
Jillian Joyce
@jillianljoyce
Neuroscience PhD Student at USC @USCNGP @USCLeonardDavis | @cosentinolab Columbia University
ID: 1016880305146351622
11-07-2018 03:02:12
27 Tweet
69 Followers
516 Following



Thrilled to share our perspective, "Is AD a Disease?" co-authored w/ Amos Korczyn, in Nat Rev Neurology. As we delve deeper into #Alzheimer research & treatment advancements, it's an honor to contribute to the conversation. UCSF MAC Grinberg Lab CONy Neurology tinyurl.com/4df9w2nh


✨Our new paper in The Journal of Women's Health demonstrated the feasibility of cognitive screening at the annual gynecological well-woman visit Cosentino Lab Mary Rosser @SilChapman Mary Ann Liebert Inc #Alzheimers #WomensHealth liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.10…


Thank you so much NIH Women's Health The Menopause Society! I can’t wait to present in Chicago! Cosentino Lab Mary Rosser

A few years ago I was in a position to do something unique in neuroscience. I had been working with the phenomenal Emily G. Jacobs 🦋 @emilyjacobs.bsky.social on menopause and inspired by Laura Pritschet's menstrual study, and I was planning a pregnancy. What if we scanned my brain?? nature.com/articles/s4159…

With mild infection in healthy participants who received a #SARSCoV2 challenge there was evidence of persistent cognitive and memory changes at least one year after Covid, compared with uninfected controls thelancet.com/journals/eclin… Adam Hampshire eClinicalMedicine – The Lancet Discovery Science





I need people to understand how difficult it is to get an NIH grant. You spend months writing a proposal, following strict guidelines that include a detailed multiyear budget, bios of everyone on your team, plans for participant safety & ethical conduct. Then you send it off -1/n



How it may be possible to maintain integrity of the blood brain barrier that is dysregulated during aging nature.com/articles/s4158… nature Carolyn Bertozzi Stanford Medicine nature.com/articles/d4158…



"We could all use a little more X!" Thrilled our new study is out. Aging "wakes up" the silent X chromosome in the female brain - and this contributes cognitive resilience. Spearheaded by @MargaretGadek in Science Advances Collaborators Berenice Benayoun, Bérénice A. Benayoun, PhD

