Curriculum Vitae
Date Prepared:
Name(s):
Suena Huang Massey
Suena Wan Huang (before 2008)
Office Address:
Brigham and Women’s Hospital
Boston MA, 02115
Massachusetts General Hospital
55 Fruit Street, Bullfinch 1
Boston, MA 02114
Home Address:
127 Marlborough Street
Boston, MA 02116
Work Phones:
617-***-**** (MGH)
312-***-**** (mobile/pager)
Work Email:
ad456n@r.postjobfree.com
ad456n@r.postjobfree.com
Place of Birth:
Trenton, New Jersey
Education
05/98
B.A.
Art, Premedical Studies
Yale University
05/02
M.D.
Medicine, Clinical Research
Cornell University Medical College
Postdoctoral Training
06/03
Internship
Internal Medicine
Montefiore Medical Center
06/07
Residency
Psychiatry
George Washington University Hospital
Faculty Academic Appointments
7/07 - 6/08
Instructor
Psychiatry
George Washington University
School of Medicine and Health Sciences
7/08 - 12/12
Assistant Professor
Psychiatry
George Washington University
School of Medicine and Health Sciences
2/13 - 8/16
Assistant Professor
Psychiatry
Northwestern University Feinberg
School of Medicine
9/16 - 11/22
Associate Professor
Psychiatry
Northwestern University Feinberg
School of Medicine
12/22 -
Faculty Member
Psychiatry
Harvard Medical School
Appointments at Hospitals/Affiliated Institutions
07/07 - 12/12
Physician
Psychiatry
George Washington University Hospital
02/13 - 11/22
Physician
Psychiatry
Northwestern Memorial Hospital
12/22 - present
Psychiatrist
Psychiatry
Brigham and Women's Hospital
12/22 - present
Psychiatrist
Psychiatry
Massachusetts General Hospital
Service on National Committees
2015 - 18
Hazelden Betty Ford Graduate School of Addiction Studies, a nationally accredited masters and counseling degree program of the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation, a leading non-profit addiction treatment provider with 17 treatment centers nationwide (https://www.hazeldenbettyford.org)
Invited Member, Board of Governors, Hazelden Betty Ford Graduate School of Addiction Studies
2016 -
National Institutes of Health (NIH) Loan Repayment Program (LRP) of the NIH Office of the Director
Physician Investigator LRP Ambassador
2020 - 21
The HEALthy Brian and Child Development (HBCD) Nationwide Consortium Study - Phase I (Planning Phase)
Prenatal Exposures Work Group (WG-PRG) Member
2021 - 22
The HEALthy Brian and Child Development (HBCD) Nationwide Consortium Study - Phase II
Northwestern and Washington University at St. Louis Site
Prenatal Exposures Work Group (WG-PRG) Member
2022 -
The HEALthy Brian and Child Development (HBCD) Nationwide Consortium Study - Phase II
Boston Children’s Hospital Site
Prenatal Exposure Work Group Member
Service on National Professional Societies
2014 -19
Society for Prevention Research
Early Career Preventionist Network Reviewer
Grant Review Activities
2015 - 20
NIH Center for Scientific Review
Ad Hoc Early Career Reviewer
Editorial Activities
Journals at which I served as an Ad hoc reviewer:
Addiction
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research
American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology Maternal Fetal Medicine
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Breastfeeding Medicine
Drug and Alcohol Dependence
Frontiers in Public Health
Neurotoxicology and Teratology
Substance Use and Misuse
Honors and Prizes
2001
Medical Student Research Scholarship
Cornell University Medical College
Research
2006
Distinguished Poster Award
American Medical Informatics Association
Research
2010
Family Research Consortium V Summer Institute Research Fellowship
National Institute on Drug Abuse
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Research
2016
NIH Loan Repayment Program Initial Award (2 years)
NIH Division of Loan Repayment
Research
2018
NIH LRP Renewal Award (1 year)
NIH Division of Loan Repayment
Research
2016
Early Career Investigator Travel Award
Society for Biological Psychiatry
Research
Report of Funded and Unfunded Projects
Past Funded Projects
2014 - 15
CAN PRENATAL PLASMA OXYTOCIN CONCENTRATION PREDICT LIKELIHOOD OF POSTPARTUM DEPRESSION? AN OPPORTUNITY FOR EARLY INTERVENTION AND PREVENTION IN A VULNERABLE POPULATION
Sponsor: Evergreen Invitational Women's Health Grants Initiative of the Northwestern Memorial Foundation
Type: Investigator-initiated Foundation Grant
Role: Principal Investigator
This study examines the relationship between third trimester plasma oxytocin concentration and depressive symptoms at 6 weeks postpartum in a sample of non-smoking normal weight pregnant females with singleton gestations recruited from local obstetric practices. The long-term goal is to elucidate the role of oxytocin in postpartum mood disturbances to optimize screening and prevention.
