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Fonzo, Greg
No

Greg A Fonzo

Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Assistant Professor
Department of Psychiatry, Department of Psychology



gfonzo@austin.utexas.edu


Office Location
HTB

Postal Address
1601 TRINITY ST BLDG A
AUSTIN, TX 78712

 

Greg Fonzo, Ph.D., is an assistant professor in the Department of Psychiatry at Dell Medical School. He is also a courtesy assistant professor in The University of Texas at Austin Department of Psychology.

He graduated summa cum laude from the University of Georgia Honors Program in 2005 with a dual bachelor’s degree in biology and psychology. He received his doctorate in clinical psychology in 2013 from the San Diego State University/University of California-San Diego Joint Doctoral Program. He completed his clinical internship at the Memphis Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Prior to joining the faculty at Dell Medical School, Fonzo completed two postdoctoral research fellowships. The first was a T32 Biobehavioral Research Fellowship in the Department of Psychiatry at the Stanford University School of Medicine, and the second was an Advanced Fellowship in Mental Illness at the Sierra-Pacific Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC) at the Palo Alto Veterans Affairs Healthcare System.

Fonzo’s research focuses broadly on utilizing neuroscience tools to understand mechanisms of affective disorder psychopathology and treatment and leveraging this understanding to improve clinical care and patient outcomes. His lab takes a multimodal approach to assessing disorder mechanisms and characteristics across affective disorder categories, such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), anxiety disorders and depression. Prior and future planned adopted approaches include behavioral and biological phenotyping of emotional or threat reactivity, emotion regulation and reward processing; building computational models of decision-making algorithms and brain dynamics to understand information processing dysfunction across units of analysis; and utilizing brain stimulation tools (e.g., transcranial magnetic stimulation) to probe circuit dynamics, manipulate information processing and behavior, and identify targets for novel interventions. 

As a primary in-vivo brain assessment methodology, he utilizes structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging to elucidate neurocircuitry mechanisms underlying symptom expression within and across diagnostic categories, vulnerability to disorder development, treatment mechanisms, and individual-level biophenotypic characteristics that moderate or predict outcomes to evidence-based treatments such as psychotherapy and antidepressant medications. The ultimate goal of his work is to improve clinical care and patient outcomes for individuals suffering from stress-induced disorders of affect/emotion by discovering how current treatments work, whom is best suited to receiving a particular treatment and why, and designing novel interventions targeted to engage specific brain circuits of interest. His vision is for every individual to receive an effective, individually tailored, evidence-based treatment based upon his or her unique constellation of biological, psychological and information-processing style characteristics.