Personal profile
About
Dr. Hennessy is a Professor of Psychology and a core faculty member in the Behavioral Neurosciences group. He received his PhD from Northern Illinois University and completed a post-doctoral fellowship at Stanford University. He was employed as a Research Psychologist at SRI International before joining Wright State.
Related documents
Education/Academic qualification
Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Fellowship, Stanford University
1976 → 1979
Psychology, Ph.D., Northern Illinois University
… → 1976
Psychology, M.A., Northern Illinois University
… → 1974
Psychology, B.A., Northern Illinois University
… → 1972
Research Interests
- Behavioral Neuroscience
Disciplines
- Life Sciences
- Neuroscience and Neurobiology
- Social and Behavioral Sciences
- Psychology
- Biological Psychology
-
Communication of inflammation
Hennessy, M. B., Jan 2025, In: Brain, Behavior, and Immunity. 123, p. 397-398 2 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Comment/debate › peer-review
Open Access -
Early Attachment Disruption Increases Central Sensitivity of Depressive-Like Behavior to Stimulation by PGE-2
Hennessy, M. B., Slomski, O., Spenny, J. L., Sharma, T. R., Schiml, P. A. & Deak, T., Mar 2025, In: Developmental Psychobiology. 67, 2, e70033.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access -
Examination of the role of adrenergic receptor stimulation in the sensitization of neuroinflammatory-based depressive-like behavior in isolated Guinea pig pups
Kessler, R. R., Schiml, P. A., McGraw, S. M., Tomlin, E. N., Hoeferlin, M. J., Deak, T. & Hennessy, M. B., 2023, In: Stress. 26, 1, 2239366.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access -
Sensitization of depressive-like behavior is attenuated by disruption of prostaglandin synthesis days following brief early attachment-figure isolation
Hennessy, M. B., Miller, J. A., Carter, K. A., Molina, A. L., Schiml, P. A. & Deak, T., Mar 2022, In: Developmental Psychobiology. 64, 2, e22237.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access -
Social buffering of plasma corticosterone and amygdala responses of young rats following exposure to periorbital shock: Implications for eyeblink conditioning development
Claflin, D. I., Gallimore, D. M., Koraym, A., Costello, A., Hennessy, M. B. & Quinn, J. J., Oct 1 2021, In: Behavioral Neuroscience. 135, 5, p. 622-628 7 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access