Three New Manuscripts Accepted for Publication in 48 Hours

Happy to share that THREE of my papers got ACCEPTED for publication within the last 48 HOURS!!!

#1 Ben-Zion, Z., Korem, N., Fine, N., Katz, S., Siddhanta, M., Funaro, M. C., Duek, O., Spiller, T. R., Danböck, S. K., Levy, I., Harpaz-Rotem, I. (2023). Structural Neuroimaging of Hippocampus and Amygdala Subregions in Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD): A Scoping Review. Biological Psychiatry: Global Open Science

#2 Korem, N., Ben-Zion, Z., Spiller, T. R., Duek, O., Harpaz-Rotem, I., & Pietrzak, R. H. (2023). Correlates of avoidance coping in trauma-exposed U.S. military veterans: Results from the National Health and Resilience in Veterans Study. Journal of Affective Disorders 

#3 Sheynin, J., Lokshina, Y., Ahrari, S., Nickelsen, T., Duval, E. R., Ben-Zion, Z., Shalev, A. Y., Hendler, T., & Liberzon, I. (2023). Greater Early Post-Trauma Activation in Right Inferior Frontal Gyrus Predicts Recovery from Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms. Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging 

Ben-Zion Honored by Anxiety and Depression Association of America

Ziv Ben-Zion, PhD, a postdoctoral associate in the Yale Department of Psychiatry, has been chosen to receive the 2023 Alies Muskin Career Development Leadership Program (CDLP) Award from the Anxiety and Depression Association of America (ADAA). The mission of CDLP is to inspire the next generation of ADAA’s leaders.

Ben-Zion will receive the award April 13, 2023, at the ADAA Annual Conference in Washington, D.C. As an awardee, he will receive complimentary registration to the conference, a cash award, and a complimentary one-year membership to ADAA.

The CDLP is a competitive award program that is designed to encourage early career clinicians and researchers to engage in creative discourse about anxiety, depression, and co-occurring disorders in a diverse, multidisciplinary community.

Ben-Zion works in the Levy Decision Neuroscience Lab and Harpaz-Rotem Post Traumatic Stress Lab at Yale School of Medicine. While a postdoc at Yale, he aims to combine these two research fields by investigating the neural computations underlying decision-making, learning, and memory, and their association with anxiety, stress, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Inspired by personal motivation, his overarching goal is to further elucidate the neural mechanisms underlying anxiety- and stress-related disorders, to advance mechanisms-based personalized treatments and improve the life quality of people who suffer from these debilitating disorders.

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