Rachel Zsido, Ph.D
Postdoctoral Fellow, Harvard Medical School
Senior Imager, SCORE P1
Massachusetts general hospital
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Rachel joined Dr. Jill Goldstein's lab (Clinical Neuroscience Laboratory of Sex Differences in the Brain) in 2022 to merge her long-held interest in sex differences with her experience using MRI to investigate functional interactions between brain regions.
Dr. Rachel Zsido is a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital in the Department of Psychiatry. Dr. Zsido received her B.A. in Neurobiology from Harvard University. As a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Interdisciplinary Undergraduate Fellow, she researched sex differences in stress and anxiety-related disorders at Massachusetts General Hospital. Her B.A. thesis, “Contributions of estradiol and hormonal contraceptive use to sex differences during fear extinction recall”, received the Best Manuscript Award from The Harvard Undergraduate Research Journal. Dr. Zsido then completed her Ph.D. in Cognitive Neuroscience at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences. During her doctoral studies, she used multimodal neuroimaging techniques (MRI, EEG, PET) to investigate how sex steroids shape brain structure, function, and chemistry across the lifespan; with emphasis on women’s increased risk for depression and dementia. She was the recipient of several prestigious awards, including the Joachim Herz Foundation Fellowship for Interdisciplinary Life Science and the Dr. Margarete Blank Publication Prize for noteworthy scientific work in the field of sex and gender medicine.
Follow Rachel on Twitter at @RachelGZsido
Publications
Effects of Hormonal Contraceptives on Mood: A Focus on Emotion Recognition and Reactivity, Reward Processing, and Stress Response. Lewis CA, Kimmig AS, Zsido RG, Jank A, Derntl B, Sacher J. Curr Psychiatry Rep. 2019 Nov 7;21(11):115. doi: 10.1007/s11920-019-1095-z. PMID: 31701260Using positron emission tomography to investigate hormone-mediated neurochemical changes across the female lifespan: implications for depression. Zsido RG, Villringer A, Sacher J. Int Rev Psychiatry. 2017 Dec;29(6):580-596. doi: 10.1080/09540261.2017.1397607. Epub 2017 Dec 4.PMID: 29199875
Testosterone imbalance may link depression and increased body weight in premenopausal women. Stanikova D, Zsido RG, Luck T, Pabst A, Enzenbach C, Bae YJ, Thiery J, Ceglarek U, Engel C, Wirkner K, Stanik J, Kratzsch J, Villringer A, Riedel-Heller SG, Sacher J. Transl Psychiatry. 2019 Jun 7;9(1):160. doi: 10.1038/s41398-019-0487-5. PMID: 31175272
Association of Estradiol and Visceral Fat With Structural Brain Networks and Memory Performance in Adults. Zsido RG, Heinrich M, Slavich GM, Beyer F, Kharabian Masouleh S, Kratzsch J, Raschpichler M, Mueller K, Scharrer U, Löffler M, Schroeter ML, Stumvoll M, Villringer A, Witte AV, Sacher J. JAMA Netw Open. 2019 Jun 5;2(6):e196126. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.6126. PMID: 31225892
One-week escitalopram intake alters the excitation-inhibition balance in the healthy female brain. Zsido RG, Molloy EN, Cesnaite E, Zheleva G, Beinhölzl N, Scharrer U, Piecha FA, Regenthal R, Villringer A, Nikulin VV, Sacher J. Hum Brain Mapp. 2022 Apr 15;43(6):1868-1881. doi: 10.1002/hbm.25760. Epub 2022 Jan 22. PMID: 35064716
Contribution of estradiol levels and hormonal contraceptives to sex differences within the fear network during fear conditioning and extinction. Hwang MJ, Zsido RG, Song H, Pace-Schott EF, Miller KK, Lebron-Milad K, Marin MF, Milad MR. BMC Psychiatry. 2015 Nov 18;15:295. doi: 10.1186/s12888-015-0673-9. PMID: 26581193