Scientists in Love: Stories about the fantasies

Published: July 31, 2020, 11 a.m.

b'This week we present two stories from people for whom science and love were interconnected.\\nPart 1: When Saurin Choksi starts dating a neuroscientist, it challenges his assumptions about gender roles.\\nPart 2: Wendy Suzuki\'s trajectory as a neuroscientist is forever altered by a passionate love affair in Paris.\\nA proud member of the Writers Guild of America, he wrote on staff for the Facebook / Refinery 29 talk show, \\u201cAfter After Party.\\u201d He\\u2019s also worked with the good people at Comedy Central on a number of their digital sketches. Choksi won The Boston Comedy Fest and his stand up has been featured on Laughs on Fox TV and Sirius/XM radio. He\'s performed at numerous comedy festivals--Limestone, Bridgetown, and SF Sketch are among his favorites. Choksi also hosted a television show on Fuse called "White Guy Talk Show" where he talked about pop culture and wore suits he couldn\'t afford. He created internet videos for Seriously.tv and is a proud alumni of Chicago\'s Lincoln Lodge. Choksi produces and hosts two acclaimed live stand up showcases in Brooklyn: Comedians You Should Know NYC and Brown Privilege Comedy. He is a 2020 Sesame Workshop Writer\'s Room fellow.\\nChoksi relaxes by sewing, crafting, and making stuff. He loves his wife, his family, and 4 of his friends. He thinks you should be nice to yourself and is impressed by your power.\\n\\nDr. Wendy A. Suzuki is a Professor of Neural Science and Psychology in the Center for Neural Science at New York University. She received her undergraduate degree in physiology and human anatomy at the University of California, Berkeley in 1987 studying with Prof. Marion C. Diamond, a leader in the field of brain plasticity. She went on to earn her Ph.D. in Neuroscience from U.C. San Diego in 1993 and completed apost-doctoral fellowship at the National Institutes of Health before accepting her faculty position at New York University in 1998. Her major research interest continues to be brain plasticity. She is best known for her extensive work studying areas in the brain critical for our ability to form and retain new long-term memories. More recently her work has focused on understanding how aerobic exercise can be used to improve learning, memory and higher cognitive abilities in humans. Wendy is passionate about teaching (see her courses), about exercise (intenSati), and about supporting and mentoring up and coming scientists. \\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices'