Program director

Joan Luby

Joan Luby, MD

Early Emotional Development Program Director
Samuel and Mae S. Ludwig Professor of Child Psychiatry

Dr. Luby is the Samuel and Mae S. Ludwig Professor of Child Psychiatry at Washington University. She is founder and director of the Washington University School of Medicine Early Emotional Development Program, which focuses on the study and treatment of mood disorders in preschool-aged children, early onset psychopathology and early environmental determinants of neurodevelopment and risk and resilience for psychopathology. Dr. Luby’s clinical work and research also focuses on the emotional development of young children and how deviations in this trajectory relate to risk for early onset disorders and predict their longitudinal course. Dr. Luby and colleagues have conducted the first large-scale empirical studies to establish the criteria for identifying and validating the characteristics of depression in preschoolers and developed an early psychotherapeutic intervention that proved both powerfully and durably effective. Dr. Luby and colleagues are currently investigating the role of experience and, more specifically, early psychosocial factors on brain development and risk and resilience for psychopathology and optimization of early developmental trajectories. Related to this, early psychotherapeutic interventions that focus on enhancing the parent child relationship in the hopes of optimizing developmental trajectories is a key aim of the program. Dr. Luby earned her medical degree from Wayne State University and completed her residency in psychiatry and fellowship in child psychiatry at Stanford University. She was honored with NARSAD’s Gerald L. Klerman Award for Outstanding Clinical Research in 2004 and the Washington University Faculty Achievement Award in 2015, the Ruane Award for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry in 2020, and the Washington University School of Medicine Dean’s Medal for Research Excellence in 2025. She was elected to the National Academy of Medicine in 2021.

Director of Neuroscience

Portrait of Deanna Barch, PhD

Deanna Barch, PhD

Professor and Chair, Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences
Gregory B. Couch Professor of Psychiatry

Dr. Barch is a clinical scientist whose research focuses on understanding normative patterns cognitive function and brain connectivity and the mechanisms that give rise to the challenges in behavior and cognition found in illnesses such as schizophrenia and depression, utilizing psychological, neuroimaging and computational approaches. She is Chair of the Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences at Washington University and has been at the University since 1998. She is also a Professor of Psychiatry and Radiology. She was the inaugural Dean of Faculty Development for the School of Arts and Sciences. She is Deputy Editor at Biological Psychiatry e. She is also the incoming President-elect of the Psychology Section of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Dr. Barch is on the scientific boards of the Brain and Behavior Research Foundation, the One Mind Foundation, and the Stanley Foundation and a member of the NIMH Research Diagnostic Criteria Committee. Dr. Barch was on the Executive Committee of the Association for Psychological Science and the Scientific Council of the NIMH. She is a Fellow of both the Association for Psychological Science and the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology, and a member of the Society for Experimental Psychology. She serves on a number of national society committees, including the Women’s Task Force for the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology.

Faculty

Staff

Portrait of Genevieve Jacquot

Genevieve Jacquot

Research Staff

Genevieve received a Bachelor’s of Science in Psychology from Drake University. She then went on to receive a Master of Science in Clinical Psychology from Eastern Michigan University. While there, she provided psychotherapy to families with young children, led parenting workshops, and acted as the Lab Manager for the BRAIN Lab studying brain-behavior relationships in children and adults. Currently, she works on the GLO Study examining the associations between social media use, early pubertal timing, and preteen mental health.

Danielle Kelly

Danielle Kelly

Statistical Data Analyst

Danielle Kelly received a B.A. in Psychology from University of Missouri – St. Louis. She currently conducts EEGs and MRIs with preschoolers for the PCIT-ED study. Danielle also works in Deanna Barch’s lab doing recruitment and data entry for adults with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. She has prior experience working at UMSL’s Center for Trauma Recovery.

Portrait of Mackenzie Ki

Mackenzie Ki

Research Staff

Mackenzie graduated from Washington University in St. Louis with a B.A. in Psychological and Brain Sciences. During her time as a student, she worked as a research assistant for Dr. Thompson’s Emotion and Mental Health Lab and as an intern for WashU’s Psychological Service Center. She has experience working with children and adults affected by mental health struggles. In the EEDP, she assists with the THRIVE study and NOA study, conducting EEG assessments and clinical interviews. 

