Caitlin C Clements
@ccclements.bsky.social
54 followers 86 following 13 posts
Asst Prof @NotreDame Psych | BRAIN Lab | Study autism, reward processing, & rare genetic syndromes
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ccclements.bsky.social
In honor of the album announcement, I am endeavoring to write “Taylor Swift” into the current manuscript I’m drafting. If it gets past co-authors, it will be my crowning accomplishment as an academic and as a swiftie. 🫶🎓
ccclements.bsky.social
I wish I could say yes :(
ccclements.bsky.social
Hiring! Please RT and send to anyone who is looking for a research coordinator position in a psych lab! apply.interfolio.com/164693
Reposted by Caitlin C Clements
drcarolw.bsky.social
Please share: Opportunity for soon to be graduating grad students with an interest in neurodevelopment and mental health - our T32 postdoc program in neurodevelopmental disorders at Boston Children’s is accepting applications: rsztnc.org/wp-content/u...
rsztnc.org
ccclements.bsky.social
📣 I'm hiring a research coordinator! Would you enjoy working with preschool age autistic children during study visits & a wonderful group of grad students & staff in the developmental and clinical psychology programs at ND? If yes, pls email your resume to [email protected]!
Reposted by Caitlin C Clements
hayafatimah.bsky.social
🔔Pub alert.
Happy to share our paper on substance use relapse as a bistable dynamical system (published in JoPaCS). We’re currently working to extend the model to include time varying predictors of the process. Stay tuned!
ccclements.bsky.social
Many thanks to the families who traveled with their child with TSC from around the country to Boston Children’s or UCLA for this EEG and other assessments. I’m so fortunate for the time I spent learning from them, as well as from @drcarolw.bsky.social in careful analysis of resting EEG. 9/9
ccclements.bsky.social
I’m working on a stats approach to disentangle the effects of meds on EEG. In the meantime, we recommend that resting EEG studies across psychiatry are sure to collect medication data from participants. 8/x
ccclements.bsky.social
EEG is a great tool for psychiatric & neurodevelopmental biomarkers because it is low-cost, noninvasive, and feasible for all ages & abilities. But if people are on meds that alter their EEG (antiepileptics, benzos for anxiety), EEG’s utility as a biomarker is threatened. 7/x
ccclements.bsky.social
To see this, look in the beta range: the red dashed line is higher (amplitude), and peaks more to the left (at a lower frequency), compared to the height and peak of the gray line. Why does this matter? For biomarker studies, especially in autism and anxiety. 6/x
ccclements.bsky.social
Children with TSC not on meds (red solid line) looked shockingly similar to typically developing children (gray line). So I think the most interesting finding is that GABAergic medications were associated with a large change in beta power (lower peak freq, higher peak amp). 5/x
ccclements.bsky.social
the finding of greater beta power in toddlers with TSC was driven by those children with high seizure severity (Fig B: red=high, yellow=low, gray=matched typical children) or those taking GABAergic antiepileptic medication (Fig D), or both. 4/x
ccclements.bsky.social
Toddlers with TSC showed greater periodic beta power compared to age- and sex-matched typically developing children. That means more neural oscillations at frequencies between 12-30 Hz: compare the red and gray lines above the gray bar on the x-axis. But… 3/x
ccclements.bsky.social
We intended to characterize the resting EEG power spectrum in a cohort of toddlers with TSC (Tuberous Sclerosis Complex), a rare genetic disorder with ~50% autism rate, ~90% epilepsy rate, and tubers throughout the brain and body. 2/x
ccclements.bsky.social
New paper alert! A story where secondary findings were perhaps more interesting than our original question. rdcu.be/d6LnQ Before I start, I extend deep thanks to the families in the study. 🧵 1/x