People

Lab Director

Stew Shankman Ph.D.

Stew.Shankman@northwestern.edu

Dr. Shankman is the Dunbar Professor at Northwestern University, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. His research focuses on the relation between depression and anxiety disorders (i.e., internalizing psychopathologies), with an emphasis on neurobehavioral processes that are common vs. specific emotional between the two. Internalizing psychopathologies are serious and prevalent public health problems with an economic burden of hundreds of billions of dollars that is increasing in recent years. While moderately efficacious treatments have been developed for these conditions (e.g., cognitive behavioral therapies, SSRIs), treatment response is very heterogeneous. Our group’s research attempts to improve our understanding of internalizing psychopathologies and their risk factors so that (a) more effective interventions and preventative strategies can be developed for specific people, (b) identify specific targets for those intervention and prevention efforts, and (c) develop and test novel interventions to help people suffering from these conditions. Currently, Dr. Shankman is the Principal Investigator and co-investigator on multiple NIH-funded projects utilizing multiple methods (e.g., fMRI, electrophysiology, laboratory behavioral paradigms, treatment development, etc).

Curriculum Vitae

Faculty

Sameer Ashaie, Ph.D.

Sameer.Ashaie@northwestern.edu

Dr. Ashaie’s research primarily focuses on aphasia rehabilitation particularly post-stroke depression and related psychosocial issues. He employs a variety of techniques in his research including non-invasive brain stimulation and eye-tracking.

 

Allison Letkiewicz, Ph.D.

Allison.Letkiewicz@northwestern.edu

Dr. Letkiewicz is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Northwestern University. Her research primarily focuses on identifying the role of cognitive functioning (executive function, reinforcement learning, and decision-making) in the onset and recurrence of internalizing psychopathology using multiple methods (fMRI, computational modeling [Q-learning, drift-diffusion], EEG/ERPs, and neuropsychological assessment). She received a PhD in Clinical Psychology with a concentration in Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2019. Prior to receiving her PhD, she completed a predoctoral clinical internship at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (2018-2019). From 2020-2022, Dr. Letkiewicz completed postdoctoral training at Northwestern University with Dr. Shankman, during which she received an NIH-funded TL1 grant through NUCATS that focused on the application of computational approaches to examining inhibitory control as a transdiagnostic correlate of internalizing and externalizing psychopathology in youth. She is currently the PI on an NIMH-funded K23 award (2022-2027), which aims to clarify the role of aberrant reward learning in depression and psychomotor symptoms using computational modeling and fMRI. In 2023, she was awarded the Ken and Ruth Davee Award for Innovative Investigations.

Postdoctoral Fellows

Lilian Yanqing Li, Ph.D.

Lilian.Y.Li@northwestern.edu

Dr. Li received her Ph.D. in Psychological Science with concentrations in Affective Science and Quantitative Methods from the University of California, Irvine in 2021. Her research centers on understanding how affective processes (e.g., experience, regulation) contribute to risk for psychopathology, including disorders within the internalizing and psychosis spectrums. Currently, she focuses on the temporal dynamics of affect, from momentary fluctuations to developmental trajectories, to predict the emergence of risk and resilience. This work utilizes multiple methods of data collection (e.g., EEG, ecological momentary assessment) and analysis (e.g., natural language processing, network analysis).

James Glazer, Ph.D.

JamesGlazer2020@u.northwestern.edu

Dr Glazer’s research focuses on developing integrated biopsychosocial models of mood and anxiety disorders from a multimethod and multimodal perspective (e.g., EEG/fMRI/diagnostic/behavioral). I am interested in the neural correlates of shared and unique symptom dimensions of depression, anxiety, and bipolar disorders across reward, threat, and executive control processing domains. The objective of this research program is to detect early vulnerability, improve diagnosis, and develop empirically supported treatments that target specific areas of dysfunction.

Brent Rappaport, Ph.D.

