Beating the Odds

Jessica Dixon advocates for students with disabilities while using her own to become a better researcher

Mon, 07/20/20

Jessica Dixon and her close-knit family. Courtesy photo.

Florida State neuroscience major Jessica Dixon鈥檚 fascination with the brain started on her 10th birthday. That day, her sister, Alex, had brain surgery to treat a severe neurological movement disorder and suffered a subdural brain hemorrhage.

鈥淪he was not expected to recover. They were not sure she would even survive,鈥 Dixon said.

Alex鈥檚 family and doctors worked hard to help her rehabilitate and graduate high school on time. Dixon helped her sister relearn everything she had lost, and co-authored a book, 鈥淎 Stroke of Luck: A Girl鈥檚 Second Chance at Life,鈥 with her mother, Juli, about the experience. The family speaks at conferences around the country to bring awareness to the learning practices of students with disabilities.

Dixon鈥檚 drive proved important when, five years later, Dixon was diagnosed with a movement disorder of her own at age 15 鈥 Tourette鈥檚 Syndrome.

鈥淎 movement disorder nearly cost my sister her life, and now I had one too. It was terrifying,鈥 she said.

Courtesy photo.

Patient and researcher

Dixon joined a Tourette鈥檚 clinical trial to explore treatments, and the experience solidified her interest in neuroscience.

鈥淗aving Tourette鈥檚 gives me a better perspective to approach research because I know how it feels to be a participant in that process,鈥 Dixon said. 鈥淚 know what having a disability feels like, which makes me a more compassionate researcher.鈥

As a high-achieving student 鈥 she is an 鈥 Dixon has accumulated an impressive slate of accomplishments, and she only just finished her sophomore year. In Spring 2020, Dixon was awarded a prestigious Barry Goldwater Scholarship 鈥 the top undergraduate award in the country for engineering, mathematics and science 鈥 for her research into hyperactivity in the CA1 region of the hippocampus, an area associated with navigation and Alzheimer鈥檚 disease in mouse models.

The award provides Dixon with up to $7,500 in both her junior and senior years from the Barry Goldwater Scholarship and Excellence in Education Foundation to cover tuition, fees, books, and room and board.

A new challenge

FSU began offering neuroscience as an undergraduate major in Fall 2018, the same year Dixon started as a freshman.

鈥淛essica excels in the classroom, takes full advantage of research opportunities, and actively engages in outreach activities as a strong advocate for students with disabilities,鈥 said Lisa Eckel, director of the and a professor.

Dixon conducts research in the lab of assistant professor of psychology and neuroscience Aaron Wilber, whom she met through . In Wilber鈥檚 lab, Dixon examines mouse models of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease and compares navigation in new surroundings, among the first abilities compromised in the early stages of Alzheimer鈥檚, to these abilities in normal mice.

Doing the work

She has expanded on that work by examining activation in the hippocampus of mice with Alzheimer鈥檚 disease and attempting to determine if overactivity in that area is a compensatory mechanism or a symptom of injured brain cells.

Understanding brain changes in mice with early Alzheimer鈥檚 disease can lead to an earlier diagnosis in humans 鈥 present treatments are often applied too late to be effective, she said.

Dixon received the 2019 Scott and Ina McNichols Undergraduate Research award, an offered through the and, in the coming year, Wilber will advise her honors thesis.

鈥淛essica has the work ethic to succeed and is exceptionally independent,鈥 Wilber said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 extremely rare for an undergraduate to be this independent in generating and refining their own research ideas.鈥

Dixon鈥檚 aspirations include a career as a professor and researcher of neurological conditions, including movement disorders.

鈥淎s our program grows and matures, Jessica will serve as a role model for those who follow her,鈥 Eckel said.

Casey Taylor graduated from FSU in May with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in with a concentration in , and .

Jessica Dixon and members of her family. Courtesy photo.