2015 – 21
(NCE)
COGNITIVE-AFFECTIVE SUBSTRATES OF SMOKING: TARGETS FOR MATERNAL BEHAVIOR CHANGE
Sponsor: NIDA 5K23 DA037913
Type: Investigator-Initiated Federal Patient Oriented Research Career Development (K23) Award
Role: Principal Investigator
This study examines directly observed processes related to sensitive caregiving in relation biomarker-verified smoking behavior during pregnancy using extant data (Aim 1); and a new pilot study (Aim 2). Laying the groundwork for her mechanistic program of research, the PI receives mentored training in the measurement of behavioral and biological substrates of caregiving, multi-level modeling and other advanced statistical techniques, and intervention development.
2017- 18
IMPACT OF PRENATAL CANNABIS USE ON PREGNANCY AND BIRTH OUTCOMES
Sponsor: Northwestern Memorial Foundation Dixon Translational Research Grants Initiative
Type: Investigator Initiated Foundation Research Grant
Role: Principal Investigator
The implications of recent changes in policy, potency, and public perceptions of cannabis in the United States remain to be fully elucidated. This study focuses on the potential impact of these changes on maternal marijuana use during pregnancy. Specifically, we estimate the unique effect of prenatal cannabis exposure on two well-established obstetric biomarkers of neurodevelopmental risk—infant weight at birth and gestational age at delivery — independent of other drug exposures and known sociodemographic confounders. To accelerate progress, we employ integrated analysis of existing data from three independent NIDA-funded longitudinal prenatal exposure cohorts contributed by a team of leading developmental scientists.
2018-19
SEX SND GENDER DIFFERENCES IN COGNITIVE-AFFECTIVE SUBSTRATES OF SMOKING: TARGETS FOR BEHAVIOR CHANGE AMONG OPPOSITE SEX EXPECTANT PARENTS
Sponsor: NIDA 3K23DA037913-03S1
Type: Investigator Initiated Federal Administrative Supplement
Role: Principal Investigator
This administrative supplement study from the NIH’s Office for Women’s Health Research examines sex differences in pregnancy-associated changes in smoking in a newly recruited sample of n=60 opposite sex expectant parent dyads (N=120) bringing the total K award sample to N=214. This design also enables the PI to collect pilot data supporting this approach for disentangling processes associated with anticipation of a new child common to both sexes, from sex-specific neurobiological processes associated with pregnancy unique to the expectant mothers.
2019 - 22
2/2 OPTIMIZING ACCESS, ENGAGEMENT AND ASSESSMENT TO ELUCIDATE PRENATAL INFLUENCES ON NEURODEVELOPMENT: THE BRAINS BEGIN BEFORE BIRTH (B4) MIDWEST CONSORTIUM
Sponsor: NIDA R34DA050266 (PI - Wakschlag)
Type: Investigator-Initiated Federal Planning Grant
Role: Co-Investigator
This multidisciplinary effort brings together unique, complementary expertise from bioethicists, neuroscientists, population health, exposure, clinical and developmental scientists from Washington University and Northwestern University to investigate this critical issue. Using innovative methods and strategies, we generate best practices recommendations for addressing the key legal/ethical, recruitment/retention and assessment challenges to conducting a large, national multi-site study characterizing the impact of early life exposure on brain and behavioral development across childhood.
2021 - 22
9/24 HEALTHY BRAIN AND CHILD DEVELOPMENT NATIONAL CONSORTIUM
Sponsor: NIDA U01 DA55355 (MPI Norton & Wakschlag)
Type: National Consortium - HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study (HBCD)
Role: Co-Investigator
The overarching goal of this nationwide effort is to create a comprehensive, harmonized, and high- dimensional dataset that will characterize typical neurodevelopmental trajectories in US children and that will assess how biological and environmental exposures affect those trajectories. A special emphasis will be placed on understanding the impact of pre- and postnatal exposure to opioids, marijuana, alcohol, tobacco and/or other substances.
