She recently won two awards: the Best Poster Award at the Society for Social Neuroscience (S4SN), and the Society for Neuroscience’s Trainee Professional Development Award. “I am honored to have received this poster award. After several years of limited, virtual conferences due to the pandemic, it has been reinvigorating to share my research and reconnect with the scientific community,” Olivia said. Through conversations with participants at S4SN, she gained insight into future analyses and has a better understanding of how her results fit into “the bigger picture of our understanding of the social brain,” she added.
Olivia’s first exposure to research was as a summer intern at the Tulane National Primate Research Center. She performed cell culture experiments with borrelia burgdorferi, the spirochete that causes Lyme disease. After researching the nervous system at a molecular level, she was curious how changes at a cellular level came together to produce complex behaviors. Then an undergraduate at Emory University, she joined the lab of Jocelyne Bachevalier, PhD, at Emory to study learning, memory, and socioemotional processing at a systems level.
After graduating, Olivia became a research technician at MIT. Working with Guoping Feng, PhD, and Robert Desimone, PhD, she used behavioral assays to characterize baseline behaviors in wild type marmosets and confirm ASD-like phenotypes in marmosets with a genetically engineered Shank3-deletion.
For her PhD, she wanted to continue researching the neural mechanisms of social behaviors. That’s what drew her to Yale. For the past four years, she’s pursued projects aimed at better understanding the neural computations underlying social decisions.
The overall highlight of her time at Yale has been the collaborative and supportive research community.