Division of Intramural Research
Section on Affective Neuroscience and Pain
Lauren Y. Atlas, Ph.D., leads the Section on Affective Neuroscience and Pain in the NCCIH Intramural Research Program. The lab’s work focuses on characterizing the psychological and neural mechanisms by which expectations and other cognitive and affective factors influence pain, emotional experience, and clinical outcomes. Our approach is multimodal: We integrate experimental psychology, neuroimaging, psychophysiology, computational approaches, and other interventions to understand how psychological and contextual factors influence subjective experience. Current projects focus on dissociating components of expectancy (e.g., instructions vs. conditioning; stimulus vs. treatment expectancies), relating pain with other types of hedonic affective responses, and understanding social influences on pain (e.g., patient-provider interactions; health disparities). Long-term goals include revealing how specific features of the clinical context and interpersonal aspects influence patient outcomes, as well as determining whether expectancy-based processing is altered in specific patient populations.
Lab Chief
Dr. Atlas received her B.A. in psychology from the University of Chicago in 2003, and her Ph.D. in psychology in 2011 from Columbia University, where she studied under the mentorship of Dr. Tor D. Wager. She completed a postdoctoral fellowship with Dr. Elizabeth Phelps at New York University’s Department of Psychology in 2014. Dr. Atlas joined NCCIH in 2014 as a tenure-track clinical investigator and chief of the Section on Affective Neuroscience and Pain. She became a tenured senior investigator in 2023. She holds joint appointments with the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). Her laboratory uses a multimodal approach to investigate how expectations and learning influence pain and emotion, and how these factors influence clinical outcomes.
Lab Members
Jolyna Chiangong, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Jolyna Chiangong is a postbaccalaureate Intramural Research Training Award (IRTA) research fellow and Office of Intramural Training and Education Postbac Enrichment Program (OITE-PEP) Scholar investigating biopsychosocial influences on pain and pain assessment through studying facial expressions. She obtained her B.S. in biology, health, and society and gender and health from the University of Michigan. Under the mentorship of Dr. Clayton Shuman, she researched perinatal experiences of birthing patients during and following the COVID-19 pandemic and maternal health disparities. She also obtained her M.S. in biotechnology from Johns Hopkins University, where, under the mentorship of Dr. Wendy Bennett, she explored technology-based interventions to limit gestational diabetes and obesity. At the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, she worked in the lab of Dr. Faustine Williams and explored the intersections between psychosocial factors and immigrant, racial/ethnic minority, and gender minority mental health. In the Atlas lab, Jolyna hopes to investigate biopsychosocial influences on pain perception and expressions and their influence on physician-patient relationships in relation to pain treatment. She can be contacted at jolyna.chiangong@nih.gov.
Jasdeep Kang, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Jasdeep Kang is a postbaccalaureate Intramural Research Training Award (IRTA) fellow who is currently investigating social influences of pain assessment through studying facial expression. In 2022, Jasdeep received his B.S. in neuroscience with a specialization in behavioral systems from Ohio State University (OSU) in Columbus, Ohio. Prior to joining NCCIH, Jasdeep conducted research in the OSU Cognitive and Systematic Musicology Lab with Dr. Daniel Shanahan. His projects at OSU were focused on investigating how music is processed into memory by the brain. Projects that Jasdeep worked on have been presented at the Society for Music Perception and Cognition in Portland, Oregon as well as the International Conference on Music Perception and Cognition in Tokyo, Japan. Jasdeep is planning to use his experience in the Atlas lab to better understand the complexity behind pain as a physician. Outside of research, you can find Jasdeep engaged in a variety of different hobbies including, but certainly not limited to, rock climbing, running, playing music, baking bread, and brewing coffee. Jasdeep can be reached at jasdeep.kang@nih.gov.
Ruth Mosunmade, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Ruth Mosunmade is a postbaccalaureate Intramural Research Training Award (IRTA) research fellow who is currently investigating facial recognition of pain and the social influences on pain and pain assessment. In 2020, Ruth received her B.A., with honors, from Amherst College in biochemistry and biophysics. Throughout the duration of her undergraduate career, she worked in the Carter Biophysics laboratory under Professor Ashley Carter. With the guidance of Professor Carter, she completed a thesis, “Unraveling the Histone Replacement Process in Sperm,” researching the biophysical properties of the protamine-histone replacement process during spermatogenesis. Her progress led her to present her work during the American Physical Society and Biophysical Society conference poster sessions in 2019 and 2020. While Ruth is pursuing a career as an orthopedic surgeon, her career goals involve using her work in the Atlas lab to better perceive pain in her patients. She can be reached at ruth.mosunmade@nih.gov.
