Elissa Welle is a news reporter for The Transmitter, where she covers neurodegeneration and a smorgasbord of other basic neuroscience research. Before joining the newsroom in late 2023, she worked as an intern reporter for Reuters, Nature, STAT News and The Detroit Free Press. She has also written for The Chronicle of Higher Education and her alma mater’s student newspaper, The Michigan Daily. Her days as a scientist were spent designing and fabricating tiny electrodes for single-neuron electrophysiology recordings.
Elissa Welle
Reporter
The Transmitter
From this contributor
Decoding flies’ motor control with acrobat-scientist Eugenia Chiappe
Inclusivity committee disbands in protest at Canadian neuroscience institute
Carol Jennings, whose family’s genetics informed amyloid cascade hypothesis, dies at 70
Education
- M.S. in science journalism, University of California, Santa Cruz
- Ph.D. in biomedical engineering, University of Michigan
- B.S. in bioengineering, Cornell University
Fellowships
- AAAS Mass Media Fellowship in 2022
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Cocaine, morphine commandeer neurons normally activated by food, water in mice
Confirming a long-held hypothesis, repeated exposure to the drugs alters neurons in the nucleus accumbens, the brain’s reward center, and curbs an animal’s urge for sustenance.
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Here is a roundup of autism-related news and research spotted around the web for the week of 6 May.
Neuroscience needs a research-video archive
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Neuroscience needs a research-video archive
Video data are enormously useful and growing rapidly, but the field lacks a searchable, shareable way to store them.