Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Karin Roelofs
Dutch neuroscientist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Karin Roelofs (born 1972[citation needed]) is a cognitive neuroscientist and clinical psychologist known for her contributions in the fields of stress resilience.,[1] defensive freeze reactions in humans,[2] neurocognitive mechanisms of emotion regulation in health,[3] professionals at risk[4] and patients with stress-related disorders.[5] Currently she holds the position of Professor of Experimental Psychopathology at the Behavioural Science Institute (BSI) and is chair of the Affective Neuroscience group at the Donders Institute for Brain Cognition and Behaviour (DI), Radboud University Nijmegen (RU) in The Netherlands. Roelofs is a member of the Dutch Royal Academy for Sciences.[6]
Remove ads
Education and career
Karin Roelofs obtained her master's degree in Neuropsychology and Clinical Psychology at Radboud University. Afterward, Roelofs took on a research fellowship, assuming the position of junior researcher at the Pediatric Branch NCI: National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, USA. She completed her Ph.D. in 2002 at Radboud University, with the highest distinction (Cum Laude) and became assistant professor at the Department of Clinical Health and Neuropsychology at Leiden University (LU). During this time, she also held part-time positions as a registered GZ-Psychologist[7] at Rivierduinen, Leiden and at PsyQ, Den Haag. In 2007 she was promoted to associate professor specifically at the Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition (LIBC). Following her tenure at Leiden University, she made a transition in 2010 to Radboud University as a full professor of Experimental Psychopathology at Behavioural Science Institute (BSI) & Donders Institute: Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging (DCCN). It was there that she founded the EPAN group,[8] known as "Experimental Psychopathology and Affective Neuroscience".[9]
Remove ads
Research
Roelofs is an expert in affective neuroscience and stress-related disorders. She has provided the empirical foundations of current theorizing about the role of human defensive stress-reactions in long-term resilience.[10] Her group's longitudinal studies in risk populations[4] has contributed to the identification of biomarkers for stress-resilience.[1] Additionally, she is developing neurocognitively grounded interventions to train stress-resilience and decision making under threat,[11][12] of which one is currently implemented in the curriculum of the Dutch Police Academy.[1] Roelofs' theoretical paradigm opened new scientific directions, moving from a focus on stress vulnerability towards a focus on understanding resilience. She was awarded the prestigious international Evens Science Prize for outstanding neuroscientific contributions to the field of stress-resilience.[1]
Remove ads
Awards and recognition
Summarize
Perspective
Roelofs holds various international positions.[13] She founding member and chair (2022–2024) of the International Resilience Alliance (INTRESA)[14] organizing symposia and publishing recommendations to advance the field. As founding member and vice-president (2020–2026) of the (AERG)[15] she focuses on fundamental science in Europe and organizes EU-wide debates and science events. She is elected member of the Academia Europaea AE[16] and the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW)[6] and elected board member of the European federation of Academies of Sciences and Humanities (ALLEA) dedicated to the advancement of science and scholarship in Europe and the world.