Qingbao Yu, Ph.D., Senior MRI Data Analyst
Qingbao Yu, Ph.D., is a senior MRI data analyst. He performs analyses on pain-related fMRI data. Dr. Yu received his B.A. in physics as well as his Ph.D. in biomedical engineering (neuroinformatics) from Dalian University of Technology, Dalian, China. While obtaining his Ph.D., Dr. Yu worked under Dr. Yiyuan Tang, where he performed fMRI and EEG studies to investigate functional brain connectivity during Chinese language tasks and gender differences in mental rotation tasks. Dr. Yu’s postdoctoral and research scientist research was conducted in Dr. Vince Calhoun’s laboratory at the Mind Research Network, Albuquerque, New Mexico, where he combined ICA and graph theory–based analysis to examine brain connectivity in patients with schizophrenia. In May 2018, Dr. Yu joined the Affective Neuroscience and Pain lab at NCCIH to work with Dr. Lauren Atlas. View Dr. Yu's publications.
Yili Zhao, Ph.D., Visiting Postdoctoral Fellow
Yili Zhao, Ph.D., is a visiting postdoctoral fellow who is currently investigating the neural mechanisms underlying the learning process of pain and other negative emotions. Dr. Zhao received her M.Sc. in psychology from Chinese Academy of Sciences under the mentorship of Dr. Wencai Zhang, where she studied the placebo effects on pain, noise, and other unpleasant experiences. She then moved to Europe and received her Ph.D. in natural sciences (psychology) from University of Vienna under the mentorship of Dr. Claus Lamm, where her research was focused on neural mechanisms of empathy for pain and emotion identifications on pain and disgust. Specifically, she uses a wide range of research approaches including behavioral measures, univariate and multi-voxel fMRI analysis, computational modeling, and psychopharmacological administration. She can be reached at yili.zhao@nih.gov.
Lab Alumni
Titilola Akintola, Ph.D., Visiting Postdoctoral Fellow
Lola Akintola was a visiting postdoctoral fellow who investigated the mechanisms of expectation effects on pain using neuroimaging and behavioral approaches. Lola received her B.Sc. in biology from Morgan State University and her Ph.D. in toxicology from the University of Maryland, Baltimore, where she studied under the mentorship of Dr. Luana Colloca.
Carolyn Amir, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Carolyn Amir served as a postbac IRTA research fellow, studying the effects of psychological processes on pain perception in healthy adults.
Nicole Antkiewicz, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Nicole Antkiewicz served as a postbac IRTA who investigated the effects of bias on pain perception and expression in healthy adults.
Lauren Banker, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Lauren is now a Ph.D. student in the applied physiology and kinesiology at the University of Florida.
Sabrina Barhoum, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Sabrina Barhoum was a postbac IRTA research fellow in the Section on Affective Neuroscience and Pain.
Jama Brookes, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Jama Brookes is a postbac IRTA research fellow who is currently assisting in understanding biopsychosocial processes in pain perception and expressions. She will create and analyze psychophysiological stimuli to study health disparities in pain. Jama received a B.S. in psychology with a minor in medical humanities from Appalachian State University. While completing her undergraduate degree, Jama worked under three research professors in the departments of biochemistry, psychology, and economics. She researched P450 modulation, moral aspects of blame, and the role of sleep in monetary decision making, respectively. While at NIH, she hopes to further investigate the social and cultural factors that influence the physician-patient relationship in pain treatment. Outside of lab, Jama enjoys dancing, hiking, whitewater rafting, and watercolor painting. She can be contacted at jama.brookes@nih.gov.
Molly Cosgrove, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Molly Cosgrove was a postbac IRTA fellow in the Section on Affective Neuroscience and Pain.
Troy Dildine, Predoctoral IRTA Fellow
Troy Dildine was a predoctoral IRTA fellow through the Graduate Partnership Program and had been pursuing a Ph.D. in medicine between the National Institutes of Health and Karolinska Institutet.
Maya Joshi Delity, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Maya Joshi Delity was a postbac IRTA research fellow who investigated psychological processes on chronic pain, as well as mechanisms of expectation effects on pain. Maya received her B.A. in psychology from Boston University, where she studied under the mentorship of Dr. Nicholas Wagner in the Biobehavioral and Social Emotional Lab.
