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ASSISTANT PROFESSOR | Neuroscience
Biography
Dr Stoll joined the department of Neurosicence at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in 2015 as a Post-doctoral fellow and was promoted to Instructor in 2020. Dr Stoll obtained in PhD in Neuroscience from the University of Lyon (France), where he worked on the neural dynamics underlying exploratory behavior in animals and humans.
Dr Stoll is interested in understanding the neural bases of decision-making and foraging. More specifically, he is focused on understanding how parts of the prefrontal cortex communicate when we have to decide in a flexible and efficient manner, and also how more distant areas are involved in the implementation of such decisions.
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Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years
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Consistent Hierarchies of Single-Neuron Timescales in Mice, Macaques, and Humans
Zeisler, Z. R., Love, M., Rutishauser, U., Stoll, F. M. & Rudebeck, P. H., 7 May 2025, In: Journal of Neuroscience. 45, 19, e2155242025.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access6 Scopus citations -
Comparative basolateral amygdala connectomics reveals dissociable single-neuron projection patterns to frontal cortex in macaques and mice
Zeisler, Z. R., Heslin, K. A., Stoll, F. M., Hof, P. R., Clem, R. L. & Rudebeck, P. H., 22 Jul 2024, In: Current Biology. 34, 14, p. 3249-3257.e3Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access8 Scopus citations -
Decision-making shapes dynamic inter-areal communication within macaque ventral frontal cortex
Stoll, F. M. & Rudebeck, P. H., 7 Oct 2024, In: Current Biology. 34, 19, p. 4526-4538.e5Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access4 Scopus citations -
Dissociable Representations of Decision Variables within Subdivisions of the Macaque Orbital and Ventrolateral Frontal Cortex
Stoll, F. M. & Rudebeck, P. H., 28 Aug 2024, In: Journal of Neuroscience. 44, 35, e0464242024.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access5 Scopus citations -
Preferences reveal dissociable encoding across prefrontal-limbic circuits
Stoll, F. M. & Rudebeck, P. H., 3 Jul 2024, In: Neuron. 112, 13, p. 2241-2256.e8Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access18 Scopus citations
Press/Media
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Findings from Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Yields New Data on Biology (Comparative Basolateral Amygdala Connectomics Reveals Dissociable Single-neuron Projection Patterns To Frontal Cortex In Macaques and Mice)
Stoll, F., Rudebeck, P., Hof, P. & Clem, R.
27/08/24
1 item of Media coverage
Press/Media
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Research on Science Detailed by Researchers at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (The neural basis of resting-state fMRI functional connectivity in fronto-limbic circuits revealed by chemogenetic manipulation)
Stoll, F., Rudebeck, P., Fujimoto, A., Fleysher, L. & Elorette, C.
17/06/24
1 item of Media coverage
Press/Media