Gaurav H. Patel, MD, PhD

Psychiatry
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Overview

Gaurav Patel, MD/PhD is an Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University and a Research Scientist at the New York State Psychiatric Institute.  His research interest is in the neural systems underlying social cognition, and how they become dysfunctional in psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia.  Dr. Patel received his MD and PhD at Washington University School of Medicine, where he used task and resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in awake behaving macaques to map the circuits that control orienting of attention with Maurizio Corbetta and Larry Snyder.  During his psychiatry residency at Columbia University, he performed a study that compared human and monkey attention circuits with Vincent Ferrera. He then completed both a T32 research fellowship and a K23 Career Development Award under the mentorship of Daniel Javitt.  These projects used naturalistic stimuli, eye-tracking, and fMRI to measure behavioral and functional deficits during social cognition in schizophrenia.  His current efforts are focused on extending these findings, by using advanced retinotopic mapping methods to examine the effects of these deficits on the dynamics of the cortical activity and by exploring whether these deficits exist in individuals at high risk for developing schizophrenia. The ultimate goal of these studies is to understand the primary deficits and compensatory mechanisms in each patient, leading in the future to individualized treatment strategies.  For his work, Dr. Patel has received a Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award in 2005, a Leon Levy Neuroscience Fellowship in 2009, a fellowship from the American Psychiatric Foundation in 2013, a NARSAD Young Investigator Award in 2015, and a David Mahoney Neuroimaging Award from the Dana Foundation in 2017.  

Areas of Expertise / Conditions Treated

  • General Psychiatry

Academic Appointments

  • Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

Hospital Affiliations

  • NewYork-Presbyterian / Columbia University Irving Medical Center
  • NewYork-Presbyterian Hudson Valley Hospital
  • NewYork-Presbyterian Westchester

Gender

  • Male

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Insurance Accepted

Aetna

  • Aetna Signature Administrators
  • NYP Employee Plan
  • NY Signature
  • Student Health

Affinity Health Plan

  • Beacon Health - Behavioral Health
  • Medicaid Managed Care

Cigna

  • POS
  • PPO

Emblem/HIP

  • HMO

Empire Blue Cross/Blue Shield

  • EPO

Empire Blue Cross Blue Shield HealthPlus

  • Child/Family Health Plus
  • Essential Plan

Fidelis Care

  • Essential Plan
  • Medicaid Managed Care
  • Medicare Managed Care

Healthfirst

  • Child/Family Health Plus
  • Medicaid Managed Care

Quality Health Management

  • Quality Health Management

UnitedHealthcare

  • Behavioral Health (Columbia University Employee Plan)

WellCare

  • Medicare Managed Care
  • New Jersey Services (Medicaid Managed Care)

World Trade Center Health Plan

  • World Trade Center Health Plan

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Credentials & Experience

Education & Training

  • BA, 1999 Washington University in St. Louis
  • PhD, 2009 Washington University School of Medicine
  • MD, 2009 Washington University School of Medicine
  • Internship: 2010 NewYork Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia
  • Residency: NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center
  • Fellowship: 2016 Columbia University

Board Certifications

  • Psychiatry

Research

Selected Publications

GH Patel*, SC Arkin, D. Ruiz-Betancourt, FI Plaza, SA Mirza, S. A., DJ Vieira, NE Strauss, CC Klim, JP Sanchez-Peña, LP Bartel, J Grinband, A Martinez, RA Berman, KN Ochsner, DA Leopold, and DC Javitt.  Failure to engage the temporoparietal junction/posterior superior temporal sulcus predicts impaired naturalistic social cognition in schizophrenia.  Brain. In Press. 

SC Arkin, EC Jamerson, RT Smith, NE Strauss, CC Klim, DC Javitt, and GH Patel.  Deficits and compensatory mechanisms in visual processing and attention networks in schizophrenia.  Neuroimage Clinical.  27, 102348. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2020.102348

GH Patel*, SC Arkin, D Ruiz-Betancourt, H DeBaun, NE Strauss, LP Bartel, J Grinband, A Martinez, RA Berman, KN Ochsner, DA Leopold, and DC Javitt. What you see is what you get: visual scanning failures of naturalistic social scenes in schizophrenia. Psychological Medicine, 31, 1 - 10. https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0033291720001646

CM Sylvester, Y Qu, AB Srivastava, S Marek, A Zheng, D Alexopoulos, CD Smysere, JS Shimony, M Ortega, DL Dierker, GH Patel, SM Nelson, AW Gilmore, KB McDermott, JJ Berg, AT Drysdale, MT Perino, AZ Snyder, RV Raut, TO Laumann, EM Gordon, DM Barch, CE Rogers, DJ Greene, ME Riachle, and NUF Dosenbach. Individual-specific functional connectivity of the amygdala: A substrate for precision psychiatry. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 117(7), 3808–3818 (2020).

GH Patel*, C Sestieri, and M Corbetta.  The evolution of the temporoparietal junction and posterior superior temporal sulcus.  Cortex 118, 38–50 (2019).

GH Patel*, D Yang, EC Jamerson, LH Snyder, M Corbetta, and VP Ferrera.  Functional Evolution of new and expanded attention networks in humans.  Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2015 July 13;112(30):9454-9459.  PMCID: PMC4522817

GH Patel*, DM Kaplan, and LH Snyder.  Topographic organization in the brain: Searching for general principles.  Trends Cogn Sci. 2014 July; 18(7), 351–363.  PMCID: PMC4074559

GH Patel*, GL Shulman, AZ Snyder, LH Snyder, and M Corbetta.  Topographic organization of macaque area LIP.  Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2010 Mar 9;107(10):4728-4733. PMCID: PMC2842044