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National Institutes of Health
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Adult Psychopathology and Psychosocial Intervention Research Branch

Overview

This Branch supports research on the foundations of psychopathology and its associated disability. The Branch promotes translational research that is directed toward an understanding of how the development, onset, and course of adult psychopathology may be studied in terms of dysfunction in fundamental biobehavioral mechanisms such as emotion, cognition, motivational processes, and interpersonal relationships. The program includes research on modifiable risk and protective factors for disorder and on the use of modern psychometric techniques to guide refinements in the conceptualization and assessment of disorder. Emphasis is placed on studies that combine approaches from neuroscience and behavioral science to elucidate the role of psychosocial factors in the alterations of brain functioning associated with mental disorders and to produce integrative models of risk, disorder, and recovery. An important feature of the Branch is the support of interdisciplinary basic research on emotion, mood, temperament, and motivational systems that is explicitly conceived and designed with respect to its potential for direct translation to the psychopathology of disorders, and to the development of new preventive and treatment interventions. The overarching goal is to foster new science-based behavioral strategies for assessment, prevention, treatment, and recovery.

Branch Chief

Michael Kozak, Ph.D.
6001 Executive Boulevard, Room 7127, MSC 9625
301-443-6471, mkozak@mail.nih.gov

Areas of Emphasis