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Featured: Impact of Psychosis on Emotion Regulation

Regulation of emotional experience is an individual’s ability to be aware of and accurately evaluate one’s own emotions. A person who has emotion regulation skills has control over how and when they express their emotions. Emotional regulation is essential in everyday life as it allows people to maintain their mental and emotional states. There are many adaptive and maladaptive emotion regulation strategies that people use to deal with stressful situations in their lives.

Impact of Psychosis on Emotion Regulation

Introduction

The ability to regulate emotions is a necessary skill to maintain one’s psychological well-being, but psychosis may interfere with this ability, as it is associated with abnormalities in emotion regulation (Ludwig et al., 2020). Psychosis consists of various symptoms that arise from experiencing a disconnection from reality (National Institute of Mental Health, 2023). The major symptoms of psychosis include, but are not limited to, delusions, hallucinations, and disordered thoughts and speech.

The Behavioral Traits and Dyadic Relationship Between Mother and Child as Predictors of Anorexia Nervosa 

Author’s Note

This literature review holds deep significance for me as a survivor of anorexia nervosa. By the time I received my diagnosis in 2016, I was already entrenched in a relentless cycle of restriction, self-judgment, and unattainable goals. I believed that losing weight would bring a sense of control and fulfillment, yet any intake of food felt like a failure. While anorexia nervosa perpetuated my dissatisfaction and distorted my self-worth, its impact ultimately shaped my path toward recovery and resilience. 

Decoding the Mind

Author's note

I am a UC Davis student majoring in Neurobiology, Physiology, and Behavior, and have been an editor for this journal for three years now. I am passionate about neuroscience and psychology. Most particularly, studying the cognitive and physiological aspects of how memory develops. I wrote this article to highlight the neural mechanisms behind working memory and learn more about the specific neural activity that shapes how we encode and retrieve memory. 

Variation in Infant-Directed Speech Across Infant Development

Author’s Note

I joined Language Learning Lab at the Center for Mind and Brain and worked with Dr. Katharine Graf Estes as a research assistant from Spring 2023 to Spring 2024. Through this experience, I learned how to recruit participants for studies, study empirical papers critically, and build a solid foundation to understand the various projects that the Language Learning Lab is currently undertaking. I was recommended to apply for the Provost’s Undergraduate Fellowship and pursue a capstone project for my final year of undergrad.

Schizophrenia:

Abstract

There are several structural and functional abnormalities associated with the development of schizophrenia. This paper offers an overview of recent research on the development of schizophrenia, identifying patients at risk as early as possible, and current treatments. This disease results in hallucinations, delusions, and can severely impact day-to-day function due to cognitive dysfunction. By developing more targeted therapies and implementing them as early as possible, physicians can prevent loss of brain volume and decline of cognitive skills in schizophrenic patients.

Music and Mushrooms–a Possible Recipe for Treating Depression

Author Bio: Elijah Valerjev is a recent graduate with the class of 2024, obtaining his degree in Microbiology with a double minor in Professional Writing and Education. He enjoys writing and learning about various science topics associated with the brain and substances. Additionally, he has an interest in free-form writing and intends to publish several novels about introspective stories, both fiction and nonfiction. In his free time, he enjoys boxing, baking, and buying books.

FACT or MYTH: Is babytalk doing more harm than good?

What is babytalk and why do we do it? Do all caregivers use babytalk? Is it harmful or does it help at all? Questions surrounding children’s language development were not simply raised by parents—developmental researchers have devoted their studies for decades to find answers to these questions. In acquiring a more holistic understanding of babytalk, we must dive into how adults truly speak to infants, what the kind of speech babies prefer to hear, and what it all means for their development.

​​How to Read

Author’s Note

I wrote this short literature review for my Cognitive Development class. This paper was part of a quarter-long term project that involved summarizing cognitive development research for an academic audience and then translating those findings for a lay audience. Because of the requirements of the term project, this paper, even though it’s mostly academic, makes practical recommendations for parents.

American Foundation for Suicide Prevention: An Original Analysis

Author’s Note

I wrote this paper for my CMN 161: Health Communications class to research more about suicide in the U.S. I first explore the suicide crisis in the U.S. from multiple different perspectives in order to understand the factors that lead to increased suicidality and the current interventions that exist for tackling the suicide crisis. Later on in the paper, I then discuss the purpose and effectiveness of the #RealConvo campaign conducted by the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention during May 2019.

The Art of PTSD

Author’s Note

Courtney Banzon is a fourth year undergraduate student studying Psychology and Sociology at the University of California, Davis. Courtney’s interests in psychology lay primarily in the realm of clinical and abnormal psychology. Through her studies, Courtney learned about the use of exposure therapy to treat combat veterans with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). This piqued her curiosity about other methods used to treat trauma disorders.

Psilocybin and Depression: A Review of how Assisted Therapy and External Factors Guide Emotion

Author's Bio

Elijah Valerjev is a recent graduate with the class of 2024, obtaining his degree in Microbiology with a double minor in Professional Writing and Education. He enjoys writing and learning about various science topics associated with the brain and substances. Additionally, he has an interest in free-form writing and intends to publish several novels about introspective stories, both fiction and nonfiction. In his free time, he enjoys boxing, baking, and buying books.

Don’t Folate to Eat Vegetables

Author’s Note

Joy Zheng is an undergraduate in the class of 2026 studying psychology. One of her favorite things to do in her spare time is cooking and baking, bringing the concept of nutrition and macromolecules to the playing field. Initially, this piece was born in the University Writing Program 001 with Professor Monterrey and examined the relationship between junk food and a student’s academic performance.

Encoding variability and event segmentation across narrative contexts

Author’s Note

I was involved with Dr. Charan Ranganath’s Dynamic Memory Lab since shortly before the COVID-19 pandemic. I performed remote work since 2020 on multiple projects with the lab. I was very excited to begin working on my own project with the support of my mentor, James Antony, who has performed examinations on event segmentation in naturalistic contexts in the past.