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Dana Small, Ph.D.
Assistant Fellow, The John B. Pierce Laboratory
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry
Assistant Professor of Psychology
BSc, University of Victoria, 1994
MSc, McGill University, 1998
Ph.D., McGill University, 2001 |
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Neuroimaging techniques such as functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI) and positron
emission tomography have made it possible to study
brain representation of sensation,
motivation and cognition in humans. The primary interest
of my lab is to use these techniques
in conjunction with psychophysics and behavioral
testing to uncover brain substrates of taste,
smell, flavor, and food reward. We are particularly
interested in multisensory integration of
taste and smell as well as in understanding how sensory
processing interacts with behavioral
choices such as decisions to eat or stop eating in
healthy individuals and in people with eating
disorders. A new research aim is to examine similarities
and differences in the neural
representation of food and drug reward to answer
questions such as how nicotine addiction
may influence the ability of food odors to induce
eating. We currently have a fully automated
and fMRI compatible olfactometer and gustometer and
are using these devices to study taste,
smell, and food reward in the 3 Tesla Magnet at the
Yale MR Imaging Research Center. |
Small, D.M., Voss, J., Mak, Y.E., Simmons, K.B., Parrish,
T.B., and Gitelman, D.R. (2004).
Experience-dependent neural integration of taste
and smell in the human brain. J.
Neurophysiol. 92:1892-1903.
Small, D.M., Gregory,
M.D., Mak, Y.E., Gitelman, D.R., Mesulam,
M.M., and Parrish, T.B.
(2003). Dissociation of neural representation
of intensity and affective valuation in human
gustation. Neuron 39:701-711.
Small, D.M.,
Jones-Gotman, M., and Dagher, A. (2003).
Feeding-induced dopamine release in
dorsal striatum correlates with meal pleasantness
ratings in healthy human volunteers.
Neuroimage 19:1709-1715 |