Adam Jaroszewski, Ph.D. is an Instructor at Harvard Medical School (HMS) and a Staff Psychologist in the Center for OCD and Related Disorders at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). He completed his doctorate in clinical psychology at Harvard University and clinical internship and postdoctoral fellowship a MGH/HMS. Dr. Jaroszewski is a licensed psychologist in the state of Massachusetts, whose clinical work focuses on the treatment of OCD and related disorders as well as anxiety and depression. His research focuses on examining the cognitive and affective factors that increase risk for the development and maintenance of self-injurious thoughts and behavior (SITB). He is particularly interested in using approaches from decision and affective science to understand why people decide to engage in SITB. He is also involved in developing scalable, smartphone delivered interventions for SITB and associated disorders (e.g., depression, BDD).
Professional Staff
Ivar Snorrason, Ph.D.
Ivar Snorrason, Ph.D., is a staff psychologist at the Center for OCD and Related Disorders (CORD) at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and an Instructor in Psychology (Psychiatry) at Harvard Medical School (HMS). Dr. Snorrason completed his bachelor and master’s degrees in psychology at the University of Iceland, and a Ph.D. in clinical psychology at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
Dr. Snorrason completed post-doctoral training at the New York State Psychiatric Institute/Columbia University Medical School and at McLean Hospital. He is a licensed clinical psychologist and specializes in the treatment of OCD and related disorders. His research focuses on the etiology, nosology and treatment of obsessive-compulsive and related disorders, including trichotillomania (hair-pulling disorder) and excoriation (skin-picking) disorder.
Jeremiah M. Scharf, M.D., Ph.D.
Dr. Scharf is a behavioral neurologist and neuropsychiatric geneticist who works at the interface between neurology and psychiatry, employing statistical and molecular genetics techniques along with clinical research tools to investigate the etiology and pathogenesis of Tourette Syndrome (TS), OCD and related disorders as model neuropsychiatric illnesses. Clinically, Dr. Scharf directs the Neurology Tic Disorders Unit within the MGH Division of Movement Disorders, and is Co-Director of the MGH TAA National TS Center of Excellence in partnership with Dr. Sabine Wilhelm in MGH Psychiatry.
Joan A. Camprodon, M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D.
Dr. Camprodon is Chief of the Division of Neuropsychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital and Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.
Clinically, he is the founding director of the MGH Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) clinical service, a member of the Psychiatric Neurosurgery Committee and an attending physician in the departments of Psychiatry (Neuropsychiatry) and Neurology (Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology). He is board-certified in Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurology & Neuropsychiatry.
Erica Greenberg, M.D.
Erica Greenberg, M.D., is the Director of the Pediatric Psychiatry OCD and Tic Disorders Program at MGH and a Co-Director of the Tourette Association of America MGH Center of Excellence. Dr. Greenberg is a Psychiatrist at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and an Instructor in Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School (HMS). She graduated from Weill Cornell Medical College (with Alpha Omega Alpha honors), and completed her general psychiatry residency at Harvard Longwood and her child/adolescent fellowship training at Massachusetts General Hospital/McLean where she served as chief resident in both programs. Her interests include Tourette syndrome (TS), OCD, “Tourettic OCD,” ADHD and body-focused repetitive behavior disorders (BFRBs). She is the primary investigator on a grant-funded study evaluating a modified behavioral treatment approach to those with tic disorders and ADHD, and she has authored several peer-reviewed articles and chapters on Tourette syndrome, OCD, and related disorders Additionally, she has presented locally and nationally on TS, OCD and BFRBs. Dr. Greenberg is also the HMS Director of the Klingenstein Fellowship – a philanthropic medical student program that encourages interest and exploration of child and adolescent psychiatry through mentoring, teaching, research opportunities and events.