Current Funded Projects
2021 - 26
ELUCIDATING MECHANISMS OF PREGNANCY’S PROTECTIVE EFFECT ON DRUG ABUSE USING INTEGRATED DATA ANALYSIS
Sponsor: NIDA 7R01 DA050700
Type: Investigator Initiated Federal Major Research Grant
Role: Principal Investigator
This study examines the precise timing, nature, and modifiable determinants of spontaneous cessation and reduction of smoking and substance use during pregnancy as a means of identifying novel intervention targets relevant to the general population of substance users. To overcome methodologic limitations common to clinical research studies, we employ an innovative quasi-experimental approach that includes within-person, within-pregnancy, and between-pregnancy study designs leverage existing quantitative and qualitative data derived from multiple longitudinal NIDA-funded prenatal tobacco exposure cohorts contributed by an inter-institutional team of leading developmental scientists.
2023 - 26
5/24 HEALTHY BRAIN AND CHILD DEVELOPMENT NATIONAL CONSORTIUM
Sponsor: NIDA U01 DA055353 (MPI Grant & Bosquet)
Type: National Consortium
Role: Co-Investigator
The overarching goal of the HBCD-NC is to create a comprehensive, harmonized, and high- dimensional dataset that will characterize typical neurodevelopmental trajectories in US children and that will assess how biological and environmental exposures affect those trajectories. A special emphasis will be placed on understanding the impact of pre- and postnatal exposure to opioids, marijuana, alcohol, tobacco, and/or other substances. In addition, the HBCD-NC will identify key developmental windows during which both harmful and protective environments have the most influence on neurodevelopmental outcomes. The large, multi-modal, longitudinal, and generalizable dataset produced by this study will provide novel insights into child development and inform public policy to improve the health and development of children across the nation.
Training Grants and Mentored Trainee Grants
2018 - 22
MULTIDISCIPLINARY TRAINING PROGRAM IN DIGITAL MENTAL HEALTH
Sponsor: National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) 5T32 MH115882 (PI Mohr)
Type: Investigator-Initiated Federal Training Grant
Role: Faculty mentor
This proposal will establish the first multidisciplinary postdoctoral training program in digital mental health (the use of technologies such as the web and mobile phones to support the treatment of mental health conditions). The program will admit roughly equivalent numbers of fellows with backgrounds in clinical mental health research or human computer interaction. Mentorship and training will emphasize learning experiences from both domains, team science, and career development.
2019 - 22
POST-GRADUATE RESEARCH TRAINING ALIGNED WITH THE NIMH STRATEGIC PLAN
Sponsor: NIMH 5R25MH115855 (PI Goulding)
Type: Investigator-Initiated Federal Training Grant
Role: Faculty mentor
By implementing this research education program for psychiatry trainees, we aim to support the career development of individuals who are committed to careers in translational neuroscience research. These individuals are greatly needed in the field of psychiatry to apply new knowledge about the brain to improve the diagnosis and treatment of patients with mental disorders.
2024 – 29 (Pending)
TRAINING FUTURE PHYSICIAN-SCIENTISTS IN PRECISION PSYCHIATRY
Sponsor: NIMH (PI Mahon)
Type: Investigator-Initiated Federal Training Grant
Role: Faculty mentor
The Brigham & Women’s Hospital / Harvard Medical School Psychiatry Research Education Program in Precision Psychiatry will recruit a diverse group of exceptionally promising future psychiatrist-scientists and provide them the training and mentorship needed to become leaders in precision psychiatry research.
Local Invited Presentations
No presentations below were sponsored by 3rd parties/outside entities.
2024
Title: Title: Gestational Influences on Substance Use: A Quasi-Experimental Approach to Target Discovery
Date: January 23, 2024.
Audience: MGH HOPE Clinic (Harnessing support for Opioid and substance use disorders in Pregnancy and Early childhood) and MGH PRISM Group (Perinatal Substance Use Research and Advocacy) Group
National Invited Presentations
No presentations below were sponsored by 3rd parties/outside entities.
