Annmarie MacNamara
  • Associate Professor
Research Areas
  • Affective Science
  • Clinical
  • Neuroscience

Research Interests

Emotions convey important information about events and people in our environment. They motivate us and are essential to survival (e.g., fear motivates a fight or flight response). However, when an emotional response is not well-matched to the situation (e.g., the sound of a car backfiring elicits fear), it ceases to be adaptive, and may hinder a person’s ability to function effectively in society. People with anxiety and depression struggle with emotional responses more than others. Why is this and how can we best help these individuals?

Work in the Multimethod Affect and Cognition (MAC) lab uses brain and psychophysiological measures such as event-related potentials (ERPs), functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), eyeblink startle and skin conductance response to investigate emotions in psychiatric health and disease. One aim of this work to characterize the parameters of emotional response and the cognitive factors that can affect this in healthy individuals. Another aim of this work is to better understand how these factors go awry in psychiatric disorders. The long-term goal of this research is to reduce the cost and suffering associated with emotional disorders (e.g., anxiety, depression) by improving diagnosis and guiding new treatments.

Affiliated Research Cluster

Neuroscience. Emotions in psychiatric health and disease; cognitive factors; neuroimaging and psychophysiology in humans.
Affective Science. Affect and cognition; psychophysical measures of emotional response to health and disease.

Office Hours: Please email

Accepting Students for 2024-2025?: Yes

Memberships:

Institute for Neuroscience

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

Selected Publications

    • Bauer, E. A., Wilson, K. A., Phan, K. L., Shankman, S. A. & MacNamara, A. (in press). An fMRI-EEG Profile Underlying Comorbidity Load and Prospective Increases in Dysphoria in a Focal Fear Sample. Biological Psychiatry.

    • MacNamara, A., Joyner, K. & Klawohn, J. (2022). Event-related potential studies of emotion regulation: A review of recent progress and future directions. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 176: 73-88.

    • Cheng, Y., Jackson, T. B. & MacNamara, A. (2022). Modulation of threat extinction by working memory load: An event-related potential study. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 150: 104031.

    • Bauer, E. A. & MacNamara, A. (2021). Comorbid Anxiety and Depression: Opposing Effects on the Electrocortical Processing of Negative Imagery in a Focal Fear Sample. Depression and Anxiety, 38(7): 690-699.

    • Wilson, K. A. & MacNamara, A. (2021). Savor the moment: willful increase in positive emotion and the persistence of this effect across time. Psychophysiology, 58(3): e13606.

    • Imburgio, M. J., Banica, I., Hill, K. E., Weinberg, A., Foti, D. & MacNamara, A. (2020). Establishing norms for error-related brain activity among young adults. Neuroimage, 213, Article 116694.