Headshot portrait of Edith Vioni Sullivan - Professor of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences (Major Laboratories & Clinical Translational Neurosciences Incubator)
Bio-X Affiliated Faculty

Dr. Edith Vioni Sullivan's commitment to research on human alcoholism began about 30 years ago when she joined the Neuroimaging Group at Stanford. Dr. Sullivan brought to this research collaboration her background as an experimental neuropsychologist working in amnesic syndromes, Alzheimer's disease, and Parkinson's disease at MIT and gained from the collaboration experience and expertise as a brain imaging scientist at Stanford. These experiences provided complementary understanding on the potential of establishing brain structure-function relations for the first time in Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD). This background led to the development of my program of study in AUD, focusing on faulty frontocerebellar circuitry as underlying a selective subset of cognitive and motor dysfunctions commonly expressed in people with AUD. Toward this end, Dr. Sullivan was granted a MERIT Award, which resulted in dozens of publications describing cognitive, sensory, and motor sequelae of chronic, excessive alcohol drinking and identifying neural mechanisms of impairment. This project became the centerpiece of her program of research that has included international studies on AUD, investigation of cognitive and motor process selectively disrupted in AUD+HIV infection comorbidity, comparison brain structural and functional profiles of Mild Cognitive Impairment and AUD, and rodent models of chronic exposure to high levels of alcohol. 

Dr. Sullivan is also engaged in a multi-site consortium study aimed at determining the developmental trajectories of brain, neuropsychological, and emotional development of adolescents and to track deviations from normal trajectories in adolescents who initiate excessive alcohol drinking and measure recovery in those who stop drinking. Coupled with her decade long NIAAA K05 Senior Mentor Award, this integrated research program provides a rich environment for mentoring promising young investigators.