Objectives:- Explain how developmental brain maturation shapes emotional regulation, cognition, and behavior across the lifespan.
- Apply brain network concepts, including the Default Mode Network, Salience Network, and Executive Control Network, to the clinical conceptualization of common psychiatric disorders.
- Utilize a neuroscience-informed framework to understand how psychotherapy, medication treatment, behavioral interventions, and neuromodulation influence brain function and symptom improvement.
Statement of need:Mental health clinicians increasingly encounter neuroscience concepts in research and clinical practice, yet many lack practical frameworks that connect developmental neuroscience to real-world assessment, psychotherapy, and treatment planning.
AbstractMental health clinicians are increasingly exposed to neuroscience findings, yet many struggle to translate these discoveries into practical patient care. This presentation provides an accessible framework for understanding psychiatric symptoms through the lens of developmental cognitive neuroscience and large-scale brain networks. Drawing from contemporary developmental neuroscience literature, attendees will explore how brain systems involved in emotional regulation, salience detection, executive functioning, and self-referential processing mature across childhood and adolescence and contribute to clinical presentations throughout the lifespan. The session will introduce the Triple Network Model as a practical framework for understanding depression, anxiety, ADHD, trauma-related disorders, and other common psychiatric conditions. Emphasis will be placed on clinical application, helping therapists and prescribers connect neuroscience concepts to psychotherapy, medication management, behavioral interventions, and emerging neuromodulation approaches.