The Neuropsychology Subprogram of the City University of New York Doctoral Program in Psychology, located at Queens College

Former Ph.D. Students of the Bodnar Laboratory

1. Dr. Diana Badillo-Martinez, 1984:
Dissertation: Neonatal monosodium glutamate: behavioral characterization of nociceptive and stress response alterations in the rat.
Present Position: Staff Neuropsychologist, Danbury Hospital, Danbury, CT.

2. Dr. Jeffrey Kordower, 1984:
Dissertation: Vasopressin analgesia: specificity of action and nonopioid effects.
Present Position: Professor and Head, Center for Brain Repair, Jean Armour-Schweppe Endowed Chair, Departments of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Rush-Presbyterian Medical Center, Chicago, IL.

3. Dr. Donald Simone, 1985:
Dissertation: Naloxonazine, a high-affinity opiate receptor antagonist: effects upon nociceptive and ingestive processes.
Present Position: Professor, Acting Chairman of Department of Oral Science, University of Minnesota Sch. of Med. Minneapolis, MN.

4. Dr. Elisse Kramer, 1985:
Dissertation: Age-related changes in stress and opiate responses in rats.
Present Position: Associate Director of Research, Department of Psychiatry, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, New York, NY.

5. Dr. Ellen Sperber, 1986:
Dissertation: Cholinergic involvement in pain inhibition.
Present Position: Assistant Professor, Mercy College, Dobbs Ferry, NY.

6. Dr. Pamela Butler, 1986:
Dissertation: Neuromodulatory actions of thyrotropin releasing hormone upon stress-induced analgesia.
Present Position: Assistant Professor, Dept. of Psychiatry, New York University Medical Center and Research Scientist, Nathan Kline Psychiatric Institute, NY.

7. Dr. Phyllis Mann, 1987:
Dissertation: Opioid receptor involvement in food intake and body weight maintenance: role of the mu1 binding site.
Present Position: Assistant Professor, Dept. of Veterinary Medicine, Tufts University School of Medicine, Worcester, MA.

8. Dr. Maria-Teresa Romero, 1987:
Dissertation: Gender differences in analgesic processes in rats: influence of gonadal and hormonal factors.
Present Position: Associate Professor, Dept. of Psychology, State University of New York at Binghamton, Binghamton, NY.

9. Dr. Edward Lubin, 1991:
Dissertation Topic: Central alloxan treatment: characterization of effects upon opioid and nonopioid analgesia.
Present Position: Neurosurgery and Pain management, Gessler Pain Clinic, Florida.

10. Dr. Karen Kepler, 1991:
Dissertation Topic: Gender differences in central opiate and opioid analgesia.
Present Position: Osteopathic Medical Student, NJ.

11. Dr. Benjamin Kest, 1991:
Dissertation Topic: Endopeptidase 24.15 and antinociception: characterization and specificity of action.
Present Position: Associate Professor, College of Staten Island, CUNY, Staten Island, NY.

12. Dr. Dulmanie Arjune, 1992:
Dissertation Topic: Free feeding and intake following regulatory challenges in rats: roles of selective opioid receptor subtype antagonists.
Present Position: Staff Neuropsychologist, Behavioral Health Associates, Forest Hills, NY.

13. Dr. Iwona Beczkowska, 1993:
Dissertation Topic: Differential effects of opioid receptor subtype antagonists upon fluid intake of sucrose, saccharin and maltose dextrin solutions in rats.
Present Position: Clinical Associate, Purdue Pharmaceutical Company, Norwalk, CT.

14. Dr. Grace Rossi, 1993:
Dissertation Topic: Supraspinal opiate antinociception: synergy between mesencephalic, pontine and medullary sites in the rat.
Present Position: Associate Professor, C.W. Post College, Long Island University and Research Associate, Department of Neurology, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York NY.

