girl staying up late on laptop

This study is testing whether special counseling sessions can help 10-18 year olds who have difficulty getting to sleep at night, difficulty waking up or getting out of bed in the in the morning, and feel sleepy during the day.
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Recent Grads & Lab Alumni

Deidre Abrons
dabrons@gmail.com

Aaron Daley Aaron Daley
Content 15
Ania Foster Ania Foster
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Dr. Anda Gershon

Anda Gershon recently completed an NRSA-funded postdoctoral fellowship at the Golden Bear Sleep and Mood Clinic. During this fellowship she designed and conducted a prospective research study examining the impact of stress, mood variability, social rhythm disruption, and sleep disturbance, on illness course in bipolar disorder. Anda completed her Ph.D. in Personality and Psychopathology with the mentorship of Dr. Ian H. Gotlib, at the Mood and Anxiety Disorders Laboratory of the Psychology Department at Stanford University. For her dissertation research she conducted a longitudinal study examining the role of acute and chronic stress in the first onset of psychiatric disorders in adolescent daughters of depressed mothers. Anda earned her B.A. (with Honors) from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Anda's research interests focus on the intersection between social environmental and biological factors in the course of mood disorders. In her research, Anda uses longitudinal designs and prospective daily assessment methods including daily sleep and mood diaries and actigraphy. During her fellowship, Anda led a multi-year training group in the administration and coding procedure of the Life Events and Difficulties Schedule (LEDS; Brown & Harris, 1978), an interview method for the assessment of stress. Anda completed the Limited Clinical Training Program through the Clinical Science Program at UC Berkeley. In the summer of 2010 she taught Psychology of Personality (Psych 150) through the Department of Psychology at UC Berkeley.

Awards:
-2007-2010 Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award Individual Postdoctoral Fellowship (F32), the National Institutes of Mental Health.

Publications:
-Eidelman, P., Gershon, A., McGlinchey, E., & Harvey, A.G. (in press). Sleep and Psychopathology. In C.A. Espie and C.M. Morin (Eds). Handbook of Sleep and Sleep Disorders, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
-Harvey, A.G., Talbot, L.S., & Gershon, A. (2009). Sleep disturbance in bipolar disorder across the lifespan. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice, 16, 256-277.
-Harvey, A.G., Hairston, I.S., Gruber, J., & Gershon, A. (2007). Anxiety and sleep. Invited chapter. In Antony, M. M., & Stein, M. B. (Eds.), Handbook of Anxiety and the Anxiety Disorders. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
-Harvey, A.G., Hairston, I.S., Gershon, A., & Gruber, J.L. (2006). Special Considerations in Insomnia Treatment. In C.A. Kushida (Ed.), Handbook of Sleep Disorders. Oxford: Oxford University Press.


Dr. June Gruber
June Gruber received her PhD in Clinical Psychology at UC Berkeley in 2009. She is now an Assistant Professor of psychology at Yale University and director of the Yale Positive Emotion and Psychopathology (YPEP) Laboratory.

Faculty Profile: http://www.yale.edu/psychology/FacInfo/Gruber.html
Lab Webpage: http://www.yalepeplab.com

Teresa Caffe
Teresa is the polysomnography supervisor for the sleep lab. She graduated from University of California, Santa Cruz with a bachelor's degree in psychology. She received her sleep technology training while working at the Central Coast Sleep Disorders Center within the Watsonville Community Hospital. Teresa became a licensed sleep technologist in 2006. She has been working on the Insomnia Treatment Study since joining the lab in 2008. When she's not at the lab, Teresa enjoys reading, hiking, and playing with her pug.

Natash Dagys, M.A.

ndagys@gmail.com
Natasha is a fourth-year PhD student in the School Psychology program of the Graduate School of Education. Her interests revolve around adolescents, with a specific focus on (a) sibling relationships and sibling influence on adolescent outcomes and (b) sleep during adolescence and consequences of sleep deprivation. She is currently working on her dissertation while also working as a school psychologist intern.


