is Professor of Psychiatry and Radiology and Director of the Emory Clinical Neuroscience Research Unit (ECNRU)
at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, Georgia, and Director
of Mental Health Research at the Atlanta VAMC in
Decatur, Georgia. Dr. Bremner moved to Emory from Yale
in November of 2000 where he spent the first 12 years of his career.
Dr. Bremner’s research has used neuroimaging and neurobiology
measures to study the neural correlates and neurobiology of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) related to
combat and childhood abuse, as well as the related area of depression.
His more recent work is expanding to look at the relationship between brain, behavior, and physical health
including studies of heart disease and the brain, and the effects of medication on the brain.
Dr. Bremner has worked continuously throughout his career as a physician scientist, with the support of funding from
two successive VA Career Development Awards, VA Merit Review, NIMH, DOD, and various private sources. His research
includes studies of the neurobiology and assessment of PTSD, hippocampus and memory in PTSD and depression, neural
correlates of declarative memory and traumatic remembrance in PTSD, PET measurement of neuroreceptor binding in mood
and anxiety disorders, neural correlates of myocardial ischemia, and the effects of psychotropic
and acne medication on brain function and structure.
Following obtaining a bachelors degree in literature, Dr. Bremner attended medical school at Duke University where he graduated in 1987,
followed by residency in Psychiatry (1991) and Nuclear Medicine (1997) at Yale School of Medicine, leading to a double board certification.
Dr Bremner was a VA Biological Psychiatry Fellow at the West Haven VA and Yale from 1990-1993, Assistant and Associate Professor of Psychiatry
and Radiology from 1993 to 2000, Director of the Yale Trauma Research Program and Associate Director of the Yale PET Center, before moving to
Emory in 2000. He was Director of the Emory Center for Positron Emission Tomography from 2000-2006.
He is on the editorial boards of several journals and the Scientific Advisory Board of the Anxiety Disorders Association of America. He has
received several awards for his work, including the Chaim Danieli Award for Research and Service in Traumatic Stress from the International
Society for Traumatic Stress Studies.