Psychiatry Grand Rounds 10/13 | Guillermo Horga, MD, PhD

Horga Grand Rounds

"Computational mechanisms and neuroimaging biomarkers of psychosis"

About the Speaker:

Guillermo Horga, MD, PhD
Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Columbia University, NY
Co-director, Clinical Cognitive Computational Neuroscience (C3N) Center
Columbia Psychiatry and New York State Psychiatric Institute (NYSPI)

Dr. Horga is clinically trained as a psychiatrist and completed a PhD program in clinical and experimental neuroscience at the University of Barcelona as well as a postdoctoral research fellowship at Columbia University focused on advanced MRI and cognitive neuroscience methods, where I was mentored by Bradley Peterson and later by Anissa Abi-Dargham. My lab mainly focuses on the neurobiological and computational mechanisms of psychotic symptoms in schizophrenia and of related cognitive functions in health, including inference, learning and decision-making. Psychosis is characterized by the experience of abnormal percepts, such as hallucinations, and delusional beliefs. While excessive dopamine transmission in the striatum is known to play a role in these symptoms, the cognitive and computational mechanisms mediating psychotic experiences remain unclear. To understand these neural mechanisms, our research uses behavioral paradigms and computational tools in combination with a variety of functional, structural and molecular in vivo neuroimaging techniques (mainly functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging [fMRI] and Positron Emission Tomography [PET]) in healthy humans and patients with psychotic disorders. This work has been continuously funded through private foundations and federal funding from the NIMH. 

Objectives:

The activity is designed to help the learner: 

1. Identify computational models of hallucinations and delusions in schizophrenia,

2. Describe perceptual inference and its relationship to psychosis,

3. Define neuromelanin-sensitive MRI methods

Summary:

Psychotic symptoms have long been associated with dopamine excess. I will describe research into how this alteration could lead to changes in perception and decisions that may explain these symptoms. Finally, I will talk about neuromelanin-sensitive MRI and its potential clinical utility as a biomarker in psychosis.

 

CME/CE credit for Psychiatry Grand Rounds is only available during the live feed time and for a brief time immediately following. The code for this week's session is displayed at the opening and closing of the meeting and also in the Chair's Office Account Name during the meeting.

 

For CME/CE information about this session, please visit:

https://vumc.cloud-cme.com/course/courseoverview?P=0&EID=71225

 

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Meeting ID: 238 474 167 446 
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This talk is sponsored by the
Hollender Lecture Fund
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences 
This educational activity received no commercial support.