Karin Roelofs has received several grants throughout her career. A selection of personal and consortium grants:
- 2023 Dutch Research Council NWO take-off grant. Primary applicant: DUST platform (Decision under threat training), a biofeedback-based VR game.[9][4]
- 2021Dutch Research Council (NWO) open competition SHH. Role applicant together with Ivan Toni: Control mechanisms of social-emotional regulation (406.20.GO.020)[9][17]
- 2020 Dutch Research Council NWO Crossover Grant. Role WP-leader: INTENSE: Innovative Neurotechnology for Society.[9][18]
- 2013-2019 Dutch Research Council (NWO): Vici personal grant, for "The role of freeze-fight-flight tendencies in post traumatic stress"[9][19]
- 2018 European Research Council ERC Consolidator Grant. Primary applicant: DARE2APPROACH: A Neurocognitive Approach to Alleviating Persistent Avoidance in Anxiety Disorders (772337)[9][20]
- 2017-2024 Horizon2020 Personalized Medicine grant. Co-applicant (PI: Kalisch): DYNAMORE: Dynamic modelling of resilience (777084777084)[9][6][18]
- 2013-2017 European Research Council (ERC): FP7-HEALTH-2013-INNOVATION (co-applicant) [9]
- 2017-2023 Dutch Research Council (NWO): Brain and Cognition Grant[9]
- 2012-2018 European Research Council (ERC-StG) starting grant: Neural control of human freeze-fight-flight[9][21]
- 2007-2013 Dutch Research Council (NWO): Vidi (advanced postdoc) personal grant[22]
- 2004-2007 Dutch Research Council (NWO): Veni (postdoc) personal grant[9]
Remove ads
Public engagement
Summarize
Perspective
Roelofs regularly gives public lectures, several of which are publicly available: "The Resilient Human Being" [23] (in Dutch: De veerkrachtige mens) as part of the Dies Natalis event at Radboud University; "What causes you to freeze, flee or fight when you feel threatened?"[24] ( in Dutch: Wat zorgt ervoor dat je verstijft, vlucht of juist vecht als je je bedreigd voelt?) was recorded as part of public lecture series of the University of the Netherlands (in Dutch: de universiteit van nederland); and "Grensverleggen is... logisch"[25] organized by the Ministry of Defense of the Netherlands (in Dutch: Ministrie van Defense); and a lecture on Veerkracht as part of the Radboud Reflects lecture series.[26]
Roelofs' work has been featured in several television programs and documentaries: The Evens Foundation Price video,[1][27] Radboud Brain Awareness Week,[28] "Martijn is Angry!" ( in Dutch: Veilig Verkeer Nederland: Martijn is Boos![29][30]). VPRO-Labyrint[31] and Katja's body scan.
Her work has been covered in newspapers and magazines, including the annual magazine of the Dutch Research Council (NWO): Results of 2022,[32] NeurolabNL,[33] European Commission Horizon (online magazine),[34] NWO.[35]
She also engaged in educating teachers and primary school children in research skills,[36] including workshops, lectures and a book on science for primary schools.[37]
Additionally, Roelofs' expertise has been sought in media interviews, including discussions on funding for fundamental research[48], the effects of stress on young children, and emotion regulation in psychopaths.[38] Lastly, her lab's efforts have been featured in numerous articles and radio segments in the Netherlands and Belgium[39]
Remove ads
Representative publications
Summarize
Perspective
Source:[40]
- Bramson, Bob; Meijer, Sjoerd; van Nuland, Annelies; Toni, Ivan; Roelofs, Karin (2023). "Anxious individuals shift emotion control from lateral frontal pole to dorsolateral prefrontal cortex". Nature Communications. 14 (1): 4880. Bibcode:2023NatCo..14.4880B. doi:10.1038/s41467-023-40666-3. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 10423291. PMID 37573436.
- Roelofs, Karin; Bramson, Bob; Toni, Ivan (2023). "A neurocognitive theory of flexible emotion control: The role of the lateral frontal pole in emotion regulation". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 1525 (1): 28–40. Bibcode:2023NYASA1525...28R. doi:10.1111/nyas.15003. ISSN 0077-8923. PMID 37170478.
- Roelofs, Karin; Dayan, Peter (2022). "Freezing revisited: coordinated autonomic and central optimization of threat coping". Nature Reviews Neuroscience. 23 (9): 568–580. doi:10.1038/s41583-022-00608-2. hdl:2066/251259. ISSN 1471-0048. PMID 35760906.
- Kaldewaij, Reinoud; Koch, Saskia B. J.; Hashemi, Mahur M.; Zhang, Wei; Klumpers, Floris; Roelofs, Karin (2021). "Anterior prefrontal brain activity during emotion control predicts resilience to post-traumatic stress symptoms". Nature Human Behaviour. 5 (8): 1055–1064. doi:10.1038/s41562-021-01055-2. ISSN 2397-3374. PMC 7611547. PMID 33603200.
- Bramson, Bob; den Ouden, Hanneke EM; Toni, Ivan; Roelofs, Karin (2020). Shackman, Alexander; Ivry, Richard B (eds.). "Improving emotional-action control by targeting long-range phase-amplitude neuronal coupling". eLife. 9 e59600. doi:10.7554/eLife.59600. ISSN 2050-084X. PMC 7591252. PMID 33106222.
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads