Leah H. Somerville | |
Workplaces: | Harvard University |
Alma Mater: | University of Wisconsin–Madison Dartmouth College |
Thesis Title: | Physiological and neural mechanisms of anxiety, negativity, and threat. |
Thesis Url: | http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/939402636 |
Thesis Year: | 2008 |
Leah H. Somerville is an American psychologist who is a professor at Harvard University. She is a member of the Human Connectome Project. Somerville was awarded the 2022 National Academy of Sciences Troland Research Award.[1]
Somerville became interested in adolescent neurodevelopment due to her own experiences as a teenager. She spent four years volunteering as a teen crisis counsellor, and intended to pursue a career in social work.[2] Whilst an undergraduate at the University of Wisconsin, she became interested in affective neuroscience.[3] Somerville was eventually a doctoral student at Dartmouth College, where she studied the neural mechanisms of anxiety, negativity and threat.[4] [5] After earning her doctoral degree, Somerville joined the Sackler Institute for Developmental Biology. During her postdoc she looked to combine an appreciation of development into emotion.[6]
In 2012, Somerville joined the Department of Psychology at Harvard University, where she leads the Affective Neuroscience & Development Laboratory in the Center for Brain Science.[7] Her research considers human emotion and the factors that explain variability in how people respond to emotions. Somerville is interested in how brain development influences psychological functioning. She has also studied how brain and psychological development interact during human adolescence.[8] She believes that dynamic trajectories of brain development shape the interplay between these processes.[9]
Somerville was made an endowed Professor at Harvard University in 2021.[10] Somerville was awarded a Troland Research Award from the National Academy of Sciences in 2022.[11]