Polina Eidelman

eidelman@cbtscience.com

 

Partner and practicing Psychologist at the Cognitive Behavior Therapy and Science Center
Hedvik Elizabeth Fosse
Hedvik Elisabeth Fosse is a visiting student at the Golden Bear Sleep and Mood Clinic at the University of California, Berkeley. Hedvik is licensed a clinical psychologist in Norway, and completed her degree at the University of Bergen (Norway) in 2007. She is now a doctoral student at Centre for Child and Adolescent Mental Health/University of Bergen
Her research interests are sleep disturbance across the age range, and the association between sleep and psychiatric disorders in children and adolescents.

Manuela Gander

Manuela is a visiting scholar at the Golden Bear Sleep and Mood Research Clinic. She is a second-year doctoral student in Clinical Psychology at the University of Innsbruck and has done research in Austrian schools and at the Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS) in London.

Manuela’s research interests are the impact of sleep disturbance in adolescence, its contribution to the symptoms of depression and bipolar disorders and the possible interventions. As her PhD thesis is on the different ways to identify depressive adolescents in school, she wants to find out more about the school’s role in terms of sleep disturbance, i.e. how can teachers recognize sleep problems, how can sleep problems influence a teenager’s school performance and how can schools promote better sleep habits.

Awards:
2010-2011: Research scholarship of the vice-rector of research in Innsbruck
2010: Academic Excellence Scholarship of the University of Innsbruck

Publications:
Gander , M. (2011, March). Internalising symptoms in depressive adolescents: Manifestations and ways of identification in school. Paper presented at the 32 nd Congress of the German Society of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Essen, Germany.
Gander , M. (2010). Shell Shock during the First World War: Diagnosis and Treatment in the Austrian-Hungarian Army. Zeit-Raum-Innsbruck, 11, 13-32.


Jason Hartman
jason.hartman@case.edu
Jason was the assistant polysomnography supervisor in his time at the Golden Bear Sleep and Mood Research Lab starting in March 2008. He earned his BA in Psychology from UC Berkeley with highest honors in 2009. Jason Hartman is in his second year of medical school at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. (Class of 2015)


Kate Kaplan
katekate@gmail.com



Kate Kaplan is currently completing her clinical internship at the San Francisco VA Medical Center. Kate received her B.A. in 2003 and M.A. in 2004 from Stanford University, where she worked with Dr. William C. Dement in the Sleep Disorders Research Center and Dr. Ian H. Gotlib in the Mood and Anxiety Disorders Laboratory. Her research is a happy fusion of previous work in sleep and psychopathology. Kate's present and past research focuses on documenting the presentation, course and consequences of hypersomnia in psychiatric disorders, exploring sleep deprivation and recovery sleep in adolescents and adults, and the relationship between stressful life events, sleep, and illness course in unipolar and bipolar depression. Kate has also worked as a clinical intern in the U.C. Berkeley Psychology Clinic for three years and serves as a therapist and assessor on two RCTs treating sleep disturbances in individuals with insomnia and with bipolar disorder. When she's not working in the lab or getting some sleep, Kate enjoys traveling, reading, and eating dim sum.

