Michelle Craske to share how research can inform anxiety and depression treatment

Director of the UCLA Anxiety and Depression Research Center will deliver the 128th Faculty Research Lecture at UCLA on Feb. 19
Michelle Craske
Michelle Craske and colleagues are studying how to integrate virtual reality into treatment for anxiety and depression.

For more than three decades, Michelle Craske has been trying to understand what makes some people prone to anxiety and depression. She's studied what biomarkers, behaviors and thinking patterns contribute to these conditions, and how to use that knowledge to develop better treatments.

At the 128th Faculty Research Lecture, Craske, distinguished professor of psychology in the UCLA College, will describe some of her findings and talk about how virtual reality has begun playing a role in changing patients' mindsets for the better. The talk will be held at 3 p.m. on Wednesdsay, Feb. 19.

"Anxiety and depression are dramatically increasing in prevalence," said Craske, who is also a professor of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and holder of the Joanne and George Miller and Family Endowed Chair. "We need to understand the engine that's driving these conditions so we can improve our treatments."

In the U.S., only about half of people with symptoms of anxiety or depression receive treatment. And when they do get help, treatments are only effective about half the time, said Craske, also an executive committee member for the UCLA Depression Grand Challenge, a campus-wide initiative that aims to cut the global burden of depression in half by 2050.

Much of Craske's work on anxiety centers on the idea that people prone to anxiety disorders, which affect an estimated 18% of U.S. adults each year, anticipate threat more often than others and have difficulty inhibiting this fear. Most people feel fearful when faced with a real threat — say, a bear in front of us in the woods. But people most at risk for anxiety disorders are more likely to respond to an uncertain situation — feeling afraid in the woods even when there's no bear, for instance.

The challenge for clinicians like Craske is to decrease this anticipation of threat. Craske uses a technique known as exposure therapy, in which a person is exposed to a situation or setting that makes them anxious, in an attempt to train their brain that it's safe. Craske utilizes prediction error learning to explain the effects of exposure therapy and attempts to optimize such learning. The greater the element of surprise, the more the learning sticks.

"We want to design a treatment where a person says, 'Oh, I was wrong! I really expected this to be unmanageable or even risky and it wasn’t at all,'" Craske said.

Craske's research aims to make people with depression — or those prone to depression — more motivated to work toward and to savor rewards. This "reward sensitivity" is often dampened by depression and Craske thinks it's an avenue for potential treatments to target. For example, in her studies of the effects of kindness and compassion on depression, she has found that training people how to more regularly engage in acts of kindness can ease their symptoms.

Craske and colleagues also are studying how to integrate virtual reality into treatment for anxiety and depression.

"We use virtual reality to help people face the situations they fear and avoid, and at other times we use virtual reality to increase their capacity for positive emotions," she said. "By immersing themselves in positive scenes we can teach them how to anticipate and savor rewarding events and then transfer that to real life."

In her talk, titled "Anxiety and Depression: Risk Factors and Treatment," Craske wants to convey a sense of her scientific approach, which builds off her background as a clinical psychologist to improve psychotherapies. It will take many different perspectives, however, to solve anxiety and depression, she said. In her role with the Depression Grand Challenge, she helps build collaborations between researchers like herself and those that study psychological diseases from a genetic, molecular or neurological point of view.

Craske looks forward to presenting her research, and hopes the audience comes away from her lecture feeling hopeful about the progress that science is making on anxiety and depression.

"I am deeply honored to have been selected to give this lecture which represents the true pinnacle of my career at UCLA," Craske said.

The Faculty Research Lecture — a UCLA tradition since 1925 — is free and open to the public and will be held at 3 p.m. on Feb. 19 in the Schoenberg Music Building. Please RSVP here if you'd like to attend.

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