Elly Nedivi () is an American neuroscientist. She is a professor of brain and cognitive sciences at the Picower Institute for Learning and Memory and the William R. (1964) and Linda R. Young Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
As the Fred and Carole Middleton Assistant Professor of Neurobiology, she conducted a study to find the possibility of growing new cells to replace ones damaged by disease or spinal cord injury. By 2008, her research team discovered that a type of neuron related to Autism spectrum disorders developed in a thin strip of brain tissue at the upper border of cortical layer 2. This discovery could allow for the possibility to force growth in cells that would normally be unable to repair themselves.
In 2016, she was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science for her contributions to the field of neuroscience. That same year, she found that a protein known as CPG2 was important in regulating the receptor reabsorption and its connections between neurons. Three years later, she discovered that people with less abundant CPG2 were more likely to suffer from bipolar disorder. By November, Nedivi was appointed the inaugural William R. (1964) And Linda R. Young Professor.
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