Portrait of Melinda Looby, MSW

Melinda Looby, MSW

Research Staff

Melinda graduated from Valparaiso University with a B.S. in biology and chemistry and from Washington University with a Masters in Social Work. Melinda has worked as a therapist with children and families in a variety of settings including a family preservation model, foster care and at an adolescent group home. She has also worked as a parent educator for Parents as Teachers and as an early childhood educator. In the EEDP, Melinda administers parent interviews for the Neurodevelopment of Over Control and Anxiety (NOA) and PED-SI studies.

Portrait of Lisa Miller

Lisa Miller

Research Staff

Lisa graduated with a B.S. in Psychology from the University of Pittsburgh. She also majored in Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies. Before attending Pitt, Lisa interned in the Personality Measurement and Development Lab with Dr. Josh Jackson and the Optimism Study with Dr. Laura Hennefield, both at WashU. At Pitt, she was an Undergraduate Research Assistant with Dr. Jana Iverson at the Infant Communication Lab and the Pitt Parents and Children Lab with Dr. Daniel Shaw and Dr. Leah Hunter. She also was a social work intern at the Allegheny Department of Children, Youth, and Families. At the EEDP, she conducts STARK assessments, assists with measurements for THRIVE and running assessments, and is on the Affiliative Tenor Coding Team.

Jennifer Pautsch

Jennifer Pautsch, MA, LPC

PCIT-ED Trainer and Therapist, Senior Research Clinical Coordinator

Jennifer is responsible for the training and supervision of all PCIT-ED therapists. She also functions as a therapist for families participating in the Parent Child Interaction Therapy – Emotion Development Study. She is a Licensed Professional Counselor who earned a Master’s Degree from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Prior to her work at the Early Emotional Development Program she worked for an agency providing mental health services for homeless women with children. She has also worked with adults in a private practice setting. Jennifer joined the EEDP in October of 2004 and has enjoyed many roles since that time including a parent interviewer for Dr. Luby’s longitudinal study of preschool depression, co-author of the PCIT-ED manual, and a coordinator and therapist for an earlier phase of PCIT-ED.

Teresa Perryman

Teresa Perryman

EEDP Lab Manager

Teresa graduated from Fontbonne University, where she studied Human Services with a minor in Sociology. As an undergraduate, she contributed to Dr. Luby’s Preschool Depression Study. She later worked as a Parents As Teachers parent educator, providing crisis intervention services to immigrant and refugee families through the Head Start program. Since rejoining the Early Emotional Development Program (EEDP), Teresa has worked on a range of research studies and currently serves as the Lab Manager. Individuals interested in employment or student opportunities within the EEDP are encouraged to contact Teresa directly.

Portrait of Mary Grace Portell, MA, LPC

Mary Grace Portell, MA, LPC

PCIT-ED Therapist

Mary Grace is a therapist for families participating in the Parent Child Interaction Therapy – Emotion Development Study. She is a Licensed Professional Counselor who earned a Master’s degree in Counseling and Family Therapy from Saint Louis University. Mary Grace has over 8 years of clinical experience working with children and families in both a research and private practice setting. Her previous research experience includes substance abuse and its prevalence in families. Mary Grace joined the EEDP in February 2008 and has served many roles, including study coordinator for the Preschool Depression Study and as a therapist in earlier phases of PCIT-ED. She also collaborated with Dr. Luby and colleagues in the development of the Parent Child Interaction Therapy-Emotion Development treatment.

Portrait of Ashna Ramiah

Ashna Ramiah

Research Staff

Ashna graduated from Washington University in St. Louis with a B.A. in Philosophy-Neuroscience-Psychology: Cognitive Neuroscience and a minor in Children’s Studies. She was an undergraduate research assistant in the Cognition and Development Lab and WAVE Lab before joining the EEDP full-time. She now works on both the GLO and NeuCorE+ studies where she conducts fMRI and EEG scans as well as clinical diagnostic interviews.

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Jeff Rittenhouse

Research Staff