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August 8, 2024
Virtual
This webinar will introduce a range of approaches to meaningfully integrate individuals with lived experiences of psychiatric disabilities into mental health research.
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October 30–November 1, 2023
NIH Campus, Natcher Auditorium, Bethesda, Maryland
This conference brought together experts to share innovations, findings, and opportunities in mental health research.
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August 9, 2023
Virtual
This technical assistance webinar was for prospective applicants of the Notice of Funding Opportunity: Accelerating Medicines Partnership® Schizophrenia: Clinical High Risk for Psychosis Clinical Trial Network.
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May 4, 2023
Virtual
In recognition of Mental Health Awareness Month, NIMH hosted a Facebook Live on schizophrenia.
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December 3, 2019
On December 3, 2019, Dr. Roland R. Griffiths will present “Psilocybin: History, Neuropharmacology, and Implications for Therapeutics,” as part of the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Director’s Innovation Speaker Series.
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March 14, 2019
On March 14, 2019, Sheena Josselyn, PhD, will present “Making, Breaking, and Linking Memories” as part of the NIMH Director’s Innovation Speaker Series. In her talk, Dr. Josselyn will provide an overview of recent research focusing on how a memory is physically or functionally represented in the brain through a memory trace or “engram.”
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July 23–24, 2018
Rockville, MD
In collaboration with SAMHSA, NIMH sponsored a workshop focused on research priorities for treatment interventions and recovery services for adults with serious mental illness (SMI).
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November 12, 2017
Room 146A, Walter E. Washington Convention Center
This mini-symposium will provide an in-depth introduction to the nascent and burgeoning field of computational psychiatry (CP).
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November 12, 2017
Washington Convention Center, Washington, D.C.
On November 12, 2017, NIMH hosted a mini-symposium to introduce new and burgeoning field of computational psychiatry. Computational psychiatry applies cutting-edge quantitative methods and theoretical models to investigate neural or cognitive phenomena relevant to psychiatric diseases. Presentations covered practical examples of theory- and data-driven computational models of cognitive deficits associated with schizophrenia, emotion regulation, anxiety, and drug addiction.