Dante Cicchetti


Dante Cicchetti is a scientist specializing in the fields of developmental psychology and developmental psychopathology, particularly the conduct of multilevel research with high-risk and disenfranchised populations, including maltreated children and offspring of depressed parents. He currently holds a joint appointment in the University of Minnesota Medical School's psychiatry department, and in the Institute of Child Development. He is the McKnight Presidential Endowed Chair and the William Harris Endowed Chair.

Biography

Cicchetti received his bachelor of science degree from the University of Pittsburgh, and a Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota in 1972 in clinical psychology and developmental psychology. He was on the faculty of Harvard University from 1977 to 1985, where he was the Norman Tishman Associate Professor of Psychology until he left for the University of Rochester in 1985 where was the director of the Mt. Hope Family Center. Cicchetti is the founding and current editor of the academic journal Development and Psychopathology.

Career

While at Harvard, he began publishing on emotional development, Down syndrome, child maltreatment, and on the development of conditions such as depression and borderline personality disorder. In 1984, he edited a special issue of Child Development on developmental psychopathology that served to acquaint the developmental community with this emerging discipline. Subsequently, the emergence of the field of developmental psychopathology began in 1989 with the publication of the first of the 9 volumes of the Rochester Symposia on Developmental Psychopathology, and with the inaugural issue of the journal Development and Psychopathology.
Cicchetti's major research interests lie in the formulation of an integrative developmental theory that describes and explains the full range of human psychological functioning. His work has involved several domains, including developmental psychopathology, the developmental consequences of child maltreatment, neuroplasticity and sensitive periods, the impact of traumatic experiences upon brain development, the biology and psychology of unipolar and bipolar mood disorders, the interrelationships among molecular genetic, neurobiological, socio-emotional, cognitive, linguistic and representational development in normal and pathological populations, the study of attachment relations and representational models of the self and its disorders across the life span, and multilevel perspectives on resilience; and 9) multilevel evaluations of randomized controlled trial interventions for depressed and maltreated children and adolescents.
Cicchetti's research has been funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Institute of Drug Abuse, the Office of Child Abuse and Neglect, and the William T. Grant Foundation.

Professional societies