Mayim Bialik, who you may know as Dr. Amy Farrah Fowler from "The Big Bang Theory" or the titular hat wearer from "Blossom," is one of the most well-known celebrities to have a PhD (real not honorary). She received the degree in neuroscience from UCLA in 2007.
Many times on this blog, I have mentioned the issue of open access, which means you can't read a lot of scientific papers unless you pay. I still have yet to write an eloquent, passionate, and intelligent article on the subject, so go
here if you want to read more. Bottom line: most of you don't have access to Bialik's full thesis, so I am going to read it and summarize here. I'll go chapter by chapter, but I'm going to start slow with this post. It's always best to ease into dissertation reading.
Let's get started.
Title: Hypothalamic regulation in relation to maladaptive, obsessive-compulsive, affiliative, and satiety behaviors in Prader-Willi syndrome (
Translation: what's wrong with the brains of people who have this disease where they eat like crazy)
Acknowledgements: It sounds like grad school was a real beyotch to Bialik: "Through an advisor leaving the University, a data set that was contaminated and had to be recollected, an infant who nursed every 2 hours all day for the first year of his life (and continued to nurse every 2 hours all night for the first 2 years of his life); this was the thesis that almost wasn't." Mad respect to anyone who had a child or children during grad school. I literally don't know how you did it. Madder respect to Bialik for use of a semicolon. And she wins further points for thanking the lab technicians who trained her in addition to the standard professors and fellow students.
Abstract: Bialik's thesis is going to tell us about abnormal hormone secretions in the hypothalamus (the part of the brain containing the pituitary gland) in people with
Prader-Willi Syndrome, a disease where seven genes are deleted or unexpressed and the leading cause of genetic obesity.
Verdict: I'm very excited to read this dissertation, something I don't think I've ever said, even about the ones my classmates have written. (Note - I don't think I've read any of their dissertations all the way through. I'm a terrible friend.) Bialik comes across as grateful for her educational opportunities while acknowledging how hard the process was. Her writing is engaging and thoughtful. She mentions her grandparents "left their war-torn countries of origin as young dreamers--the children of peddlers and tailors--to provide future generations with the opportunity to be free and to live in a place where the streets were paved with gold and you could be anything you wanted to be." I hadn't heard of Prader-Willi Syndrome before, but I'm always interested in the link between genetics, biology, and behavior.