Elena Do, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Elena Do was a postbac IRTA research fellow who investigated social discrimination on pain.
Shara Grant, Ph.D., Postdoctoral Fellow
Inseon Lee, Ph.D., Visiting Postdoctoral Fellow
Inseon Lee is now faculty at Kyung Hee University.
View Dr. Lee's publications
Robert Linton III, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Robert Linton III, was postbac IRTA.
Dominik Mischkowski, Ph.D., Postdoctoral Fellow
Dominik Mischkowski is now an assistant professor at Ohio University.
Margaret Rose-McCandlish, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Margaret Rose-McCandlish was a postbac IRTA research fellow who studied the effects of psychological processes on pain perception and expression in healthy adults.
Elizabeth Necka, Ph.D., Postdoctoral Fellow
Elizabeth Necka is now an American Association for the Advancement of Science fellow at the National Institute of Mental Health.
View Dr. Necka's publications
Olga Oretsky, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Esther Palacios-Barrios, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Esther Palacios-Barrios is now a Ph.D. student in clinical psychology at the University of Pittsburgh.
Julie Parsons, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Julie Parsons was a postbac IRTA fellow.
Chrissy Sandman
Chrissy Sandman is now a Ph.D. student in clinical psychology at the University of California, Los Angeles. (no image available)
Rachel Weger, Postbaccalaureate IRTA Fellow
Rachel Weger was a postbac IRTA research fellow. She gathered and analyzed psychophysiologial measures and participant self-report in healthy adults to study health disparities in pain.
Julio Yanes, Ph.D., Postdoctoral IRTA Fellow
Julio Yanes, Ph.D., was a postdoctoral IRTA fellow.
View Dr. Yanes's publications
(from left): Bethany Sauls, summer student; Bethany Leidl, summer student; Caitlin Stavish, special volunteer; Lauren Banker, summer student
Publications
- Lossio-Ventura JA, Weger R, Lee AY, Guinee EP, Chung J, Atlas L, et al. A comparison of ChatGPT and fine-tuned Open Pre-Trained Transformers (OPT) against widely used sentiment analysis tools: sentiment analysis of COVID-19 survey data. JMIR Mental Health. 2024:11:e50150.
- Lossio-Ventura A, Weger R, Lee AY, Guinee E, Chung J, Atlas LY, Linos E, Pereira F. Sentiment analysis of COVID-19 survey data: a comparison of ChatGPT and fine-tuned OPT against widely used sentiment analysis tools. Journal of Medical Internet Research—Mental Health. 2023 (In press).
- Atlas LY. Computational psychiatry and the placebo effect in psychosis. Biological Psychiatry: Global Open Science. 2023;3(4):585-586.
- Motzkin J, Hiser J, Carroll I, Wolf R, Koenigs M*, Atlas LY*. Human ventromedial prefrontal cortex lesions enhance expectation-related pain modulation. Cortex. 2023;166:188-206. *Equal authorship contributions.
- Dildine TC, Amir CM, Parsons J, and Atlas LY. How pain-related facial expressions are evaluated in relation to gender, race, and emotion. Affective Science. 2023;4(2):350-369.
- Weger R, Lossio-Ventura J-A, Rose-McCandlish M, Shaw J, Sinclair S, Pereira F, Chung J, Atlas LY. Trends in language use during the COVID-19 pandemic and relationship between language use and mental health: text analysis based on free responses from a longitudinal study. JMIR Mental Health. 2023;10:e40899.
- Atlas LY. How instructions, learning, and expectations shape pain and neurobiological responses. Annual Review of Neuroscience. 2023;46:167-189.
- Atlas LY, Dildine TC, Palacios-Barrios EE, Yu Q, Reynolds RC, Banker LA, Grant SS, Pine DS. Instructions and experiential learning have similar impacts on pain and pain-related brain responses but produce dissociations in value-based reversal learning. eLife. 2022;11:e73353.
- Atlas LY, Sandman CF, Phelps EA. Rating expectations can slow aversive learning. Psychophysiology. 2021 Nov 27 [epub ahead of print].
- Abend R, Ruiz SG, Bajaj MA, Harrewijn A, Linke JO, Atlas LY, Pine DS. Threat imminence reveals distinct links among anxiety, anticipatory physiological response, and cortical-subcortical intrinsic functional connectivity. Neurobiology of Stress. 2022;16:100428.