2017
Title: The Power of Love: Elucidating Social/Affiliative Mechanisms of Health Behavior Change
Venue: Yale Child Study Center
Invited by: Linda Mayes, MD, Director, Yale Child Study Center
2020
Title: Social Cognitive Ability Could Underlie Pregnancy’s Protective Effect on Cigarette Smoking: Preliminary Support for a Novel Target for Preventive Intervention
Venue: NIDA Poster Session, 127th Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association
Invited by: Will Aklin, PhD, Chief, Clinical Research Grants Branch and Director, Division of Therapeutics and Medical Consequences, National Institute on Drug Abuse, NIH
REPORT OF LOCAL TEACHING AND TRAINING
Formal Teaching of Residents, Clinical Fellows, and Research Fellows
2017 - 22
"Management of Substance Use Disorders in Pregnant Women"
Audience: Psychiatry residents, Women’s Health fellows
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine (NUFSM) Department of Psychiatry
2018 - 22
"Grant Writing Group"
Audience: Research track residents, fellows, junior faculty
NUFSM Department of Psychiatry
Quarterly to monthly
2022
"Research Question to R01"
Audience: Research track residents
NUFSM Department of Psychiatry
Nov 2023
"Innovative Multimethod Study Designs for Studying Complex Behaviors"
Audience: Research track residents
BWH Department of Psychiatry
One hour lecture
Jan 2023
"Innovative Multimethod Study Designs for Studying Complex Behaviors"
Audience: Research track residents
BWH Department of Psychiatry
One hour lecture
2022 -
Supervision and staffing, emergency psychiatry cases, MGH Acute Psychiatry Service
Audience: MGH/McLean psychiatry residents, HMS students
MGH/McLean Psychiatry Residency Program
1.5 hours/week cumulatively across clinical shifts
Local Mentees
2023 -
Franklin King, MD
Instructor, Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital
Career stage: Junior faculty
Mentoring role: Research mentor and sponsor
Accomplishments: Grant application in progress
2023 -
Jad Hilal, MD
PGY-2 Resident, Department of Psychiatry, Brigham and Women’s Hospital
Career stage: Resident
Mentoring role: Research mentor and sponsor
Accomplishments: Submitted an internal grant proposal
Other Mentored Trainees and Faculty
2012 - 19
Nikita Nagpal, MD
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, New York University Grossman School of Medicine
Career stage: Pennsylvania State University Undergraduate Student
Mentoring role: Research mentor
Accomplishments: Coauthored 1 paper / acceptance to Thomas Jefferson University Medical School
2013 - 15
Stephanie Schuette, BA
Graduate student in Clinical Psychology, Duke University
Career stage: Research assistant, Clinical Psychology PhD applicant
Mentoring role: Supervisor, research mentor
Accomplishments: Coauthored 3 papers, Acceptance to PhD program at Duke University
2014 - 17
Michael Y. Sun, MD
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, New York University Langone Medical Center
Career stage: Medical student extern from Dartmouth Medical School
Mentoring role: Supervisor, research mentor
Accomplishments: Coauthored 1 paper; Acceptance to Psychiatry Residency at Duke and Child/Adolescent Psychiatry Fellow MGH/McLean
2015 -
Rebecca L. Newmark, BA
MD-PhD student, University of California San Francisco (UCSF)
Career stage: Research assistant / post-baccalaureate student
Mentoring role: Supervisor, research mentor
Accomplishments: Coauthored 3 papers; Acceptance at MD-PhD program at UCSF
2017 – 20
Ashish Premkumar, MD, PhD
Assistant Professor of Obstetrics & Gynecology, University of Chicago
Career stage: PGY-5 Fellow in Maternal Fetal Medicine
Mentoring role: Research mentor
Accomplishments: Coauthored 1 paper, submitted a grant application, tenure-track faculty position at the University of Chicago
2017 -
Drew Winters, PhD
Research Faculty, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Center
Career stage: Graduate student, Quantitative Psychology, Indiana University
Mentoring role: Research mentor
Accomplishments: Coauthored one paper; received a NIMH funded T32 postdoctoral fellowship in Developmental Psychobiology
2020 -
Leiszle Lapping-Carr, PhD,
Instructor, Department of Psychiatry, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
Career stage: Women's Mental Health Fellow, Junior faculty
Mentoring role: Research mentor
Accomplishments: Coauthored one paper, K23 award (5K23 MD 018092), Research Grant from the Davy Foundation
2021 -
Rachel Level, PhD
Predoctoral Intern, West Penn Hospital, Pittsburgh, PA
Career stage: Graduate student
Mentoring role: Research mentor
Accomplishments: Coauthored 2 papers and 2 posters; defended thesis at Pennsylvania State University
Formal Teaching of Peers (e.g., CME and other continuing education courses)
No presentations below were sponsored by 3rd parties/outside entities.
