Dante Cicchetti Curriculum Vitae

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Dante Cicchetti Curriculum Vitae Dante Cicchetti Curriculum Vitae I. Current Information Licenses: Licensed Psychologist in Massachusetts and New York University Address: Institute of Child Development University of Minnesota 51 River Road Minneapolis, MN 55455 Contact Information: (612) 624-4455 [email protected] II. Education B.S., University of Pittsburgh, 1971 (Biology and Psychology). Ph.D., University of Minnesota, 1972-1977 (Clinical Psychology and Child Development; Minors in Behavior Genetics, Neuroscience, and Psychophysiology), Department of Psychology and Institute of Child Development, Advisors: Paul E. Meehl and L. Alan Sroufe. III. Employment History July 2005-Present McKnight Presidential Chair and Professor, Institute of Child Development and Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota July, 2000-June 2005 Shirley Cox Kearns Professor of Psychology, Psychiatry, and Pediatrics, University of Rochester. July, 1995-2005 Professor of Clinical and Social Sciences in Psychology, Psychiatry, and Pediatrics, University of Rochester. Director, Mt. Hope Family Center. July, 1994-2005 Professor of Psychology, Psychiatry, and Pediatrics, University of Rochester. Director, Mt. Hope Family Center. Dec., 1987-July, 1994 Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry, University of Rochester. Director, Mt. Hope Family Center. 1 July, 1985-Dec., 1987 Associate Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry, University of Rochester. Director, Mt. Hope Family Center. July, 1982-July, 1985 Norman Tishman Associate Professor of Psychology, Harvard University. Member, Faculty of the Graduate School of Education, Program in Human Development, Harvard University. July, 1982-July, 1983 Associate Professor, Department of Psychology and Social Relations, Harvard University. July, 1978-July, 1985 Director, Daycare and Families Project, Harvard University. (Harvard Child Maltreatment Project) May, 1978-July, 1985 Director, Developmental Risk Research Project, Harvard University July, 1977-June, 1982 Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology and Social Relations, Harvard University. Sept., 1971-Aug., 1972 Instructor, Department of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh. IV. Awards and Honors Young Scholars Award in Social and Affective Development, Foundation for Child Development, 1982. Boyd McCandless Award for Significant Early Career Contributions, Division of Developmental Psychology, American Psychological Association, 1983. Norman Tishman Associate Professor of Psychology, Harvard University, 1983-1985. Fellow, Division 7 (Developmental Psychology) American Psychological Association. Elected 1990. Scientific Merit Award National Institute of Mental Health, 1991-1996 (for Research on Affective Disorders). Fellow, Center for the Advanced Study of the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University (Chosen May 1992). Recipient of the Outstanding Research Study Award from the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children 1995. 2 American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children Research Career Achievement Award, 1997. Distinguished Contributions to Research in Clinical Child Psychology Award - Division 12 (Clinical Psychology, Section 1), American Psychological Association, 1999. Nicholas Hobbs Award, Division 37 of the American Psychological Association, for Significant Contributions to Child Advocacy and Social Policy, 1999. Shirley Cox Kearns Professor of Psychology, Psychiatry, and Pediatrics, 2000. John Romano Award, Mental Health Association, Rochester, New York, 2001. Academic Keys Who’s Who in Social Sciences Higher Education (WWSSHE) – 2004 Senior Career Award for Distinguished Contributions to Psychology in the Public Interest – American Psychological Association, 2004 G. Stanley Hall Award, from the American Psychological Association – for Significant Lifetime Contributions to Developmental Psychology - 2005 Bronfenbrenner Award, from the American Psychological Association - Lifetime Contribution to Developmental Psychology in the Service of Science and Society – 2006 McKnight Presidential Chair of Child Psychology, Institute of Child Development and Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota – 2005 Alumni of Notable Achievement Award, University of Minnesota – 2006 NIH Top Grantee, Above the 95th percentile of distribution of (extramural) NIH grants over the last 25 years (along with 2,500 others). V. Financial Support A. University of Rochester Current Clinical Support Services Since 1985, over $2,000,000.00 annual Center clinical services budget has been sustained through contracts for services, foundation and private donor support, and United Way funding. Current and Completed Grant Support (July 1, 2004 – June 30, 2009) National Institute of Mental Health. Domestic Violence, Child Security, & Child Mental Health. Total of $3,111,589 Direct Costs. (Co-Principal Investigator.) 