Awards & Honors

Publications

- Kaplan, K.A., Talbot, L.S., Gruber, J. & Harvey, A.G. (in press). Comparison between actigraphy, polysomnography and sleep diary in individuals with bipolar disorder. Bipolar Disorders.
- Eidelman, P., Gershon, A., Kaplan, K., McGlinchey, E. & Harvey, A.G. (in press). Social support and social strain in interepisode bipolar disorder.  Bipolar Disorders.
- Gershon, A., Eidelman, P., McGlinchey, E., Kaplan, K.A. & Harvey, A.G. (in press).  Restless pillow, ruffled mind: Sleep and affect coupling in inter-episode bipolar disorder. Journal of Abnormal Psychology.
- Soehner, A., Kaplan, K.A., Kanady, J., & Harvey, A.G. (in press). Cognitive therapy for insomnia.  Encyclopedia of Sleep.
- Dagys, N., McGlinchey, E.L., Talbot, L.S., Kaplan, K.A., Dahl, R.E. & Harvey, A.G. (2012). Double Trouble? The Effects of Sleep Deprivation and Chronotype on Adolescent Affect. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 53(6), 660-7.
- Harvey, A.G., Kaplan, K.A., Soehner, A. (2012). Interventions for Sleep Disturbance in Bipolar Disorder. In J. Herman & M. Hirshkowitz (Eds). Sleep medicine and psychiatric illness. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. Philadelphia.
- Kaplan, K.A., Gruber, J., Eidelman, P., Talbot, L.S., & Harvey, A.G. (2011). Hypersomnia in interepisode bipolar disorder: Does it have prognostic significance? Journal of Affective Disorders, 132(3), 438-44.
- McGlinchey, E.L., Talbot, L.T., Chang, K., Kaplan, K.A., Dahl, R.E., Harvey, A.G. (2011). Vocal expression of emotion in sleep deprived adolescents and adults. SLEEP, 34(9), 1233-1241
- Talbot, L.S., McGlinchey, E.L., Kaplan, K.A., Dahl, R.E., Harvey, A.G. (2010). Sleep Deprivation in Adolescents and Adults: Changes in Affect. Emotion, 10(6), 831-41.
- Kaplan, K.A., Talbot, L.S. & Harvey, A.G. (2009). Cognitive mechanisms in chronic insomnia: Processes and prospects. Sleep Medicine Clinics, 4(4), 541-548.
- Kaplan, K.A. & Harvey, A.G. (2009). Hypersomnia across mood disorders: A review and synthesis. Sleep Medicine Reviews, 13, 275-285.
- Kaplan, K.A., Itoi, A., & Dement, W.C. (2007). Relationship between awareness of sleepiness and ability to predict sleep onset: Can drivers avoid falling asleep at the wheel? Sleep Medicine, 9(1), 71-79.
- Kamdar, B.B., Kaplan, K.A., Kezirian, E.J., & Dement, W.C. (2004). The impact of extra sleep on daytime alertness, vigilance, and mood. Sleep Medicine, 5, 441-448.


Ingvild Berg Saksvik

Ingvild is a licensed psychologist and a PhD candidate at the University of Bergen, Norway. She worked as a research fellow at the University of Bergen in 2008. Further, she has held a position as PhD research fellow at the University of Bergen since January 2009 and plans to complete her PhD degree in December 2011. Her dissertaion focuses on shift work, sleep and health. Her research interests are related to how individuals handle and cope with work and leisure time, especially in relation to sleep, stress and health. Also she is interested in personality, resistance to change and clinical psychology.

List of Publications
-Saksvik, I. B., Bjorvatn, B., Hetland, H., Sandal, G. M. & Pallesen S (submitted). Individual differences in tolerance to shift work. A systematical review. Sleep Medicine Reviews.
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Pallesen, S. Bjorvatn, B. Magerøy, N. Saksvik, I. B. Waage, S. & Moen, B. E. (2010). Measures to counteract the negative effects of night work. Scandinavian Journal of Work and Environmental Health, 36, 109-120
- Saksvik, I. B., Hetland, H. (2009). Exploring Resistance to Change. Journal of Leadership and Organizational Studies, 16. 135-155
- Saksvik, I. B. & Hetland, H. (2009) Resistance to organizational change Individual reactions to change on the emotional, attitudinal and behavioural level. In Saksvik, P. Ø (ed) Prerequisites for organizational change. Ebook. Bentham Science Publishers.
- Oreg, S., Bayazit, M., Arciniega, L., Armaenakis, A., Barakauskiene, R., Bozionelos, N. . . . van Dam, K. (2008). Dispositional resistance to change: Measurement equivalence and the link to personal values across 17 nations. Journal of Applied Psychology, 93, 935-944.


Lisa Talbot

lisa.talbot@gmail.com
Lisa is a postdoctoral fellow in the Advanced Fellowship Program in Mental Illness Research and Treatment at the San Francisco VA Medical Center and the University of California, San Francisco. Currently, her research focuses on the relationships among sleep, psychiatric symptoms, health behaviors, and metabolic outcomes in post-traumatic stress disorder. Website: www.lisastalbot.com

Adriane Soehner

Adriane Soehner
asoehner@berkeley.edu

 


Taiala Tatakamontonga
Taiala is a fourth year undergraduate student at UC Berkeley and will be graduating in the spring of 2012 with her B.A in psychology. She is currently a research assistant at the Golden Bear Sleep and Mood research clinic for Professor Harvey. Taiala is also an undergraduate student peer adviser for the department of psychology. In her spare time, she likes spending time with family and friends and enjoys traveling.
Ellie McGlinchey
emcglinchey@gmail.com