- Han X, Ashar YK, Kragel P, Petre B, Schelkun V, Atlas LY, Chang LJ, Jepma M, Koban L, Losin EAR, Roy M, Woo C-W, Wager TD. Effect size and test-retest reliability of the fMRI-based neurologic pain signature. Neuroimage. 2021;247:118844.
- Atlas LY. A social affective neuroscience lens on placebo analgesia. Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 2020;25(11):992-1005.
- Lebedev AV, Acar K, Garzón B, Almeida R, Råback J, Åberg A, Martinsson S, Olsson A, Martinsson S, Olsson A, Louzolo A, Pärnamets P, Lövden M, Atlas LY, Ingvar M, Petrovic P. Psychedelic drug use and schizotypy in young adults. Scientific Reports, 2021;11(1):15058.
- Necka EA, Amir C, Dildine TC, Atlas LY. Expectations about pain and analgesic treatment are shaped by medical providers’ facial appearances: evidence from five online clinical simulation experiments. Social Science & Medicine. 2021;281:114091.
- Mischkowski D, Stavish CM, Palacios-Barrios EE, Banker LA, Dildine TC, Atlas LY. Dispositional mindfulness and acute heat pain: comparing stimulus-evoked pain with summary pain assessment. Psychosomatic Medicine. 2021;83(6):539-548.
- Abend R, Bajaj MA, Harrewijn A, Matsumoto C, Michalska KJ, Necka E, Palacios-Barrios EE, Liebenluft E, Atlas LY, Pine DS. Threat-anticipatory psychophysiological response is enhanced in pediatric anxiety and correlates with prefrontal cortex structure. Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience. 2021;46(2):E212-E221.
- Zunhammer M, Spisák T, Wager TD, Bingel U, Placebo Imaging Consortium. Meta-analysis of neural systems underlying placebo analgesia from individual participant fMRI data. Nature communications. 2021;12(1):1391. (Member of Placebo Imaging Consortium).
- Evers AWM, Colloca L, Blease C, Gaab J, Jensen KB, Atlas LY, et al. “Consensus on placebo and nocebo effects connects science and practice: reply to “Questioning the consensus on placebo and nocebo effects”. Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics. 2021;90(3):213-214. (Pain Research Forum Editors’ Pick).
- Dildine TC, Necka EA, Atlas LY. Confidence in subjective pain is predicted by reaction time during decision making. Scientific Reports. 2020;10(1):21373.
- Gruber J, Mendle J, Lindquist KA, Schmader T, Clark LA, Bliss-Moreau E, Akintola M, Atlas LY, et al. The future of women in psychological science. Perspectives on Psychological Science.
- Leknes S, Atlas LY. Flawed methodology undermines conclusions about opioid-induced pleasure: implications for psychopharmacology. British Journal of Anesthesia. 2020;124(3):e29-e33.
- Geuter S, Roy M, Reynolds Losin EA, Atlas LY, Schmidt L, Krishnan A, Koban L, Wager TD, Lindquist MA. Multiple brain networks mediating stimulus-pain relationships in humans. Cerebral Cortex. 2020;30(7):4204-4219.
- Rahnev D, Desender K, Lee ALF, Adler WT, Aguilar-lleyda D, Akdogan B, Arbuzova P, Atlas LY, et al. The confidence database. Nature Human Behaviour. 2020;4:317-325.
- Zheng W, Woo CW, Yao Z, Goldstein P, Atlas LY, Roy M, Schmidt L, Krishnan A, Jepma M, Hu B, Wager TD. Pain-evoked reorganization in functional brain networks. Cerebral Cortex. 2020;30(5):2804-2822.
- Lee IS, Necka EA, Atlas LY. Distinguishing pain from nociception, salience, and arousal: how autonomic nervous system activity can improve neuroimaging tests of specificity. Neuroimage. 2020;204:116254.
- Atlas LY, Palacios-Barrios E, Dildine TC, et al. (In press). Anxious individuals update expectations and reported pain in response to instructions during aversive reversal learning, but maintain sustained arousal for initial threats. Journal of Abnormal Psychology.
- Necka EA, Lee IS, Kucyi A, Cheng JC, Yu Q, Atlas LY. Applications of dynamic functional connectivity to pain and its modulation. Pain Reports. 2019;4(4):e752.
- Dildine TC, Atlas LY. The need for diversity in research on facial expressions of pain. Pain. 2019;160(8):1901-1902.
