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Seth Pollak
College of Letters and Science Distinguished Professor of Psychology
Investigator, Social and Affective Processes Unit
Ph.D. (Clinical Psychology and Brain & Cognitive Sciences), 1997,
University of Rochester

Email: spollak@wisc.edu

I am a developmental psychopathologist. My students and I are interested in understanding the mechanisms through which children's experiences increase biobehavioral development and vulnerability for behavioral disorders. The goal of our work is to use psychopathological processes to help us to understand relative contributions of "nature" and "nurture" to human development and the role of social experience on brain development. These studies seek to understand children's adaptive and maladaptive behaviors by exploring the developmental processes linking emotion, neural plasticity, and mental health.



REPRESENTATIVE PUBLICATIONS

Pollak, S.D. (2005). Early adversity and mechanisms of plasticity: Integrating affective neuroscience with developmental approaches to psychopathology. Development and Psychopathology, 17: 735-752
Pollak, S.D., Vardi, S., Bechner, A.M.P., and Curtin, J.J. (2005). Physically abused children's regulation of attention in response to hostility. Child Development, 76(5): 968-977.
Wismer Fries, A.B., Ziegler, T.E., Kurian, J.R., Jacoris, S. and Pollak, S.D. (2005). Early experience in humans is associated with changes in neuropeptides critical for regulating social behavior. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 102:17237-17240.
Wismer Fries, A.B. and Pollak, S.D. (2004). Emotion understanding in postinstitutionalized Eastern European children. Development and Psychopathology, 16:355-369.
Pollak, S.D., & Sinha, P. (2002). Effects of Early Experience on Children's Recognition of Facial Displays of Emotion. Developmental Psychology, 38, 784-791.

image: Seth Pollak

Phone: (608) 265-8190

Office: 317 Psychology

Lab Director Page

 University of Wisconsin- Madison: Psychology Department
Brogden Hall, 1202 West Johnson Street, Madison, WI 53706-1969
Office: (608) 262-0512 or (608) 262-1041
Fax: (608) 262-4029

 
  Last Modified: February 14, 2008 10:11 AM
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