15. Dr. Judith Robertson, 1993:
Dissertation Topic: Site-specific modulation of morphine and swim-induced antinociception following thyrotropin-releasing hormone administration in the rat periaqueductal gray.
Present Position: Staff Neuropsychologist, Institute for Cognitive Development (ICD), New York, NY.

16. Dr. Jacqueline Kiefel, 1994:
Dissertation Topic: Mesencephalic morphine antinociception: antagonism by serotonergic and opioid antagonists in the rostral ventral medulla in rats.
Present Position: Chief Neuropsychologist, Atlanta, GA.

17. Dr. Anita Islam, 1994:
Dissertation Topic: Interactive effects of gender, gonadectomy and aging upon opioid analgesia and ingestive behavior in rats.
Present Position: Clinical Research Coordinator, Target Health Inc., NY, NY

18. Dr. Zoran Wolf Pavlovic, 1997:
Dissertation Topic: Functional relationship between the amygdala and periaqueductal gray in the processes of pain and analgesia.
Last Known Position: Post-Doctoral Fellow, Department of Pharmacology, Cornell University College of Medicine, New York, NY.

19. Dr. Liza Leventhal, 1998:
Dissertation Topic: Antisense mapping of opioid receptor clones: role in ingestive behavior in rats.
Present Position: Research Scientist, Wyeth Pharmaceuticals Neuroscience Institute, Princeton, NJ.

20. Dr. Marcello Spinella, 1999:
Dissertation Topic: The role of medullary cholinergic and excitatory amino acid receptors modulating mesencephalic opioid antinociception.
Present Position: Associate Professor, Richard Stockton State College of New Jersey, Pomona, NJ.

21. Dr. André Ragnauth, 2000:
Dissertation Topic: Role of the nucleus accumbens in the mediation of opioid-induced feeding in rats.
Present Position: Assistant Professor, Dept. of Pharmacology, Sophie Davis Medical School, City College of New York, New York, NY.

22. Dr. Wei-Zhen Yu, 2001:
Dissertation Topic: Pharmacology of conditioned flavor preferences in sham-feeding rats: effects of opioid and dopaminergic antagonists.
Present Position: Clinical Neuropsychologist, Kingsbrook Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY.

23. Dr. Eliza Krzanowska: 2001:
Dissertation Topic: The periaqueductal gray: a site eliciting gender differentiated responses in opioid analgesia.
Present Position: Clinical Neuropsychologist, Queens Hospital Medical Center, Kew Gardens, NY.

24. Dr. Joyce Echo: 2001:
Dissertation Topic: The role of excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters upon opioid-induced feeding in the nucleus accumbens and ventral tegmental area in rats.
Present Position: Post-Doctoral Fellow in Clinical Neuropsychology, JFK Rehabilitation Institute, Edison, NJ.

25. Dr. Robert Silva: 2001:
Dissertation Topic: Pharmacological and molecular characterization of endogenous opioid peptide-induced feeding responses in rats.
Present Position: Senior Manager, Clinical Development, Dainippon-Sumitomo Pharma.

26. Dr. Randi Shane: 2002:
Dissertation Topic: Pharmacological and behavioral analysis of nociceptive modulation of rat pre-pro-Orphanin FQ/nociceptin fragments in the amygdala of rats.
Present Position: Assistant Professor, Department of Social Sciences, Bronx Community College, Bronx, NY.

27. Dr. Maria Hadjimarkou: 2004:
Dissertation Topic: Pharmacological, molecular and neuroanatomical analysis of the role of opioid receptor subtypes and genes in regulatory challenges.
Present Position: Post-Doctoral Fellow, Laboratory of Functional Neuroanatomy, National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, MD.

28. Dr. Robert Baker: 2004:
Dissertation Topic: Pharmacology of the acquisition and expression of flavor preference conditioning to fructose: roles of dopamine and opioid receptors in rats.
Present Position: Assistant Professor, Touro College, New York, NY.

Back

contact us queens college home graduate center home Frequently Asked Questions colloquia fall research day class schedule prospective students current students faculty and research about the program