Gül Dölen Explained

Gül Dölen
Fields:Neuroscience
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Website:https://neuroscience.jhu.edu/research/faculty/23

Gül Dölen is a Turkish-American neuroscientist known for studying social behavior, psychedelic drugs and critical periods.

As an MD–PhD student at Brown University and later at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dölen studied fragile X syndrome and identified a possible treatment target.[1]

As a postdoctoral fellow under Robert Malenka, Dölen found that the hormones oxytocin and serotonin interact with the brain's nucleus accumbens to produce good feelings from social interactions ("social rewards") in mice.[2]

In 2018, Dölen co-authored a paper that found that octopuses, which are normally anti-social, became more social after exposure to the psychoactive drug MDMA, which acts on a serotonin pathway The research suggests that there is a common genetic basis of social behavior across much of the animal kingdom.[3]

Dölen's recent research, published 2019–2023 in the journal Nature, examines the power of psychedelic drugs like MDMA in re-opening the critical period in social reward learning.[4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2022-08-03 . In deep water with Gül Dölen . 2023-08-16 . Spectrum Autism Research News . en-US.
  2. News: Nuwer . Rachel . Rachel Nuwer . 2023-06-15 . The Psychedelic Scientist Who Sends Brains Back to Childhood . en-US . Wired . 2023-08-16 . 1059-1028.
  3. Web site: Leventhal . Jamie . 2018-09-20 . Scientists gave octopuses some molly. Here's what happened. . 2023-08-29 . PBS NewsHour . en-us.
  4. Web site: 2019-04-04 . Psychedelic Drug MDMA May Reawaken ‘Critical Period’ in Brain to Help Treat PTSD . 2023-08-29 . Johns Hopkins Medicine Newsroom . en.