- Mischkowski D, Atlas LY. Reply to Zaman et al. Pain. 2019;160(6):1485-1486.
- Mischkowski D, Palacios-Barrios E, Banker LA, Dildine TC, Atlas LY. Pain or nociception? Subjective experience mediates the effects of heat on autonomic responses–corrected and republished. Pain. 2019;160(6):1469-1481.
- Atlas LY. How instructions shape aversive learning: higher order knowledge, reversal learning, and the role of the amygdala. Current Opinions in Behavioral Sciences. 2019;26:121-129.
- Atlas LY, Doll BB, Li J, Daw ND, Phelps EA. How instructed knowledge shapes adaptive learning. PsyArXiv. 2018;doi:10.31234/osf.io/f4sh9.
- Atlas LY, al’Absi M. The neuroscience of pain: biobehavioral, developmental, and psychosocial mechanisms relevant to intervention targets. Psychosomatic Medicine. 2018;80(9):788-790.
- Case LK, Laubacher CM, Richards EA, Grossman M, Atlas LY, Parker S, Bushnell MC. Is placebo analgesia for heat pain a sensory effect? An exploratory study on minimizing the influence of response bias. Neurobiology of Pain. 2019;5:100023.
- Zunhammer M, Bingel U, Wager TD, Atlas LY, et al. Placebo effects on the neurologic pain signature: a meta-analysis of individual participant functional magnetic resonance imaging data. JAMA Neurology. 2018;75(11):1321-1330.
- Michalska KJ, Feldman JS, Abend R, Gold AL, Dildine TC, Palacios-Barrios EE, Leibenluft E, Towbin KE, Pine DS, Atlas LY. Anticipatory effects on perceived pain: associations with development and anxiety. Psychosomatic Medicine. 2018;80(9):853-860.
- Evers AWM, Colloca L, Blease C, Klinger R, Annoni M, Atlas LY, et al. Implications of placebo and nocebo effects for clinical practice: expert consensus. Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics. 2018;87(4):204-210.
- Moayedi M, Salomons TV, Atlas LY. Pain neuroimaging in humans: a primer for beginners and non-imagers. Journal of Pain. 2018;19(9):961.e1-961.e21.
- Atlas LY, Phelps EA. Prepared stimuli enhance aversive learning without weakening the impact of verbal instructions. Learning & Memory. 2018;25(2):100-104.
- Necka EA, Atlas LY. The role of social and interpersonal factors in placebo analgesia. In: Colloca L, ed. Neurobiology of the Placebo Effect, Part I. International Review of Neurobiology. Vol. 138. Cambridge, MA: Academic Press; 2018:161-179.
- Atlas LY. How are emotions regulated by context and cognition? The role of context and cognition in the placebo effect. In: Fox AS, Lapate RC, Shackman AJ, et al, eds. The Nature of Emotion. Fundamental Questions. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 2018:158-161.
- Woo C-W, Schmidt L, Krishnan A, Jepma M, Roy M, Lindquist M, Atlas LY, Wager TD. Quantifying cerebral contributions to pain beyond nociception. Nature Communications. 2017;8:14211.
- Atlas LY, Doll BB, Li J, Daw NE, Phelps EA. Instructed knowledge shapes feedback-driven aversive learning in striatum and orbitofrontal cortex, but not the amygdala. eLife. 2016;5:e15192.
- Wager TD, Atlas LY. The neuroscience of placebo effects: connecting context, learning, and health. Nature Reviews Neuroscience. 2015;16:403-418.
- Robinson LF*, Atlas LY*, Wager TD. Dynamic functional connectivity using State-based Dynamic Community Structure: method and application to opioid analgesia. Neuroimage. 2015;108:274-291. *Equal authorship contributions.
- Atlas LY, Wager TD. A meta-analysis of brain mechanisms of placebo analgesia: consistent findings and unanswered questions. In: Benedetti F, Enck P, Frisaldi E, Schedlowski M, eds. Handbook of Experimental Pharmacology—Placebo. 2014;225:37-69.
- Atlas LY, Lindquist MA, Bolger N, et al. Brain mediators of the effects of noxious heat on pain. Pain. 2014;155(8):1632-1648.
- Atlas LY, Wielgosz J, Whittington RA, et al. Specifying the non-specific factors underlying opioid analgesia: expectancy, attention, and affect. Psychopharmacology. 2014;231(5):813-823.
See the full list of publications for Lauren Y. Atlas, Ph.D. on PubMed.