Kafui Dzirasa (born 1978) is an American psychiatrist and Associate Professor at Duke University. He looks to understand the relationship between neural circuit malfunction and mental illness. He was a 2019 AAAS Leshner Fellow and was elected Fellow of the National Academy of Medicine in 2021.
Early life and education
Dzirasa was born to Abigail, a nurse, and Samuel Dzirasa, a civil engineer. His parents were from Accra, Ghana, and moved to the United States in 1971.[1] Dzirasa grew up in Silver Spring, Maryland.[1] While he was in college he met one of his childhood heroes who specialized in brain science.[2] He was an undergraduate student at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, where he received a Meyerhoff Scholarship.[1] He switched from chemistry to chemical engineering at UMBC. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in chemical engineering in 2001.[3] He joined Duke University with the intention of completing a PhD in biological engineering and designing neuroprosthetics.[3] After visiting the schizophrenia ward at Duke University, Dzirasa switched to medicine.[3] He earned a PhD in neurobiology in 2007 with Miguel Nicolelis.[4][5] He was awarded the Duke University Somjen Award for Outstanding Dissertation Thesis.[6][7] He was the first Black student to graduate with a doctorate in neurobiology from Duke.[1] He completed his MD in 2009. His graduate work was supported by the Ruth K. Broad Biomedical Research Fellowship, the UNCF-Merck Graduate Science Research Fellowship and the Wakeman Fellowship.[8] He was inspired to focus on mental illness after watching his family members suffer from bipolar disorder and completed his residency training in psychiatry in 2016.
Career
Dzirasa is interested in how mechanisms in neural circuits underpin emotional behavior.[8] His ultimate aim is to use neuroelectrical stimulation to treat mental illness.[9] He has considered the fluctuations of local field potential oscillations in the brain. Dzirasa developed a multi-circuit in vivo recording technique that can be used with selective modulation using designer drugs.[10] He used machine learning to identify a spatiotemporal dynamic network that can predict depression.[11] He has looked at how the electrical patterns in the brain impact of mice cope with stress; finding that mice who were more sensitive to stress had higher activation in their prefrontal cortex compared to the less sensitive mice.[12][13] He demonstrated that the network is distinct biologically from the networks that are dysfunctional after stress.[11]
Dzirasa is interested in providing education about health to underserved communities.[25] He is committed to improving diversity within the academic community, and founded the Association of Underrepresented Minority Fellows in 2007.[26] He has served on the board of directors of the Student Medical Association, which looks to eradicate health disparities.[25] He is a mentor for the Meyerhoff Scholarship Program.[27] Dzirasa is committed to the undergraduate community at Duke University, and welcomes trainee students to his lab every year - in particular those from underrepresented groups.[27]