2016 - 17
Work-Life Balance Workshop
Department of Psychiatry
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
(2) Chicago, IL
Report of Clinical Activities and Innovations
Current Licensure and Certification
2005
Federal DEA Registration (Schedules II, III, IV and V)
2007
Federal DEA Buprenorphine Waiver
2013
Illinois Controlled Substances Registration
2013
Medical License, State of Illinois
2022
Medical License, Commonwealth of Massachusetts
2022
Massachusetts Controlled Substances Registration
Practice Activities
2007-12
Psychiatry Outpatient Clinic
George Washington University Medical Faculty Associates, Washington, DC
0.95 FTE
2007 - 12
Emergency and Inpatient Psychiatry On-Call Coverage
George Washington University Hospital, Washington, DC
No FTE
2013 - 15
Consultation Liaison (C/L) Psychiatry
Northwestern Memorial Hospital and
Prentice Women's Hospital, Chicago, IL
0.70 FTE
2013 - 15
Emergency, C/L & Inpatient Psychiatry On-Call Coverage
Northwestern Memorial Hospital and
Prentice Women's Hospital, Chicago, IL
No FTE
2015 - 20
Emergency, C/L & Inpatient Psychiatry On-Call Coverage
Northwestern Memorial Hospital and
Prentice Women's Hospital, Chicago, IL
0.20 FTE
2021 - 22
Emergency, C/L & Inpatient Psychiatry On-Call Coverage
Northwestern Memorial Hospital and
Prentice Women's Hospital, Chicago, IL
0.15 FTE
2023 -
Acute Psychiatry Service
Massachusetts General Hospital
Emergency Department, Boston, MA
0.50 FTE
Peer-Reviewed Scholarship
Research Investigations
Mentees who coauthored papers are underlined.
1.Moses, A. C., Huang, S. W., & Schepartz, A. (1997). Inhibition of rev•RRE complexation by triplex tethered oligonucleotide probes. Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry, 5(6), 1123-1129.
2.Lieberman, D. Z., & Huang, S. W. (2008). A technological approach to reaching a hidden population of problem drinkers. Psychiatric Services, 59(3), 297-303.
3.Lieberman, D. Z., Massey, S. H., Cardona, V. Q., & Williams, K. P. (2008). Predicting Content Preference: Applying Lessons Learned from the Commercial Web to Therapeutic Software. Cyberpsychology: Journal of Psychosocial Research on Cyberspace, 2(2), article 1.
4.Lieberman, D. Z., & Massey, S. H. (2008). Pathways to change: the effect of a Web application on treatment interest. American Journal on Addictions, 17(4), 265-270.
5.Lieberman, D. Z., Kolodner, G., Massey, S. H., & Williams, K. P. (2009). Antidepressant-induced mania with concomitant mood stabilizer in patients with comorbid substance abuse and bipolar disorder. Journal of Addictive Diseases, 28(4), 348-355.
6.Willenbring, M. L., Massey, S. H., & Gardner, M. B. (2009). Helping patients who drink too much: an evidence-based guide for primary care clinicians. American Family Physician, 80(1), 44-50.
7.Lieberman, D. Z., Massey, S. H., & Goodwin, F. K. (2010). The role of gender in single vs. married individuals with bipolar disorder. Comprehensive Psychiatry, 51(4), 380-385.
8.Massey, S. H., Norris, L., Lausin, M., Nwaneri, C., & Lieberman, D. Z. (2011). Identifying harmful drinking using a single screening question in a psychiatric consultation-liaison population. Psychosomatics, 52(4), 362-366.
9.Massey, S. H., Lieberman, D. Z., Reiss, D., Leve, L. D., Shaw, D. S., & Neiderhiser, J. M. (2011). Association of clinical characteristics and cessation of tobacco, alcohol, and illicit drug use during pregnancy. American Journal on Addictions, 20(2), 143-150.
10.Weisler, R.H., Pandina, G.J., Daly, E.J., Cooper, K., Gassmann-Mayer, C. & 31001074-ATT2001 Study Investigators (2012). Randomized clinical study of a histamine H3 receptor antagonist for the treatment of adults with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder. CNS Drugs, 26(5), 421-434.
