Ph.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
M.A., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
B.S., Pennsylvania State University
Behavioral Neuroscience
Dr. Hayes earned dual B.S. degrees in Biology and Psychology from the Pennsylvania
State University and her M.A. and Ph.D. in Behavioral Neuroscience from the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She conducted post-doctoral research in the College
of Pharmacy at the University of Kentucky prior to joining the faculty at Radford
University in 2013. Her research interests broadly focus on what happens to the brain
as a result of drug abuse and/or stress with specific emphasis on understanding alcohol
consumption, addiction, and recovery. She typically teaches Biological Foundations
of Behavior (Psyc 628) as well as introductory psychology, statistics, research methods,
senior research, brain and behavior, psychopharmacology, and principles of learning
at the undergraduate level. Her free time is spent hanging out with her husband and
their two rescue dogs, Jordan and Pippa.
Selected Publications or Presentations
McClafferty, S.R., Paniagua-Ugarte, C., Hannabass, Z.M., Jackson, P.A., & Hayes, D.M.
(2024). Comparing the effects of infant maternal and sibling separation on adolescent
behavior in rats. PLOS ONE.
Hayes, D.M., Nickell, C.G., Chen, K.Y.,McClain, J.A., Heath, M.M., Deeny, M.A., &
Nixon, K. (2018). Activation of neural stem cells from quiescence drives reactive
hippocampal neurogenesis after alcohol dependence. Neuropharmacology, 133, 276-288. 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2018.01.032
Hayes, D.M., Deeny, M.A., Shaner, C.A., & Nixon, K. (2013). Determining the threshold
for alcohol-induced brain damage: New evidence with gliosis markers. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 37(3), 425-34.
McClain, J.A., Hayes, D.M., Morris, S.A., & Nixon, K. (2011). Adolescent binge alcohol
exposure alters hippocampal progenitor cell proliferation in rats: Effects on cell
cycle kinetics. Journal of Comparative Neurology, 519(13), 2697-710.
Hayes, D.M., Knapp, D.J., Breese, G.R., & Thiele, T.E. (2005). Comparison of basal
NPY and CRF levels between the high ethanol drinking C57BL/6J and low ethanol drinking
DBA/2J inbred mouse strains. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 29(5), 721-9.
Hayes, D.M., Braud, S., Hurtado, D.E., McCallum, J., Standley, S., Isaac, J.T.R.,
& Roche, K.W. (2003). Trafficking and surface expression of the glutamate receptor
subunit, KA2. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 310(1), 8-13.
Courses taught in the Psychology Department
- PSYC 774 – Psychopharmacology (Graduate)
- PSYC 628 – Biological Foundations of Behavior (Graduate)
- PSYC 410 – Psychopharmacology
- PSYC 378 – Brain and Behavior
- PSYC 333 – Principles of Learning
- PSYC 302 – Research Methods
- PSYC 301 – Analysis of Psychological Data