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Regina Sullivan

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Regina Sullivan
Alma materBrooklyn College (B.S.) CUNY Graduate Center (Ph.D.)
AwardsUniversity Oklahoma Presidential Professor

Sigma Xi Faculty Research Award
Christopher Clavius Research Award
Fellow of the Eastern Psychological Association

NICHD MERIT award
Scientific career
FieldsProfessor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Senior Research Scientist

Regina Sullivan is an American developmental behavioral neuroscientist, a professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at the New York University School of Medicine[1] and senior research scientist in the Emotional Brain Institute at The Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research.[2]

Life and work

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Sullivan's work focuses on the neurobiology of mother-infant interactions and early life adversity in rodents and humans, and their relationship to life-long psychopathology. Her work brings a diverse set of research tools to these questions including behavior, neuroanatomy, pharmacology, functional imaging, electrophysiology and optogenetics in infant rodents.

She has been very active in promoting the advancement of women and minorities in the subjects of Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics throughout her career.[3]

Education and positions

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Sullivan received her Bachelor of Science degree in Experimental Psychology from Brooklyn College of the City University of New York. She then received her Doctor of Philosophy in Biopsychology from the Graduate Center if the City University of New York. After a short post-doctoral position at Duke University, she moved to the University of California, Irvine for additional post-doctoral training with Dr. Michael Leon. There she rose to the position of assistant research professor in the department of psychobiology (now neurobiology and behavior).[2][3]

Following her training, she was hired as an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Oklahoma, where she earned tenure and promotion to associate professor.  She then transferred to the Department of Zoology (now Biology) where she became a full professor and was subsequently honored as a presidential professor. In 2008, she moved to New York City, her hometown, where she now serves as a tenured professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at the New York University School of Medicine and senior research scientist in the Emotional Brain Institute at The Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research.[1][2][3]

Sullivan holds adjunct or affiliated positions at the New York University Center for Neural Science, the University of Oklahoma Biology department,[4] and the Karolinska Institute.[5][6] In addition she has held a variety of international visiting academic appointments including at the Université  Claude Bernard, Lyon France, Kochi Medical School, Kochi Japan and the Université de Paris in France.[3] 

Research program

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Sullivan’s work has focused on the neurobiology of infant attachment to the mother and the multisensory cues the mother/caregiver provides to the infant to initiate and maintain that attachment.[1][3][7] Her early work dissected how maternal odor cues became associated with warmth, tactile stimulation, and milk to drive a learned attraction by the infant (rodent or human) toward the caregiver. Such an attraction is critical for survival of altricial mammals like humans and many rodent infants. In addition to promoting attraction to the caregiver, these cues can also serve to modulate infant behavioral state.[8] For example, cues from the caregiver can soothe an infant, prepare them for feeding, and reduce fear. However, Sullivan has demonstrated that adverse caregiving during early development can disrupt this caregiver modulation of infant, and lead to long lasting consequences such as impaired social behavior, depression-like symptoms and modified fear learning. These changes in behavior evoked by adverse rearing are mediated by the amygdala and changes in its dopaminergic inputs. Her work has been continuously funded by NIH and/or NSF.

Awards and distinctions

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Sullivan has received numerous honors (e.g., Univ. Oklahoma Presidential Professor, Sigma Xi Faculty Research Award, Christopher Clavius Research Award, Fellow of the Eastern Psychological Association,[9] NICHD MERIT award), elected positions (such as president of the International Society for Developmental Psychobiology), and served on multiple committees at NIH and editorial boards.[3]

Publications

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  • Sullivan RM, Landers M, Yeaman B and Wilson DA (2000) Good memories of bad events in infancy: Ontogeny of conditioned fear and the amygdala. Nature, 407:38-39. PMID 10993064, doi:10.1038/35024156
  • Moriceau S and Sullivan RM (2006) Maternal presence serves as a switch between attraction and fear in infancy. Nature Neuroscience, 9:1004-1006. PMCID PMC1560090
  • Barr G, Moriceau S, Shionoya K, Muzny K, Gao P and Sullivan RM (2009) Transitions in infant attachment during a sensitive period is modulated by dopamine in the amygdala. Nature Neuroscience, 12:1367-1369. PMCID PMC2783302
  • Karpova N, Pickenhagen A, Lindholm J, TiraboschiE, Kulesskaya N, Ágústsdóttir A, Antila H, Popova D, AkamineY, Bahi A, Sullivan RM, Hen R, Drew L and Castren R (2011) Synergy between antidepressant drug treatment and psychological therapy is required for fear erasure in amygdala. Science, 334:1731-1734. PMCID PMC3929964
  • Hostinar CE, Sullivan RM and Gunnar MR (2014) Psychobiological mechanisms underlying the social buffering of the Hypothalamic–Pituitary–Adrenocortical Axis: A review of animal models and human studies across development.  Psychological Bulletin. 140(1):256-282. PMCID PMC3844011
  • Tottenham N, Shapiro M, Flannery J, Caldera C, & Sullivan RM (2019) Parental presence switches avoidance to attraction learning in children. Nature Human Behaviour, 3(10):1070-1077. PMCID PMC7218758
  • Perry RE, Finegood ED, Braren SH, DeJoseh ML, Putrino DF, Wilson DA, Sullivan RM, Raver CC, Blair C, Family Life Project Key Investigators (2019) Developing a neurobehavioral animal model of poverty: drawing cross-species connections between environments of scarcity-adversity, parenting quality, and infant outcome. Development and Psychopathology, 1-20. PMCID PMC6168440.
  • Opendak M, Thiesen E, Blomkvist A, Hollis K, Lint T, Sarro E, Lundström JN, Tottenham N, Dozier M, Wilson DA and Sullivan RM (2020) Adverse caregiving in infancy blunts neural processing of the mother. Nature Communication, 11:1119. PMCID  PMC7048726
  • Sullivan RM and Opendak M (2021) Neurobiology of infant fear and anxiety: Impacts of delayed amygdala development and attachment figure quality. Biological Psychiatry, 89(7):641-650. PMCID PMC7914291
  • Full Publication List[10]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Regina M. Sullivan". med.nyu.edu. Retrieved 2021-03-18.
  2. ^ a b c "Regina M. Sullivan, Ph.D. | The Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research". www.nki.rfmh.org. Retrieved 2021-03-18.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Curriculam Vitae". reginasullivan.oucreate.com. Retrieved 2021-04-05.
  4. ^ "Faculty". www.ou.edu. Retrieved 2021-03-18.
  5. ^ "Johan Lundström's research group | Karolinska Institutet". ki.se. Retrieved 2021-03-18.
  6. ^ "Regina Sullivan | Medarbetare". medarbetare.ki.se (in Swedish). Retrieved 2021-03-18.
  7. ^ "Sullivan Lab | The Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research". www.nki.rfmh.org. Retrieved 2021-04-05.
  8. ^ Sullivan RM and Toubas P (1998) Clinical usefulness of maternal odor in newborns: Soothing and feeding preparatory responses. Biology of the Neonate, 74:402-408. PMCID: PMC2046216
  9. ^ "EPA Fellows - Eastern Psychological Association". www.easternpsychological.org. Retrieved 2021-03-18.
  10. ^ "My Bibliography - NCBI".