- Talk Title : Heritable and Acquired Aspects of Stress Reactivity: Significance for Mental and Physical Health in Later Life
- Position : Professor of Psychiatry and Neurobiology & Director of the Traumatic Stress Studies Division
- Institution : Mount Sinai School of Medicine & James J. Peters Veterans Affairs Medical Center
- Website :
Dr. Rachel Yehuda PhD
Main Research Focus
Rachel Yehuda, PhD, Professor of Psychiatry and
Neurobiology, is the Director of the Traumatic Stress Studies Division at the
Mount Sinai School of Medicine which includes the PTSD clinical research
program and the Neurochemistry and Neuroendocrinology laboratory at the James
J. Peters Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Dr. Yehuda is a recognized leader in
the field of traumatic stress studies. She has authored more than 250 published
papers, chapters, and books in the field of traumatic stress and the neurobiology
of PTSD. Her current interests
include the study of risk and resilience factors, psychological and biological
predictors of treatment response in PTSD, genetic and epigenetic studies of
PTSD and the intergenerational transmission of trauma and PTSD. Dr. Yehuda's
research on cortisol and brain function has revolutionized the understanding
and treatment of PTSD worldwide and has been awarded the renowned Max Planck
Institute for Psychiatry (Munich, Germany) 2004 Guest Professorship. The
appointment signifies a special recognition of the outstanding research she has
been performing in the field of neuroscience in the context of studies on
causality of psychiatric disorders over the years. Dr. Yehuda received her PhD
in Psychology and Neurochemistry and her MS in Biological Psychology from the
University of Massachusetts at Amherst and completed her postdoctoral training
in Biological Psychiatry in the Psychiatry Department at Yale Medical School.
