BA (20012) Columbia University
Email: jem547@cornell.edu
Research Interests: Developmental plasticity, social perception, oxytocin, vasopressin, social behavior, mating strategies
Specific Interests:
Social interactions require behavioral specializations (e.g., conspecific recognition, social signaling, formation of bonds…etc.) which are enabled by the evolution of specific neurobiological mechanisms. My research uses an ethological framework to study how neurobiological function is related to variation in social behaviors in mammals.
My research in the Ophir lab focuses on how the early social environment contributes to later mating strategies. More specifically, I am asking whether differences in vasopressin receptors underlie this developmental relationship.
This project builds on my previous dissertation work, where I identified factors contributing to the development of individual differences in social behavior in the rhesus macaque. More specifically I investigated whether infant carriers of a 5-HTTLPR genotype associated with susceptibility to adverse rearing, are responsive to enhanced maternal care. Additionally, I tested the relationships between markers of oxytocin and vasopressin function, differences in the perception of socially-relevant stimuli, and variation in sociality.
Papers (from the lab):