• Home
  • About
  • Categories
    • Arts & Culture
      • Global Health
      • Humanism
      • Pre-Med School
      • Primary Care
      • Rural Health
    • Business/Policy
    • Ethics
    • Events
      • Diversity/Inclusion Week
      • Match Day
      • Solidarity Week for Compassionate Patient Care 2016
      • Solidarity Week for Compassionate Patient Care 2022
    • Interprofessional
    • Op-Ed
    • Science
      • Data Visualized
      • Research
      • Scholarly Project
      • Science/Tech
  • EDITORS
  • Submissions
The Differential - The University of Arizona College of Medicine ‒ Phoenix Student Publication The University of Arizona College of Medicine ‒ Phoenix Student Publication
  • Arts & Culture
    • Global Health
    • Humanism
    • Pre-Med School
    • Primary Care
    • Rural Health
  • Business/Policy
  • Ethics
  • Interprofessional
  • Op-Ed
  • Science
    • Data Visualized
    • Research
    • Scholarly Project
  • Events
    • Diversity/Inclusion Week
    • Match Day
    • Solidarity Week for Compassionate Patient Care 2016
    • Solidarity Week for Compassionate Patient Care 2022
Avatar

Zachary Morrison

Zachary Morrison is a medical student at the UA COM-Phoenix. He was born in Massachusetts and lived there for 13 years before moving to Arizona. He loves being in Arizona, and one of his favorite hobbies is rock climbing. He received a BS in medicinal biochemistry from ASU and worked as a scribe in the emergency department at Banner Baywood Hospital during his gap year. His main career interests now include emergency medicine, cardiology, and orthopedic surgery. Additionally, he has always been interested in how drugs affect the brain. Since he also likes procedural things, he decided to do his scholarly project on a topic that meshed the two together.

Scholarly ProjectJanuary 9, 2018

In rats that are intermittently socially stressed, does viral-mediated knockdown of AKT in the ventral tegmental area block cross-sensitization after administration of amphetamine?

By Zachary Morrison

Introduction Social stress is a type of hierarchical stress in which an individual has little or no ability to change his/her circumstances. It is…

Read More
All Rights Reserved. This is NOT a University of Arizona College of Medicine ‒ Phoenix authorized publication.
Back to top