Curated collection
Considering sex as a biological variable in preclinical research
Read more about Considering sex as a biological variable in preclinical researchIncorporating sex as a biological variable in neuroscience: What do we gain?
Read more about Incorporating sex as a biological variable in neuroscience: What do we gain?Fast, furious and enduring: Sensitive versus critical periods in sexual differentiation of the brain
Read more about Fast, furious and enduring: Sensitive versus critical periods in sexual differentiation of the brainSexual differentiation of the brain: Mode, mechanisms, and meaning
Read more about Sexual differentiation of the brain: Mode, mechanisms, and meaningSex differences in health and disease: A review of biological sex differences relevant to cancer with a spotlight on glioma
Read more about Sex differences in health and disease: A review of biological sex differences relevant to cancer with a spotlight on gliomaOpinion: Sex inclusion in basic research drives discovery
Read more about Opinion: Sex inclusion in basic research drives discoveryIncorporating sex as a biological variable in neuropsychiatric research: Where are we now and where should we be?
Read more about Incorporating sex as a biological variable in neuropsychiatric research: Where are we now and where should we be?Why and how to account for sex and gender in brain and behavioral research
Read more about Why and how to account for sex and gender in brain and behavioral researchPractical solutions for including sex as a biological variable (SABV) in preclinical neuropsychopharmacological research
Female rats are not more variable than male rats: A meta-analysis of neuroscience studies
Read more about Female rats are not more variable than male rats: A meta-analysis of neuroscience studiesMale-female comparisons are powerful in biomedical research – don’t abandon them
Read more about Male-female comparisons are powerful in biomedical research – don’t abandon themFour Core Genotypes and XY* mouse models: Update on impact on SABV research
Read more about Four Core Genotypes and XY* mouse models: Update on impact on SABV researchAbout the curator
Margaret (Peg) McCarthy received a PhD from the Institute of Animal Behavior at Rutgers University, Newark NJ, completed postdoctoral training at Rockefeller University in New York NY and was a National Research Council Fellow at NIH-NIAAA before joining the faculty of the University of Maryland School of Medicine in 1993 in Baltimore Maryland, USA. She was a Professor in the Department of Physiology before becoming the Chair of the Department of Pharmacology in 2011.
McCarthy has a long-standing interest in the cellular mechanisms establishing sex differences in the brain. She uses a combined behavioral and mechanistic approach in the laboratory rat to understand both normal brain development and how these processes might go selectively awry in males versus females. She has published over 200 peer-reviewed manuscripts and has been cited close to 10,000 times.
In addition to being Chair of the Department of Pharmacology, Margaret is the inaugural Director of the University of Maryland – Medicine Institute for Neuroscience Discovery (UM-MIND). She is a Reviewing Editor for Journal of Neuroscience and a fellow with AAAS and ACNP, former President of the Organization for the Study of Sex Differences and current President of the Society for Behavioral Neuroendocrinology.