This recent study used 🐭 model of treatment-resistant depression & RNA sequencing to reveal transcriptional signatures associated with antidepressant treatment and TRD / @angelica_atb, @EricJNestler, @GylesTrevonn, @ericMparise
https://t.co/FJt1mNqrZ5
ACNP Travel Award Applications open TODAY for the ACNP 65th Annual Meeting: January 10-13, 2027, San Diego, California. Deadline to Submit is May 14, 2026, at 5:00 pm Central. https://t.co/tciCGq4ELQ #ACNP2027#travelawards
Last week I shared this collage showing a massive case of image fraud from a Japanese team, now I have written a blog with more detailed findings! Enjoy: https://t.co/xik6Awnl9P
This recently published longitudinal study found that ⬆️ adolescent cannabis use within individuals was linked to ⬇️ cortical thickness, especially in ♂️ & in regions with ⬆️ CB1 receptor expression
https://t.co/r9jbWjj8ms
Thrilled to share that I was promoted to Full Member! 🎉🙌 Grateful for the incredible mentorship, support, and community that made this milestone possible. Thanks to everyone who believed in me, including Tony Grace and @JaredWYoung for their letters, and to @ACNPorg 🙏🏼#ACNP2026
Grateful to everyone who joined us for last night's Experience and Resilience Reception @ACNPorg 🎉🔥💫 Honored to serve as Chair and close this chapter surrounded by such an amazing community. Thank you to all E&R subcommittee chairs/ members for your efforts 🤗👏 #acnp2026
Thank you to everyone that came out to our symposium earlier today @ACNPorg ✨️ Special shoutout to our panelists Victoria Arango, @DWWilliamsLab, and David Jentsch for sharing your experiences overcoming distinct types of adversity. #ACNP2026
How animals detect the Earth’s magnetic field remains a mystery in sensory biology.
In a new Science study, researchers used whole brain activity mapping, tissue clearing, and light sheet microscopy to identify neuronal populations activated by magnetic stimuli in the pigeon. Learn more: https://t.co/DV1MEXigKV
"I sat in my supervisor’s office, red-faced and anxious, words tumbling out faster than I could control. For half an hour, I vented everything I had been holding in for months: the stress, the doubt, the sense that I didn’t belong. I was in the third year of my Ph.D., and a creeping fear had taken root that I wasn’t cut out for academia.
"I expected some kind of judgment or disappointment. Instead, my supervisor listened patiently, then calmly offered a line I’ll never forget: 'You are here to learn to ride a bicycle, not to invent a bicycle.' That one sentence landed softly, but it cracked something open."
Check out one of our top #ScienceWorkingLife essays of 2025: https://t.co/I9q8RgC0wb