CONTE CENTER - Key Persons


Ali Mortazavi

Job Titles:
  • Project 1

Christie D. Fowler

Job Titles:
  • Anesthesiology and Perioperative Care, UCI

D.D. Shepard

Job Titles:
  • Professor of Neurological Sciences

Dan M. Cooper

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Internal Advisory Board
  • Professor of Pediatrics / Associate Vice Chancellor, Clinical & Translational Research, ICTS, UCI

Diego A. Pizzagalli

Job Titles:
  • Center Consultant

Eitan Schechtman

Job Titles:
  • Biological Sciences

James Weinstock

Job Titles:
  • Operations

John H. Weiss

Job Titles:
  • Neurology

Kate Ryan Kuhlman

Job Titles:
  • Psychological Science, UCI

Katharine Simon

Job Titles:
  • Cognitive Science, UCI

Kendra Leak

Job Titles:
  • MRI Project Coordinator

Marcelo Wood

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Internal Advisory Board
  • Professor and Chair, Neurobiology and Behavior, UCI

Peter Donovan

Job Titles:
  • Developmental & Cell Biology, UCI

Roxane Cohen Silver

Job Titles:
  • Psychological Science, Medicine, and Public Health, UCI

Ruth Benca

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Internal Advisory Board
  • Professor Emerita, Psychiatry & Human Behavior, UCI

Susanne M. Jaeggi

Job Titles:
  • Education, UCI

Tallie Z. Baram

Job Titles:
  • Director of the Center
  • Distinguished Professor: Pediatrics, Anatomy / Neurobiology, Neurology, Physiology / Biophysics
Tallie Z. Baram is the director of the Center. Baram is the Danette Shepard Professor of Neurological Sciences, and a Professor of Pediatrics, Anatomy & Neurobiology, Neurology, and Physiology/Biophysics at the University of California, Irvine. She has been studying the role of early-life experience in brain plasticity, supported by uninterrupted NIH funding, for over 25 years. Baram is trained as a developmental neuroscientist and child neurologist and is experienced in translational Neuroscience. She has focused her efforts on the influence of early-life experiences on the developing brain, and on the underlying mechanisms. She is studying this broad topic in two contexts: a) How early-life seizures, especially those associated with fever, can convert a normal brain into an epileptic one, and b) How early-life experiences including stress and maternal care influence resilience and vulnerability to cognitive and emotional disorders. She has used rodent models and cutting-edge molecular, cellular, epigenetic, and imaging methods to further the understanding of the effects of early-life experience on normal brain function and the contributions of early-life adversity and seizures to neuropsychiatric disorders. Her discoveries have been translational, providing the foundation for an FDA-approved therapy, and for novel clinical imaging approaches. Baram is an internationally recognized leader in studies of cognitive consequences of early-life and ‘modern-life' stress and the underlying mechanisms, work that has appeared in high-impact journals (Nature Reviews Neurosci; PNAS; Trends Neurosci; J Neurosci; Molec. Psychiat; H factor=80; google scholar). Baram has contributed to NIMH panels and Symposia, chaired the Developmental Brain Disorders NIH study section. Her international reputation has led to presentations in numerous national and international conferences. Baram has the experience and administrative skills for leading funded multi-investigator projects, including the current Conte Center, where cutting-edge human and animal model studies are conducted in harmony. Baram has a passion and commitment to mentoring including several funded NIH K awardees. Baram's prior students, from diverse countries and backgrounds, are now contributing independently to academic neuroscience.

Tracy Bale

Job Titles:
  • Member of the External Advisory Board
  • Professor of Pharmacology and Psychiatry / Director, Center for Epigenetic Research in Child Health & Brain Development, University of Maryland

Vince Calhoun

Job Titles:
  • Member of the External Advisory Board
  • Distinguished Professor of Mathematics and Statistics, Neuroscience, Psychology / Director, Center for Translational Research in Neuroimaging and Data Science, Georgia State University

Wendy A. Goldberg

Job Titles:
  • Psychological Science, UCI