Joseph D. Buxbaum

Professor
Psychiatry, Neuroscience and Genetics and Genomic Sciences
Icahn School of Medicine
United States of America

Professor Neurology
Biography

Joseph D. Buxbaum is an eminent researcher in the field of neuroscience and psychiatry.He completed his Graduation from Touro college and then post graduation from Weizmann institue of science and later one completed his PdD form Weizmann institute of science. He had shared various publication regarding to alzimer's disease and other disorders related to Brain. 

Research Intrest

Alzheimer's Disease, Autism, Behavior, Demyelination, Gene Regulation, Genetics, Genomics, Human Genetics and Genetic Disorders, Knockout Mice, Metastasis, Microarray, Molecular Biology, Myelination, Neurobiology, Protein Structure/Function, Schizophrenia, Signal Transduction, Stem Cells, Synapses, Synaptic Plasticity, Synaptogenesis, Transgenic Mice

List of Publications
Mehta D, Tropf FC, Gratten J, Bakshi A, Zhu Z, etal (2016) Evidence for Genetic Overlap Between Schizophrenia and Age at First Birth in Women. JAMA psychiatry.
Daskalakis NP, Cohen H, Nievergelt CM, Baker DG, Buxbaum JD, etal (2016) New translational perspectives for blood-based biomarkers of PTSD: From glucocorticoid to immune mediators of stress susceptibility. Experimental neurology.
Kajiwara Y, McKenzie A, Dorr N, Gama Sosa MA, Elder G, etal (2016) The human-specific CASP4 gene contributes to Alzheimer-related synaptic and behavioral deficits. Human molecular genetics.
Browne HA, Modabbernia A, Buxbaum JD, Hansen SN, Schendel DE, etal (2016) Prenatal Maternal Smoking and Increased Risk for Tourette Syndrome and Chronic Tic Disorders. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Vol: 55.
Fromer M, Roussos P, Sieberts SK, Johnson JS, Kavanagh DH, etal (2016) Gene expression elucidates functional impact of polygenic risk for schizophrenia. Nature neuroscience.
Siper PM, Zemon V, Gordon J, George-Jones J, Lurie S, etal (2016) Rapid and Objective Assessment of Neural Function in Autism Spectrum Disorder Using Transient Visual Evoked Potentials. PloS one Vol: 11