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TingTing Liu, Ph.D.

TingTing Liu, Ph.D.

Position

Research Fellow, Technology and Translational Research Unit

Contact

Biomedical Research Center
251 Bayview Blvd.
Suite 200
Baltimore, MD 21224

Email: tingting.liu@nih.gov

Education

Ph.D. - Psychology, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor, MI

Graduate Certificate - Data Science - University of Michigan - Ann Arbor, MI

M.Sc. - Psychology - University of Michigan - Ann Arbor. MI

M.Ed. - Psychology - Renmin University of China - Beijing, China

B.Eng. - Computer Science and Technology - Sichuan University - Chengdu, China

Research Interests

Dr. Liu’s research is aimed to understand the social motivation and influence behind decision-making and mental health. She joined theTechnology and Translational Research Unit in Nov 2020 under the supervision of Dr. Brenda Curtis. Dr. Liu has an interdisciplinary education background in psychology, neuroscience, data science, and computer science, which makes her research optimally incorporates methodologies across disciplinaries, including data science (e.g., machine learning, smartphone-based digital phenotyping), psychology (e.g., survey and experiments), and neuroimaging (e.g., fMRI). Her current focus is to larvage the innovative techniques from big data and natural language processing to predict motivational, social, and emotional mechanisms behind mental health distress, decision-making in health, alcohol/substance abuse, and consumption. Her research also tries to facilitate translational and practical suggestions on clinical intervention to improve mental health assessment and treatment of substance abuse.

Google Scholar

Selected Publications

2021

Liu, Tingting; Ackerman, Joshua M.; Preston, Stephanie D.

Dissociating compulsive washing and hoarding tendencies through differences in comorbidities and the content of concerns Journal Article

In: Journal of Behavioral and Cognitive Therapy, 2021, ISSN: 2589-9791.

Abstract | Links

@article{LIU2021,
title = {Dissociating compulsive washing and hoarding tendencies through differences in comorbidities and the content of concerns},
author = {Tingting Liu and Joshua M. Ackerman and Stephanie D. Preston},
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589979121000287},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbct.2021.05.003},
issn = {2589-9791},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-05-01},
journal = {Journal of Behavioral and Cognitive Therapy},
abstract = {Clinical compulsive washing and hoarding are intercorrelated and share comorbidities even though they are distinct and appear to manifest through opposing extremes of cleanliness and disorder (respectively). We attempted to resolve this paradox by testing five hypotheses in online, non-clinical samples (Nstudy 1=123, Nstudy 2=177, Nstudy 3=217). We replicated the intercorrelation of washing and hoarding tendencies in all studies, despite observing non-clinical individual differences. Both washing and hoarding were associated with anxiety, depression, and fears of social rejection and failure, but they were also distinguishable. Compulsive washing was associated with greater anxiety, disgust, perceptions of infection vulnerability, and the desire to organize a cluttered space, whereas hoarding was associated with reduced concerns about germs and full or cluttered spaces and higher concerns about assault, threats to safety, and insects. A third study tested and confirmed the hypothesis that washing and hoarding may be related because they are adaptive in combination during stressful conditions, like a global pandemic. During COVID-19, washing and hoarding tendencies were even more strongly interrelated, and disease-avoidant behaviors like wearing a mask and avoiding people increased with washing tendencies but decreased with hoarding tendencies. Overlapping psychopathological states can be distinguished even in non-clinical samples through psychopathological profiles and the content of concerns---that shift with one's context. Treatment may benefit from not only working to cease undesirable behaviors but also from ameliorating root fears and anxieties that are dissociable by condition and individual but not always linked to the behavioral expression.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}

Close

Clinical compulsive washing and hoarding are intercorrelated and share comorbidities even though they are distinct and appear to manifest through opposing extremes of cleanliness and disorder (respectively). We attempted to resolve this paradox by testing five hypotheses in online, non-clinical samples (Nstudy 1=123, Nstudy 2=177, Nstudy 3=217). We replicated the intercorrelation of washing and hoarding tendencies in all studies, despite observing non-clinical individual differences. Both washing and hoarding were associated with anxiety, depression, and fears of social rejection and failure, but they were also distinguishable. Compulsive washing was associated with greater anxiety, disgust, perceptions of infection vulnerability, and the desire to organize a cluttered space, whereas hoarding was associated with reduced concerns about germs and full or cluttered spaces and higher concerns about assault, threats to safety, and insects. A third study tested and confirmed the hypothesis that washing and hoarding may be related because they are adaptive in combination during stressful conditions, like a global pandemic. During COVID-19, washing and hoarding tendencies were even more strongly interrelated, and disease-avoidant behaviors like wearing a mask and avoiding people increased with washing tendencies but decreased with hoarding tendencies. Overlapping psychopathological states can be distinguished even in non-clinical samples through psychopathological profiles and the content of concerns---that shift with one's context. Treatment may benefit from not only working to cease undesirable behaviors but also from ameliorating root fears and anxieties that are dissociable by condition and individual but not always linked to the behavioral expression.

Close

  • https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589979121000287
  • doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbct.2021.05.003

Close

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