11.Massey, S. H., Neiderhiser, J. M., Shaw, D. S., Leve, L. D., Ganiban, J. M., & Reiss, D. (2012). Maternal self-concept as a provider and cessation of substance use during pregnancy. Addictive Behaviors, 37(8), 956–961.
12.Massey, S. H., Compton, M. T. (2013). Psychological differences between smokers who quit during pregnancy and those who do not: a review of observational studies and directions for future research. Nicotine and Tobacco Research, 15(2), 307-319.
13.Massey, S. H., Compton, M. T., & Kaslow, N. J. (2014). Attachment security and problematic substance use in low income, suicidal, African American women. American Journal on Addictions, 23(3), 294-299.
14.Lieberman, D. Z., Cioletti, A., Massey, S. H., Collantes, R. S., & Moore, B. B. (2014). Treatment preferences among problem drinkers in primary care. International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine, 47(3), 231-240.
15.Massey, S. H., Estabrook, C., O’Brien, T. C., Burns, J. L., Pine, D. S., Jacob, S., Cook, E. C., Wakschlag, L. S. (2015). Preliminary evidence for the interaction of the oxytocin receptor gene and face processing in differentiating prenatal smoking patterns. Neuroscience Letters 584, 259-264.
16.Massey, S. H., Bublitz, M. H., Magee, S. R., Salisbury, A., Niaura, R. S., Wakschlag, L. S., Stroud, L. R. (2015). Maternal-Fetal Attachment Differentiates Patterns of Prenatal Smoking and Exposure. Addictive Behaviors 45, 51-56.
17.Bernardini, F. B., Wan, C. R., Crisafio, A., Massey, S. H., Compton, M. T. (2015). Maternal Smoking during Pregnancy and Symptom Severity among Offspring with First Episode Nonaffective Psychosis. Schizophrenia Research 164(1-3):277-278.
18.Estabrook, R., Massey, S. H., Clark, C. A., Burns, J. L., Mustanski, B. S., Cook, E. H., O’Brien, T.C., Makowski, B., Espy, K.A., Wakschlag, L. S. (2016). Separating family-level and direct exposure effects of smoking during pregnancy on offspring externalizing symptoms: bridging the behavior genetic and behavior teratologic divide. Behavior Genetics, 46, 389-402.
19.Massey, S. H., Reiss, D., Neiderhiser, J. M., Leve, L. D., Shaw, D. S., & Ganiban, J. M. (2016). Maternal personality traits associated with patterns of prenatal smoking and exposure: Implications for etiologic and prevention research. Neurotoxicology and Teratology, 53, 48-54.
20.Marceau, K., De Araujo-Greecher, M., Miller, E. S., Massey, S. H., Mayes, L. C., Ganiban, J.M. Reiss, D., Shaw, D. S., Leve, L. D., Neiderhiser, J. M. (2016). The Perinatal Risk Index: Early risks experienced by domestic adoptees in the United States. Plos One, 11(3) e0150486.
21.Massey, S.H., Schuette, S. A., Pournajafi-Nazarloo, H., Wisner, K. L., Carter, C. S. (2016) Interaction of oxytocin level and past depression may predict postpartum depressive symptom severity. Archives of Women’s Mental Health, 33, 316-322.
22.Massey, S. H., Stern, D., Alden, E., Cobia, D. J., Wang, L., Csernansky, J. G., Smith, M. J. (2017). Cortical Thickness of Neural Substrates Supporting Empathy in Individuals with Schizophrenia. Schizophrenia Research, 179, 119 – 124.
23.Massey, S. H., Backes, K. A., & Schuette, S. A. (2016). Plasma oxytocin concentration and depressive symptoms: a review of current evidence and directions for future research. Depression and Anxiety, 33(4), 316-322.
24.Massey, S.H., Hatcher, A. E., Clark, C. A., Burns, J. L., Pine, D. S., Skol, A. D., Mroczek, D. K., Espy, K. A., Goldman, D., Cook, E. and Wakschlag, L. S. (2017). Does MAOA increase susceptibility to prenatal stress in young children? Neurotoxicology and Teratology, 61, 82-91.
25.Massey, S. H., Decety, J., Wisner, K. L., & Wakschlag, L. S. (2017). Specification of change mechanisms in pregnant smokers for malleable target identification: A novel approach to a tenacious public health problem. Frontiers in Public Health, 5, 239.
