Mark Daly is director of the Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland at the University of Helsinki. He is also co-director of the Medical and Population Genetics Program at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard.

Mark Daly
Associate professor
Massachusetts General Hospital
From this contributor
The interplay of common, rare variation in autism
Autism researchers should ditch the false dichotomy between common inherited variants and much rarer random mutations.
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Diving in with Nachum Ulanovsky
With an eye toward realism, the neuroscientist, who has a new study about bats out today, creates microcosms of the natural world to understand animal behavior.

Diving in with Nachum Ulanovsky
With an eye toward realism, the neuroscientist, who has a new study about bats out today, creates microcosms of the natural world to understand animal behavior.
Gene-activity map of developing brain reveals new clues about autism’s sex bias
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Gene-activity map of developing brain reveals new clues about autism’s sex bias
Boys and girls may be vulnerable to different genetic changes, which could help explain why the condition is more common in boys despite linked variants appearing more often in girls.
Engrams in amygdala lean on astrocytes to solidify memories
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Engrams in amygdala lean on astrocytes to solidify memories
Disrupting the astrocyte-neuronal dynamic in mice destabilizes their memory of fear conditioning.