At first, Linton observed Morrison’s graduate students and helped out with odd jobs. But by her junior year, lab life had sucked her in.
“In the fall of 2024, I started helping with a project that doctoral student Marissa Nicodemus was doing. Marissa was looking at risk-taking in the offspring of stressed mothers, and I was observing behaviors in the mice she was working with. I had never done anything like that before, and it was super exciting,” she said.
“Then going into the spring semester of my junior year, a grad student left, and her project fell into my lap. Dr. Katie wanted me to take it on, and I was kind of putting up a front, like ‘Okay, I’m confident.’ But internally, I’m like, ‘Oh my gosh, this is a graduate-level project, am I going to be able to handle it?’”
Linton took on the challenge. To address the big question of how mothers’ stress can be passed on to their offspring, she began trialing a new behavioral procedure that allows researchers to separate prenatal and postnatal maternal influences on offspring.
“I never realized how much stress even before pregnancy affects offspring, or how much the body is affected by stress in general,” she said. “Even the placentas of our stressed mice are different than the placentas of the control group.”
Linton attributed her own manageable stress levels throughout the study to her mentor, Nicodemus.
“It’s such a good relationship,” Linton said. “I cannot say enough good things about Marissa. She has helped me as a mentor, and I can ask her about more than lab stuff, like how to improve my CV.”
With Nicodemus’ support, Linton presented her findings at the Fall 2024 and Spring 2025 Undergraduate Research Symposia. Then, after participating in the intensive Summer Undergraduate Research Experience, she returned for the Summer 2025 Undergraduate Research Symposium. That time she won first place in the behavioral and social sciences category.
Soon after, she traveled to San Diego with Morrison and Nicodemus to present their work at the annual conference of the Society for Neuroscience — a pivotal experience for Linton.
“We talked to all different kinds of researchers in the field, all super intelligent. I even got to meet some of Dr. Katie’s original mentors,” Linton said.
She and Nicodemus will get at least one more chance to stand up together before Linton’s graduation, at WVU Research Week 2026. There, the two will offer a presentation about research collaborations between undergraduate and graduate students.