26.Schuette, S. A., Kominiarek, M. A., Wisner, K. L., & Massey, S. H. (2018). Pre-pregnancy Body Mass Index and Third-Trimester Depressive Symptoms in a Healthy Privately Insured Sample. American Journal of Perinatology Reports, 8(1), e13.
27.Massey, S. H., Newmark, R. L., & Wakschlag, L. S. (2018). Explicating the role of empathic processes in substance use disorders: A conceptual framework and research agenda. Drug and Alcohol Review, 37(3), 316-332.
28.Massey, S. H., Clark, C. A. C., Burns, J. L., Mroczek, D. K., Espy, K. A., Wakschlag, L. S. (2018) Positive parenting behaviors in women who spontaneously quit smoking during pregnancy: Clues to putative targets for preventive interventions. Neurotoxicology and Teratology 67:18-24.
29.Massey, S. H. & Wisner, K.L. (2018). Understanding Pregnancy’s Protective Effect on Drug Use Within a Developmental Framework. American Journal of Psychiatry 175(3):286-287.
30.Clark, C. A. C., Massey, S. H., Wiebe, S. A., Espy, K. A., & Wakschlag, L. S. (2019). Does early maternal responsiveness buffer prenatal tobacco exposure effects on young children's behavioral disinhibition? Development and Psychopathology, 31(4), 1285–1298.
31.Newmark, R.L., Zaydlin, M.L., Yang, A., Kuchenrither, K., Wisner, K.L. and Massey, S.H. (2019). Obstetric patients’ perspectives on functional magnetic neuroimaging research in pregnant women. Archives of Women's Mental Health, 22(1), pp.115-118.
32.Massey, S. H., Mroczek, D. K., Reiss, D., Miller, E. S., Jakubowski, J. A., Graham, E. K., Shisler, S. M., McCallum, M., Huestis, M.A., Ganiban, J. M., Shaw, D.S., Leve, L. D., Eiden, R. D., Stroud, L. R., Neiderhiser, J.M. (2018). Additive drug-specific and sex-specific risks associated with co-use of marijuana and tobacco during pregnancy: Evidence from 3 recent developmental cohorts (2003–2015). Neurotoxicology and Teratology, 68, 97-106.
33.Massey, S. H., Clark, C. A. C., Sun, M. Y., Burns, J. L., Mroczek, D. K., Espy, K. A., & Wakschlag, L. S. (2020). Dimension- and context-specific expression of preschoolers' disruptive behaviors associated with prenatal tobacco exposure. Neurotoxicology and Teratology, 81, 106915.
34.Nagpal N., Ramos A.M., Hajal, N., Massey, S..H, Leve, L.D., Shaw, D.S., Ganiban, J..M, Reiss, D., Neiderhiser, J.M (2021). Psychopathology Symptoms are Associated with Prenatal Health Practices in Pregnant Women with Heavy Smoking Levels. Maternal and Child Health Journal. Feb;25(2):330-337.
35.Massey, S.H., Allen, N.B., Pool, L.R., Miller, E.S., Pouppirt, N.R., Barch, D.M., Luby, J., Perlman, S.B., Rogers, C.E., Smyser, C.D. and Wakschlag, L.S. (2021). Impact of prenatal exposure characterization on early risk detection: Methodologic insights for the HEALthy Brain and Child Development (HBCD) study. Neurotoxicology and Teratology, 88, p.107035.
36.Massey, S. H., Estabrook, R., Lapping-Carr, L., Newmark, R. L., Decety, J., Wisner, K. L., & Wakschlag, L. S. (2022). Are empathic processes mechanisms of pregnancy's protective effect on smoking? Identification of a novel target for preventive intervention. Social Science & Medicine, 305, 115071.
37.Massey, S. H., Pool, L. R., Estabrook, R., Level, R., Shisler, S. M., Stacks, A. M., Espy, K.A., Neiderhiser, J.M., Wakschlag, L.S., Eiden R.D., Allen, N. B. (2022). Within person decline in smoking is observable prior to pregnancy awareness: Evidence across two independent observational cohorts. Addiction Biology, 27(6): e13245.
38.Winters, D.E., Massey, S.H., Sakai, J.T. (2023). Adolescent Substance Use Outcomes in Response to Social Consequences of Use: The Role of Empathy. Journal of Drug Issues, 00220426231159303.
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