Margaret Morris
UNSW, NSW, Australia
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.

Professor Margaret Morris (BSc, PhD Monash), is based within Biomedical Sciences, UNSW Sydney. Her current research addresses critical questions concerning the impact of adverse early life events and lifestyle factors on chronic disease risk. The impact of parental obesity and early childhood events has been a key focus, exploring offspring metabolic and cardiovascular risk, and options for intervention. Current work includes intergenerational transmission of obesity and the psychology of eating, e.g. how does provision of a varied, energy rich diet override the regulatory control mechanisms that should maintain body weight? Her lab is investigating the impact of sugar, and fat, on cognition and the gut microbiota.
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
High fat diet restored anxiety-like behaviour induced by early life adversity but induced long-term deficits in hippocampal genes related to plasticity and mitochondrial biogenesis (#137)
1:00 PM
Margaret J Morris
Poster Session 1 - Behavioural neuroendocrinology I
Early life stress induced by limited nesting had no effect on spatial memory and anxiety-like behaviour but improved object recognition in female rats (#378)
1:00 PM
Jayanthi Maniam
Poster Session 2 - Neuroendocrinology of Stress II