Deanna Barch

Deanna Marie Barch is a psychology professor, radiology professor and a psychiatry professor at Washington University.

Deanna Marie Barch
BornJuly 20, 1965
St. Louis, Missouri
CitizenshipUnited States
Academic background
Alma materNorthwestern University, University of Illinois
Academic work
Disciplinepsychology professor, radiology professor , psychiatry professor
InstitutionsWashington University

She received the APA's Distinguished Scientific Award for Early Career for contributions to psychology in psychopathology, the Joseph Zubin Memorial Fund Award, and she is also a Fellow for the Association for Psychological Science.[1] She is a deputy editor at Biological Psychiatry and she was previously editor-in-chief of Cognitive, Affective and Behavioral Neuroscience. Barch is a member of the Society for Experimental Psychology.[2]

Early life and education

Barch was born on July 20, 1965 in St. Louis, Missouri. Throughout 1983–1987, she received her B.A. in psychology from Northwestern University. During 1988-1991 and 1991–1993, she received her M.A. and Ph.D in clinical psychology from University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. And throughout 1993-1994 and 1994–1997, she did her internship in clinical psychology, postdoctoral fellowship and NIH training fellowship from Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic,University of Pittsburgh Medical School.[3]

Research

Her research includes disorders such as schizophrenia, depression, cognitive and language deficits. She also focuses on behavioral, pharmacological, and neuroimaging studies with normal and clinical populations.[4]

In 2013, Barch collaborated with Alan Ceaser to research about cognition in schizophrenia and core psychological and neutral mechanisms. They believe that there is a common action that will cause people to get schizophrenia. They can review the pattern of it by examining the context processing, working memory and episodic memory.[5]

gollark: If you were at the centre of the moon or something, that would probably work somewhat as thermal shielding just because of how big those things are, so it would at least take a while for enough heat to reach you that it'd be a problem.
gollark: I wonder if you could somehow "skim" through the upper layers of the sun with a ridiculously large amount of mass to ablate and probably some stupidly high velocity.
gollark: A crater, probably, depending on how large it is.
gollark: The earth is large, and quite solid.
gollark: I doubt it.

References

  1. "Deanna M. Barch". Noba. Retrieved 2020-01-23.
  2. "Deanna Barch, PhD | Developmental Affective Neuroscience Symposium". Retrieved 2020-01-23.
  3. "Deanna Barch". Cognitive Control & Psychopathology Laboratory. 2018-08-07. Retrieved 2020-01-23.
  4. "Deanna Barch | The Source | Washington University in St. Louis". The Source. Retrieved 2020-01-23.
  5. Barch, Deanna M.; Ceaser, Alan (2013-12-12). "Cognition in schizophrenia: core psychological and neural mechanisms". Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 16 (1): 27–34. doi:10.1016/j.tics.2011.11.015. PMC 3860986. PMID 22169777.
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