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Professor | Weill Cornell Medicine Radiology & Cornell University. Computational neuroimaging, women’s brain health, neuroAI, psychedelics, brain-behavior mapping. Mom, jogger, avid reader. Lab site: cocolaboratory.com Bowers WBHI: wbhi.ucsb.edu
Amy Kuceyeski





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Our preprint on sex differences in brain networks was covered today by Nature: www.nature.com/articles/d41...
Excited to be speaking at @camhnews.bsky.social #womenmind Conference this November on “How Family History of Substance Use Disorder Impacts Brain Dynamics Depends on an Adolescent’s Sex" Join us Nov 4–5, 2026 to turn women’s mental health research into action. #WomensHealthResearch #womenmind
Our story about The Krakencoder - a new AI tool to analyze brain networks - is out in Weill Cornell's Impact magazine. Support from NIMH and @bowers-wbhi.bsky.social Led by Keith Jamison, with @msabuncu.bsky.social, @cerentozlu.bsky.social, Zijin Gu, Qinxin Wang Full story: tinyurl.com/mryjbzfk
My perspective in The Transmitter on the role of AI and neuroimaging in advancing women’s brain health. “To put it bluntly, we need to recruit more AI researchers to be interested in women’s brain health, and we need to make women’s brain health researchers more fluent in AI.” tinyurl.com/4mvytsdu
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Addressing this gap will require collecting widespread data on pregnancy, menopause and other life events women experience—and could bring us closer to the “holy grail” of linking brain and behavior.
www.thetransmitter.org
Large-scale neuroimaging datasets often lack information specific to women’s health, constraining AI’s analysis potential
There are sex differences in brain connectivity and some of them become more pronounced with age. A particular spike happens during puberty, for example. It was fascinating to dig into this for @nature.com 🧪 🧵 1/11 www.nature.com/articles/d41...
Brain differences between sexes get more pronounced from puberty www.nature.com/articles/d41... 👆🏼one to watch by @amykooz.bsky.social and Co
Amy Kuceyeski
Amy Kuceyeski
Amy Kuceyeski
Amy Kuceyeski
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Study could help reveal why some mental health disorders vary between men and women — but it's not clear whether the differences are due to sex or gender.
www.nature.com
Brain differences between sexes get more pronounced from puberty
Study could help reveal why some mental health disorders vary between men and women — but it's not clear whether the differences are due to sex or gender.
www.nature.com
Brain differences between sexes get more pronounced from puberty
Chris Simms
Emily G. Jacobs
Mapping the connections between the brain’s structure and function.
impact.weill.cornell.edu
Unleashing the Krakencoder
Study could help reveal why some mental health disorders vary between men and women — but it's not clear whether the differences are due to sex or gender.
www.nature.com
Brain differences between sexes get more pronounced from puberty