People
Emir Abdagic
Title/Position
Undergraduate Student Researcher
Emir is a first-generation undergraduate student majoring in Global Health Studies on the Pre-Medicine track. Emir is also apart of the Student Advisory Board for the UI First-Generation Task Force!
Favorite part about being on the research team: Emir enjoys being able to communicate and work with an amazing, friendly, and supportive group of individuals, as well as being able to take part in research that could potentially end up helping individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder.
Fun fact: He is a huge fan of traveling and hopes to live in either the Caribbean or Switzerland in the future!
William Guiler
Title/Position
Neuroscience Graduate Student
Favorite thing about being on the research team: William truly believes that the work they are doing will have an impact on the lives of those with Autism Spectrum Disorder. He treats every day as if he has the power to make a difference, however small. Perhaps even more special, the people he gets to work with in the lab.
Fun fact: He is terrified of making it through the winter.
Tanner Kempton
Title/Position
Medical Student
Favorite part about being on the research team: Tanner loves digging deep into the Autism research study. A lot of work and school can be superficial, but this is different. Not only is the work interesting, but he feels like he is working as a part of something bigger, helping to uncover a piece to the puzzle that will help individuals and families dealing with these disabilities to live a higher quality life.
Fun fact: Him and his wife have two little boys, and they all love spending time outdoors, hiking, camping, or cycling. They all recently moved from Idaho and have been enjoying discovering what the Midwest has to offer!
Elizabeth Pritchard
Title/Position
Medical Student
Favorite thing about being on the research team: Elizabeth loves the collaborative nature of the research team and how everyone works together to achieve goals and find solutions.
Fun fact: She was a letter winning member of the University of Iowa Women’s Rowing team while in undergrad from 2015 to 2019.
Lane Strathearn, MBBS FRACP PhD
Title/Position
Professor of Pediatrics, Psychiatry, Neuroscience and Pharmacology, Psychological and Brain Sciences
Dr. Strathearn is a developmental-behavioral pediatrician and the Director of the Attachment and Neurodevelopment Lab. His research and clinical work focuses on the neurobiology of mother-infant attachment, and neurodevelopmental disabilities such as autism. This includes a longitudinal study of women and their infants, examining maternal brain and hormone responses to infant facial expressions using functional MRI. His work explores the development of attachment behavior, and how drugs of abuse may highjack these relationships. He is also studying the long-term effects of child maltreatment on cognitive and emotional development, and early childhood factors that may help to protect against abuse or neglect. His research has drawn upon the Mater-University of Queensland Study of Pregnancy (MUSP) birth cohort of over 8000 mothers and children who have been followed over 20 years. His current research funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health examines maternal brain responses of drug-addicted mothers, the potential role of intranasal oxytocin to enhance parental caregiving, and epigenetic risk markers for autism.
Dr. Strathearn is Professor of Pediatrics, Psychiatry, Neuroscience and Pharmacology, and Psychological and Brain Sciences. He is also the Division Director for Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics at the University of Iowa, co-director of the Hawkeye Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center (Hawk-IDDRC), and Physician Director of the Center for Disabilities and Development at the University of Iowa Children's Hospital. He holds the William E. Bell/Gail A. McGuiness Endowed Chair for Pediatric Neurodevelopment.
Nicole Yeager
Title/Position
Clinical Trials Research Assistant and Data Manager
Favorite thing about being on the research team: Nicole is excited to work with and learn alongside the incredible team within the Attachment and Neurodevelopment Laboratory to ask (and answer) cutting-edge questions that bring together two of Nicole's greatest interests: parent-child attachment and neuroscience.
Fun fact: She is excellent at spotting four-leaf clovers alongside the sidewalks and trails of Iowa City. On average, she spots around 10/year.