Brent.Rappaport@northwestern.edu@northwestern.edu

 
Dr. Rappaport received a doctorate in clinical psychology from Washington University in St. Louis in 2022. During graduate school, his research focused on the longitudinal and cross-sectional relationships between peer relations and psychopathology, specifically deficits in reward processing in internalizing disorders using neuroimaging (ERP, fMRI) and structural equation modeling (SEM). Currently, his research examines affective and social deficits as transdiagnostic risk factors for internalizing disorders, as well as sociodemographic factors. He leverages SEM, psychophysiological, and computational approaches to identify brain and behavioral mechanisms of anxiety and depression.
 

Allison Moreau, Ph.D.

Allison.Moreau@northwestern.edu

 
Dr. Moreau earned her doctorate in clinical psychology from Washington University in St. Louis in 2023. During graduate school, her research focused on neural mechanisms of internalizing disorders and treatments using neuroimaging and machine learning methods. Currently, she is expanding this line of work to incorporate clinical and psychosocial factors to more holistically examine internalizing psychopathology.
 

Staff

David Klemballa, B.A.

David.Klemballa@northwestern.edu

 
Dave has been with the lab since 2017 and has contributed to various grants including RDOC, PSANDS, NUCU. He is interested in mindfulness-based approaches to treating mental health.

Mystie Saturday, B.A.

Mystie.Saturday@northwestern.edu

 
Mystie is a research assistant who graduated from Emory University with a B.A. in Psychology and a minor in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. In the NEAR Lab, she is primarily involved with the DRIVEN project, a study which aims to help unemployed, emotionally distressed individuals return to work. Her personal research interests broadly focus on identity, personality, emotionality, trauma, and well-being. In her career, Mystie is committed to expanding the diversity of populations represented and served by psychological science, as well as helping individuals better understand themselves and the world around them.

Sarah Leonard, J.D.

Sarah.Leonard1@northwestern.edu

 
Sarah comes to the NEAR Lab with a background in law, venture capital, and technology. Prior to joining the NEAR Lab, Sarah earned her J.D. from Stanford Law School, became a member of the California Bar, and worked in venture capital investing focusing primarily on digital mental health technology, which sparked a passion for a career in mental health and psychology. Prior to law school, Sarah worked on the business team at Square, Inc. and graduated from Dartmouth College with a B.A. in Philosophy, where she was the co-captain and #1 singles player on Dartmouth’s Varsity Women’s Tennis Team.

Joanna Hernandez, B.A.

Joanna.Hernandez@Northwestern.edu

Joanna graduated from Northwestern with a B.A. in Cognitive Science. There, she developed an interest in psychological research while working as a research assistant in a psychophysiology laboratory. Since then, she has worked on a number of MRI studies and is interested in researching large-scale functional brain networks across different populations.

Megan McFarland, B.S.

Megan.McFarland@northwestern.edu

Megan graduated from the University of Michigan with a B.S. in Biopsychology, Cognition, and Neuroscience. There, she became interested in cognition and distraction as it relates to working memory capacity while working in a cognitive and affective neuroscience lab. Her future research interests lie at the intersection of emotion, cognition, and decision-making processes within the context of large-scale brain networks.

 

Lauren Grzelak, B.S.

Lauren.Grzelak@northwestern.edu

Lauren graduated from Duke University with a B.S. in Psychology. She developed an early interest in identity, culminating in a thesis exploring athlete retirement and its effects on mental health. Throughout working on her current project on depression and motor function, she has also gained a growing interest in gesture elicitation and mood.

 

Riley Maher, B.A.

Riley.Maher@northwestern.edu

Riley graduated from the University of Missouri-Columbia with a B.A. in Psychology. She developed an interest in research while working at a psychological services clinic and by doing research at a hospital. She is currently working on the NEAR Lab psychomotor study. Specifically, she’s interested in researching methods for detection strategies in psychopathology and in exploring the psychosocial needs of different populations to aid in intervention accessibility.

 

Sarah Sarkas, B.S.

Sarah.Sarkas@northwestern.edu

Sarah graduated from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign with a B.S in Psychology. There, she developed an interest in psychological research while working in clinical psychology research labs and as a peer educator at the university counseling center. Sarah is currently working on the Social Processing in Remitted Adolescent Depression grant. She is interested in researching the effectiveness and dissemination of treatment for serious mental illness.