3 (July 1, 2004 - June 30, 2009) National Institute of Drug Abuse. Chronic Stress of Maltreatment: Drug Use Vulnerability. Total of $2,148,357.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (April 1, 2004 - March 31, 2009) National Institute of Mental Health. Memory Processes in Abused and Neglected Children. Total of $1,250,000.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (February 1, 2004 – February 30, 2009) National Institute of Mental Health. Depression among low-income mothers and the impact upon their children’s brain development. Total of $4,664,151 Direct Costs. (Co-Principal Investigator.) (February 1, 2004 - January 31, 2009) National Institute of Mental Health. Prevention for Infants of Low-Income Depressed Mothers: Implications for Developmental Theory. Total of $3,305,438.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (October 1, 2000 - September 30, 2005) National Institute of Drug Abuse. Teen Drug Use/Abuse: Pathways from Child Maltreatment. Total of $1,797,531.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (September 30, 2001 - September 29, 2004) Administration for Children, Youth and Families. Following up the Effects of Family Support and Intervention for Neglected Preschool Children. Total of $570,985.00 Direct Costs. (Co-Principal Investigator.) (July 1, 2000 - June 30, 2004) National Institute of Mental Health. A preventive intervention for toddlers of depressed mothers. Total of $1,369,257.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (January 1, 1999 - December, 2006) Spunk Fund, Inc. The effects of social experience on brain development and functioning. Total of $200,000.00 Direct Costs per year. (Principal Investigator) (July 1, 1998 to June 30, 2003) National Institute of Mental Health. Preventive Intervention for Maltreated Infants. Total of $3,451,787.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (1996 - 1999) Administration of Children, Youth, & Families, Department of Health and Human Services. SAFETY FIRST: Identification and Enhancement of Factors that Protect Head Start Children from Ill Effects of Community and Family Violence. Total of $450,000.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (1997 - 2000) National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect. Longitudinal Pathways to Resilience in Maltreated Children. Total of $599,400.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) 4 (1996 - 2001) National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect. Family Support and Intervention for Neglected Preschool Children. Total of $750,000.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (1995 - 1999) William T. Grant Foundation. Childhood Maltreatment, Community Violence, and Pathways to Adaptation: Risk and Resilience in the Adolescent Years. Total of $495,994.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (1994 - 1997) National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect. An Ecological Developmental Perspective on the Consequences of Child Maltreatment. Total of $593,667.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (1992 - 1995) William T. Grant Foundation. Childhood maltreatment and developmental psychopathology. Total of $300,000.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (1991 - 1996) National Institute of Mental Health - Preventive Intervention: Toddlers of Depressed Mothers (MERIT). Total of $2,500,000.00 Direct Costs. (1991-1996). (Principal Investigator) (1990 - 2002) [and ongoing] Spunk Fund, Inc. Resilience in Child Maltreatment: A Longitudinal Investigation. $100,000.00 per year. (Principal Investigator) (1989 - 1991) Spencer Foundation. Attachment relationships, self-perceptions, and school adaptation in maltreated children. Total of $150,000.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (1989 - 1992) William T. Grant Foundation and Smith Richardson Foundation. A longitudinal study of maltreated children. Total of $600,000.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (1987 - 1989) A.L. Mailman Family Foundation. Assessing the impact of a peer relations enhancement program upon the social adjustment of maltreated and "high risk" youngsters. Total of $90,000.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (1987 - 1989) Smith Richardson Foundation. Development and implementation of a preventive program for toddlers and their families. Total of $150,000.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (1986 - 1987) Kenworthy Swift Foundation. Longitudinal effects of child abuse and neglect. Total of $20,000.00 Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) 5 B. Harvard University (1979 - 1983) The etiology, intergenerational transmission, and developmental sequelae of child maltreatment. National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect. Total of $1.25 million Direct Costs. (Principal Investigator) (1981 - 1983) Tool using in infants and children with Down syndrome. March of Dimes Foundation, Total direct costs of $50,000.00. (Principal Investigator)
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