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cover of episode 797: Examining How Our Brains Make Decisions About Investing Effort and the Impacts of Mental Illness - Dr. Michael Treadway

797: Examining How Our Brains Make Decisions About Investing Effort and the Impacts of Mental Illness - Dr. Michael Treadway

2025/1/27
logo of podcast People Behind the Science Podcast Stories from Scientists about Science, Life, Research, and Science Careers

People Behind the Science Podcast Stories from Scientists about Science, Life, Research, and Science Careers

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Michael Treadway: 我主要研究大脑如何决定将精力投入到哪里,以及我们想要的东西是否值得为此付出努力。这包括研究在抑郁症等疾病中,这一过程是如何改变的。我的实验室使用神经影像技术和药理学手段来研究这一过程,并试图找出可以干预的新的目标。我发现,在抑郁症患者中,许多曾经觉得值得付出的活动,现在感觉不值得了,即使是日常任务也变得难以承受。我们试图了解大脑中的相关回路是如何工作的,以及在抑郁症中这些回路是如何变化的,从而导致不同的决策。

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Dr. Treadway shares his approach to balancing his career with family life, emphasizing the importance of spending quality time together through games and other activities. He highlights the joy of playing card games with his children and his passion for music.
  • Enjoys spending time with family
  • Plays card games with children
  • Plays piano and listens to live music

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Dr. Michael Treadway is the Winship Distinguished Research Professor in Psychology and Director of Clinical Training in the Department of Psychology at Emory University. He is also affiliated with the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Emory. One of the aims of Michael’s lab is to investigate how the brain makes decisions about where to invest your effort and whether something you want is worth the work it will take to get it. The second aim of Michael’s research is to examine this process in people with conditions like major depression. His goal is to understand how the relevant circuitry in the brain typically works, and how the circuitry changes in depression, leading to a different set of decisions. This work has the potential to help identify new targets for interventions. Outside of science, Michael and his wife love spending time with their two young children and playing games together, particularly card games. He also enjoys playing the piano, listening to music, and going to live music performances. Michael received his PhD in clinical psychology from Vanderbilt University and completed his clinical internship and post-doctoral fellowship at McLean Hospital and Harvard Medical School. He joined the faculty at Emory in 2015. Michael has received numerous awards and honors in his career, including the Distinguished Scientific Award for Early Career Contribution in the area of Psychopathology from the American Psychological Association (APA), the Randolph Blake Early Career Award from Vanderbilt University, the Janet Taylor Spence Award for Transformative Early Career Contributions from the Association for Psychological Science (APS), the Early Career Impact Award from the Federation of Associations in Behavioral and Brain Sciences (FABBS), and the Rising Star Award from the APS. In this interview, he shares more about his life and science.