Faculty Accomplishments

Mount Holyoke professors have won Guggenheim awards, NASA grants and Carnegie Fellowships.

They receive millions in funding from national foundations, leading to unique research opportunities for students.

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Roychoudhury, S. (2012). Forswearing Fever: Medicine, Materialism, and Shakespeare’s Sonnet 147. The Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies, 12(1), 4–25. .


Roychoudhury, S. (2006). Staging Wonders: Spectacle and Innovation in Shakespeare’s Romances and the Court Masque. In J. Lloyd-Jones & G. Cullum Renaissance Perspectives (pp. 223–37). Canberra. .


Honeycutt JA, Young JW, Porcu A, Sabariego M (2022). Editorial: Negative Valence Systems. Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience.


Vo, A., Tabrizi, N.S., Hunt, T., Cayanan, K., Chitale, S. [MHC’22], Anderson, L. [MHC’23], Tenney, S. [MHC’21], White, A.O., Sabariego, M., Hales, J.B., (2021). . Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, 185, 107507.


Tenney, S. [MHC'21], Vogiatzoglou, E. [MHC'23], Chohan, D. [MHC'21], Vo, A., Hunt, T., Cayanan, K., Hales, J. B. and Sabariego, M. (2021). A Time Duration Discrimination Task for the Study of Elapsed Time Processing in Rats. Bio-protocol ,11(6), e3965. DOI: .


Sabariego, M., Tabrizi, N. S., Marshall, G. J., McLagan, A. N., Jawad, S. [MHC'21], & Hales, J. B. (2021). In the temporal organization of episodic memory, the hippocampus supports the experience of elapsed time. Hippocampus31(1), 46-55. [Featured on the journal cover]


Hoxha, M. [MHC '21] and Sabariego, M. (2020). Delayed Alternation Task for the Study of Spatial Working and Long Term Memory in Rats. Bio-protocol 10(5): e3549. DOI:


Sabariego, M., Schonwald, A., Boublil, B.L., Zimmerman, D., Ahmadi, S., N. Gonzalez, C. Leibold, Leutgeb, J.K., Clark, R.E., Leutgeb, S. (2019). Time cells in the hippocampus are neither dependent on medial entorhinal cortex inputs nor necessary for spatial working memory. Neuron, 102, 1-14


Sabariego, M., Rosas, M., Piludu, M. A., Acquas, E., Giorgi, O., & Corda, M. G. (2019). Active avoidance learning differentially activates ERK phosphorylation in the primary auditory and visual cortices of Roman high-and low-avoidance rats. Physiology & behavior201, 31-41.


Chenani, A.*, Sabariego, M.*, Schlesiger, M. I., Leutgeb, J. K., Leutgeb, S., & Leibold, C. (2019). Hippocampal CA1 replay becomes less prominent but more rigid without inputs from medial entorhinal cortex. Nature Communications, 1-13.
* Denotes co-first author.