 

Maddie McGregor, B.A.

Madeline.McGregor@northwestern.edu

Maddie graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with a B.A. in Psychology and minor in Neuroscience and Health Care Management. There, she developed a passion for public health and psychological research while working as a research assistant in clinical psychology and cognitive neuroscience labs. In the NEAR Lab, she is currently working on the Social Processing in Remitted Adolescent Depression grant. Her personal research interests are focused on the quality and equity of mental healthcare for adolescents with anxiety and depression.

 

Research Assistants

Nithan Rajappa, Neha Gupta, Cleo Kanter, Anna Truong, Marissa Valdespino, Maria Feng

 

Former Lab Members

Brady D. Nelson, Ph.D.

Brady is now Research Assistant Professor at
Stony Brook University. He received his Ph.D. in 2013.

E. Jenna Robison-Andrew, Ph.D.

Jenna is now a staff psychologist at the
Minneapolis VA Health Care System.
She received her Ph.D. in 2011.

Sarah E. Altman, Ph.D.

Sarah is now Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at the Ohio State University. She received her Ph.D. in 2011.

Miranda L. Campbell, Ph.D.

Miranda is now a staff psychologist at the Hines VA. She received her Ph.D. in 2015.

Anna Weinberg, Ph.D.

Anna is now Assistant Professor of Psychology at McGill University. She received her Ph.D. in 2014 from Stony Brook University.

Stephanie M. Gorka, Ph.D

Stephanie is now an Assistant Professor in the College of Medicine at Ohio State University.

Casey Sarapas, Ph.D

Casey is now a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard University Medical School in the Department of Psychiatry. He received his Ph.D. in 2016.

Andrea C. Katz, Ph.D.

Andrea is now a postdoctoral fellow at the Puget Sound VA in Seattle. She received her Ph.D. in 2017.

Huiting Liu, Ph.D.

Huiting is now an intern at the Puget Sound VA in Seattle. She received her Ph.D. in 2019.

Sarah Kate McGowan, Ph.D.

Sarah Kate is now a clinical psychologist at the West Los Angeles VA. She received her Ph.D. in 2014.

Lynne Lieberman, Ph.D.

Lynne is now an intern at the UIC department of psychiatry. She received her Ph.D. in 2019.

Libby Stevens, Ph.D.

Libby is now an intern at the Puget Sound VA in Seattle. She received her Ph.D. in 2019.

Ashley Huggins, Ph.D.

Ashley is now Assistant Professor of Psychology at the University of Arizona. She received her Ph.D. in 2020.

Fiona Helgren 

Fiona is now a graduate student at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

Alison DeLizza, Ph.D. 

Alison is an Assistant Professor and Clinical Psychologist at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. She received her Ph.D. in 2019.

Kelly Correa, Ph.D.

Postdoctoral Scholar-Fellow at University of California, San Diego. She received her Ph.D. in 2022.

Carter Funkhouser, Ph.D.

Carter is now a postdoctoral research scientist at Columbia University. He received his Ph.D. in 2022.

Jadyn Park  

Jadyn is now a graduate student at UChicago.

Collaborators

 Lauren Wakschlag, Ph.D.

Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine

 Jaime Griffith, Ph.D.

Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine

Lianne Jenkins, Ph.D.

Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine 

Sebastian Walther, Ph.D.

University of Bern

Richard Macatee, Ph.D.

Auburn University

K. Luan Phan, MD

Ohio State Univeristy

Myrna Weissman, Ph.D.

Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health – New York State Psychiatric Institute

Michael Zvolensky, Ph.D.

University of Houston

Randy Auerbach, Ph.D.

Columbia University

Vijay Mittal, Ph.D.

Northwestern University

Scott Langenecker, Ph.D.

University of Utah Department of Psychiatry

Annmaria MacNamara, Ph.D.

Texas A&M University

Alex Leow, Ph.D.

UIC Department of Psychology

                                              680 N. Lakeshore Drive, Suite 1520, Chicago, IL 60611  •  312-503-9078  •  NEARLab@northwestern.edu