Gina G. Turrigiano | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Reed College University of California, San Diego |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Neuroscience |
Institutions | Brandeis University |
Gina G. Turrigiano is an American neuroscientist and is the Levitan Chair of Vision Science at Brandeis University. [1] [2]
Gina was born in 1963.
Turrigiano is known for her pioneering work on the mechanisms that allow brain circuits to remain both flexible and stable. Turrigiano and colleagues discovered several forms of "homeostatic" plasticity, most notably Synaptic scaling and intrinsic homeostatic plasticity, and have characterized how these forms of plasticity contribute to learning and LTP/LTD allowing experience-dependent plastic changes in the brain.
She graduated from Reed College, B.A., and from University of California, San Diego, with a Ph.D.
She now lives in Weston, MA with her husband, Sacha Nelson (also a neuroscientist). She has two children, Riel Turrigiano Nelson, and Raphael Nelson Turrigiano.
Turrigiano has published >100 research articles in her field, many of which can be found in Journals such as Cell, Neuron, Neuroscience, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. [5]
Her complete scholarship can be found here https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=lAjsH-wAAAAJ&hl=en