$3.25M NIMH grant will support threat computation study

Psychology and Neuroscience researchers seek data crucial to development of effective anxiety disorder treatment

Boston Colleges Psychology and Neuroscience department has received a five-year, $3.25 million grant from the National Institute of Mental Health to study previously overlooked brainstem threat computation, potentially yielding essential data for the development of effective anxiety disorder treatments intended to reduce unwarranted fear.

Investigators have been studying neural circuits as a threat source for approximately 50 years, explained Associate Professor Michael A. McDannald, but the human brainstem has been ignored as a source of threat computation and a dysfunction site for disorders.

Our work will reveal threat signaling, prediction error computation, and specific fear behavior organization by brainstem networks knowledge that is crucial to the advancement of therapies to treat severe, ongoing anxiety that interferes with a persons daily activities, said McDannald, the studys principal investigator, who heads the departments McDannald Lab. Fear in the face of danger is healthy, and helps us prevent harm. However, fear when a threat is unlikely, or when were actually safe, is detrimental to our well-being, and is central to anxiety disorders.

August 22, 2023 -- Michael McDannald, Boston College Associate Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience, with research students (l-r) Mahsa Moaddab, Amanda Chu, and Emma Russell. 51画鋼's Psychology/Neuroscience Department received a $3.25 million grant from the National Institutes of Mental Health (NIMH) for a project that could aid in addressing anxiety disorders.

Michael McDannald with project co-investigators: (l-r) postdoctoral fellow Mahsa Moaddab and graduate students Amanda Chu and Emma Russell. (Caitlin Cunningham)

Co-investigators include postdoctoral fellow Mahsa Moaddab, and graduate students Amanda Chu and Emma Russell. The grant is effective immediately.

This new grant further bolsters our departments longstanding interests in elucidating how individuals figure out what is good or bad, or safe or dangerous, in the world, said Elizabeth A. Kensinger, professor and chair, department of Psychology and Neuroscience. We are extremely fortunate to have faculty like Michael McDannald bringing cutting-edge neuroscience methods to bear on this important topic.

According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, anxiety disorders are the most common mental health concern in the United States. Over 40 million adults approximately 19 percent of the population suffer from an anxiety disorder, while approximately seven percent of children ages 3-17 experience issues with anxiety each year. Most people develop symptoms before age 21.

Occasional anxiety is normal, noted McDannald; people inevitably worry about health, money, or family problems, but anxiety disorders, such as panic disorder, social anxiety, and various phobia-related conditions involve more than temporary apprehension or fear. For people with an anxiety disorder, the angst does not disappear and can worsen over time, frequently affecting job performance, schoolwork, and relationships.

The ultimate goal of our research is a world in which everyone can experience healthy fear, said McDannald.