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Gabrielle Reimann

Graduate Student
Research Area: Clinical Science

Gabrielle is a third year graduate student in Vanderbilt’s Clinical Science doctoral program. After graduating from James Madison University, Gabrielle spent three years as a post-baccalaureate research fellow at the National Institutes of Health. In her first year, she modeled risk factors for later life depression in Turner syndrome. She was awarded an additional two year fellowship in the Lab of Brain and Cognition where she examined the neural correlates of memory and attention in autism spectrum disorders and prosopagnosia. As a graduate student, Gabrielle is particularly interested in the role of large-scale neural networks in psychopathology. 

Lab Website

Representative Publications

 
  1. Reimann, G.E., Stier, A.J., Moore, T.M., Durham, E.L., Jeong, H.J., Cardenas-Iniguez, C., Dupont, R.M., Pines, J.R., Berman, M.G., Lahey, B., Berman, M., Kaczkurkin, A.N. (In Press). Atypical Functional Network Properties and Associated Dimensions of Youth Psychopathology During Rest and Task Performance. Biological Psychiatry Global Open Science.

  2. Jeong, H. J., Moore, T. M., Durham, E. L., Reimann, G. E., Dupont, R. M., Cardenas-Iniguez, C., Berman, M. G., Lahey, B. B., & Kaczkurkin, A. N. (in Press). General and specific factors of environmental stress and their associations with brain structure and dimensions of psychopathology. Biological Psychiatry Global Open Science.

  3. Ratto, A.B., Reimann, G.E., Nadwodny, N. (2021). Dual Language Learning Predicts Improved Executive Functioning in Youth with Autism. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders. doi.org/10.1007/s10803-021-05356-3

  4. Reimann, G.E., Walsh, C., Csumitta, K.D., McClure, P., Pereira, F., Martin, A., Ramot, M. (2021). Gauging facial feature viewing preference as a stable individual trait in Autism Spectrum Disorder Autism Research.  doi.org/10.1002/aur.2540

  5. McClure, P., Reimann, G.E., Ramot, M., Pereira, F. (2020). A Deep Neural Network Tool For Automatic Segmentation Of Human Body Parts In Natural Scenes. arXiv.arXiv:2009.09900

  6. Ramot, M., Walsh, C., Reimann, G.E., Martin, A. (2020). Distinct Neural Mechanisms of Social Orienting and Mentalizing Revealed by Independent Measures of Neural and Eye Movement Typicality. Communications Biology. 3. doi.org/10.1038/s42003-020-0771-1

  7. Reimann, G.E., Comis, L.E., Bernad Perman, M.M. (2020). Cognitive Functioning in Turner Syndrome: Addressing Deficits through Academic Accommodation. Women’s Health Reports, 1(1), 143–149.

  8. Shoup-Knox, M.L., Ostrander, G.M., Reimann, G.E., Pipitone, N. (2019). Fertility-Dependent Acoustic Variation in Women’s Voices Previously Shown to Affect Listener Physiology and Perception. Evolutionary Psychology.17(2).

  9. Reimann, G.E., Bernad Perman, M.M., Ho, P., Parks, R.A., Comis, L.E. (2018) Psychosocial Characteristics of Women with a Delayed Diagnosis of Turner Syndrome, Journal of Pediatrics, 199, 206-211. doi.org/10.1016/j.jpeds.2018.03.058

 


Honors

2022-2025 National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program

2022 Department of Psychology Scholarship, Vanderbilt University

2022 1st Place, Vanderbilt 3 Minute Thesis Competition

2021 Junior Scientist Fellowship, American Psychological Association of Graduate Students/ Psi Chi 

2021 Professional Development & Training Grant, Russell G. Hamilton Graduate Leadership Institute

2021 Gayle Fambrough Fellowship Recipient