Adrienne C. Lahti | |
---|---|
Born | Belgium |
Academic background | |
Education | MD, 1978, University of Liège |
Academic work | |
Institutions | University of Alabama at Birmingham University of Maryland School of Medicine |
Adrienne C. Lahti is an American behavioural neurobiologist. She is the F. Cleveland Kinney Endowed Chair in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurobiology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
Lahti completed her education at the University of Liège before travelling to North America to complete her residency training in Psychiatry at the University of Michigan. [1]
Upon completing her residency,Lahti started her academic career at the University of Maryland School of Medicine as a research assistant professor. She eventually left the school in 2006 to take up an associate professor position at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurobiology. [1] In 2014,Lahti was appointed the Patrick H. Linton Professorship in Psychiatry in the School of Medicine Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurobiology. [2] The following year,she co-authored a study identifying pathways that may cause seizures and shorten survival for patients with severe brain tumors. She assisted with the magnetic resonance imaging examining the association of glutamate with anti-psychotic drugs. [3]
While serving in the role as the F. Cleveland Kinney Endowed Chair in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurobiology,Lahti was appointed the co-director of the UAB's Comprehensive Neuroscience Center. [4] She was also the co-recipient of the 2017 Kempf Fund Award with Nina Kraguljac for their schizophrenia research. [5] On March 18,2020,Lahti was named the interim chair of Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurobiology. [1]
David Gil Amaral is a professor of psychiatry at the University of California,Davis,United States,and since 1998 has been the research director at the M.I.N.D. Institute,an affiliate of UC Davis,engaged in interdisciplinary research into the causes and treatment of autism and related neurodevelopmental disorders. Amaral joined the UC Davis faculty as a Professor in the Department of Psychiatry and the Center for Neuroscience and as an investigator at the California Regional Primate Research Center in 1991. Since 1995,he has been a professor of psychiatry in the UC Davis School of Medicine,with an appointment to the Center for Neuroscience.
Neuropsychiatry or Organic Psychiatry is a branch of medicine that deals with psychiatry as it relates to neurology,in an effort to understand and attribute behavior to the interaction of neurobiology and social psychology factors. Within neuropsychiatry,the mind is considered "as an emergent property of the brain",whereas other behavioral and neurological specialties might consider the two as separate entities. Neuropsychiatry preceded the current disciplines of psychiatry and neurology,which previously had common training,however,those disciplines have subsequently diverged and are typically practiced separately.
Nancy Coover Andreasen is an American neuroscientist and neuropsychiatrist. She currently holds the Andrew H. Woods Chair of Psychiatry at the Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine at the University of Iowa.
Patricia Goldman-Rakic was an American professor of neuroscience,neurology,psychiatry and psychology at Yale University School of Medicine. She pioneered multidisciplinary research of the prefrontal cortex and working memory.
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S. Hossein Fatemi is an American-Iranian psychiatrist and neuroscientist,professor of psychiatry at the University of Minnesota.
Patricia Janak is a Bloomberg Distinguished Professor at Johns Hopkins University who studies the biological basis of behavior through associative learning. Janak applies this research to pathological behaviors,such as addiction and posttraumatic stress disorder,to improve understanding of how stimuli affect relapse and responses.
Judith L. Rapoport is an American psychiatrist. She is the chief of the Child Psychiatry Branch at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH),part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda,Maryland.
Daniel R. Weinberger is a professor of psychiatry,neurology and neuroscience at Johns Hopkins University and Director and CEO of the Lieber Institute for Brain Development,which opened in 2011.
Heather Clare Whalley is a Scottish scientist. She is a senior research fellow in Neuroimaging at the Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences,University of Edinburgh.,and is an affiliate member of the Centre for Genomic and Experimental Medicine at the University of Edinburgh. Her main focus of research is on the mechanisms underlying the development of major psychiatric disorders using the latest genomic and neuroimaging approaches.
HollisT. Cline is the Hahn Professor of Neuroscience,Chair of the Neuroscience Department and Director of the Dorris Neuroscience Center at the Scripps Research Institute in California. She is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and was awarded the Society for Neuroscience Mika Salpeter Lifetime Achievement Award in 2019. Cline is known for her studies of how sensory experience affects brain development and plasticity.
Margaret M. "Peg" McCarthy is an American neuroscientist and pharmacologist. She is the James &Carolyn Frenkil Endowed Dean's Professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine,where she is also Professor and Chair of the Department of Pharmacology. She is known for her research on the neuroscience of sex differences and their underlying mechanisms. In 2019,she received the Gill Transformative Investigator Award from the Gill Center for Biomolecular Science at Indiana University.
Joseph Thomas Coyle Jr. born in Chicago,Illinois,is a psychiatrist and neuroscientist that is known for his work on the neurobiology of mental illness,more specifically on schizophrenia. He is currently the Eben S. Draper Chair of Psychiatry and Neuroscience at Harvard Medical School in Boston,Massachusetts.
Courtney A. Miller is an American neuroscientist and Professor of the Department of Molecular Medicine at the Scripps Research Institute in Jupiter,Florida. Miller investigates the biological basis of neurological and neuropsychiatric diseases and develops novel therapeutics based on her mechanistic discoveries.
Bita Moghaddam is an Iranian-American neuroscientist and a writer. She is currently the Professor of Behavioral Neuroscience at Oregon Health and Science University. Moghaddam investigates the neuronal processes underlying emotion and cognition as a first step to designing strategies to treat and prevent brain illnesses.
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Carolyn I. Rodriguez is a Puerto Rican psychiatrist,neuroscientist,and clinical researcher developing treatments for obsessive compulsive disorder as well as mapping circuit dysfunction in the human brain. Rodriguez holds appointments in both clinical and academic departments at Stanford University. Rodriguez is a Clinical Lab Director at the Stanford Center for Cognitive and Neurobiological Imaging,an associate professor and Associate Chair of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences,and a Director of several specialized translational research programs.
Farah D. Lubin is an American neuroscientist and Associate Professor of Neurobiology and an Associate Professor of Cell,Developmental,and Integrative Biology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham within the School of Medicine. Lubin is the Principal Investigator of the Lubin Lab which explores the epigenetic mechanisms underlying cognition and how these mechanisms are altered in disease states such as epilepsy and neurodegeneration. Lubin discovered the role of NF-κB in fear memory reconsolidation and also uncovered a novel role for epigenetic regulation of BDNF in epilepsy leading to memory loss. Lubin is a champion for diversity at UAB as the co-director of the Roadmap Scholar Program and as a faculty mentor for several institutional and national programs to increase retention of underrepresented minorities in STEM.
High frequency oscillations (HFO) are brain waves of the frequency faster than ~80 Hz,generated by neuronal cell population. High frequency oscillations can be recorded during an electroencephalagram (EEG),local field potential (LFP) or electrocorticogram (ECoG) electrophysiology recordings. They are present in physiological state during sharp waves and ripples - oscillatory patterns involved in memory consolidation processes. HFOs are associated with pathophysiology of the brain like epileptic seizure and are often recorded during seizure onset. It makes a promising biomarker for the identification of the epileptogenic zone. Other studies points to the HFO role in psychiatric disorders and possible implications to psychotic episodes in schizophrenia.
Adrienne C. Lahti publications indexed by Google Scholar