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Benjelene patch 3 (#349)
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* Update 2017-04-09-sutherland-benjelene.md

* Update team/_posts/2017-04-09-sutherland-benjelene.md

Co-authored-by: Taylor Salo <[email protected]>

* Update team/_posts/2017-04-09-sutherland-benjelene.md

Co-authored-by: Taylor Salo <[email protected]>

* Update 2017-04-09-sutherland-benjelene.md

* Update 2017-04-09-sutherland-benjelene.md

* Update 2017-04-09-sutherland-benjelene.md

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Co-authored-by: Taylor Salo <[email protected]>
Co-authored-by: Julio A. Peraza <[email protected]>
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Benjelene is a first-year graduate student in the Department of Psychology at Florida International University (FIU), specializing in Cognitive Neuroscience. She graduated from FIU with a B.A. in Psychology with double major in Philosophy of the Mind. Benjelene’s academic and career goals revolve around gaining a better understanding of how the use of substances can affect the brain and how brain differences may predict substance use by employing task-based and resting-state fMRI analyses. She is currently working on the Antecedents and Consequences of Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems (ACE) Project, which examines the risk and protective factors leading to electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) usage among teenagers, alongside the impact of ENDS usage on the developing brain.

Benjelene is a graduate student in the Department of Psychology at Florida International University (FIU), specializing in Cognitive Neuroscience. She graduated from FIU with a B.A. in Psychology with double major in Philosophy of the Mind. Benjelene’s academic and career goals revolve around gaining a better understanding of adolescent substance use etiology in the context of brain function and modifiable risk factors (e.g., emotion regulation, sleep) that can inform prevention strategies to reduce use onset. Namely, Benjelene is interested in those neurobiological differences that can impact adolescent substance use by employing task-based and resting-state fMRI analyses.

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