Talma Hendler

Talma Hendler (born July 9, 1955) is a psychiatrist and researcher in neuroscience and one of the pioneers in the field of functional imaging of the brain in Israel. Her research focuses on understanding emotion, particularly in human interactions with each other and when facing distressing life events.

Hendler is the director of the Center for Brain Functions at the Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center and a professor of psychiatry and psychology at Tel Aviv University, the School of Psychological Sciences and the Department of Physiology, and the Beit Sami Segol for Neuroscience. She is also the founding director of the Sagol Brain Institute in Tel Aviv.

Biography
Hendler received her bachelor's degree in science from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1976. She received her medical degree from Tel Aviv University and her doctorate from Stony Brook University in New York State in the field of psychobiology. When she returned to Israel, she completed her psychiatry residency at Sheba Medical Center. She then joined the Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center and founded the human neuroimaging research facility in Israel, the Sagol Brain Institute.

Hendler joined Tel Aviv University as a senior faculty member of their School of Psychology in 2005.

Hendler was married to cinematographer Judd Ne'eman until he died in 2021. They have two daughters: Liba and Renana

Research
Hendler's research deals, among other things, with brain imaging in the field of neuropsychiatry and an attempt to characterize vulnerability or resistance to psychiatric disorders. Some of her research interests include: the cause and consequence of traumatic stress, longitudinal biomarkers of trauma-induced psychopathology, anger in inter-personal context, neurobehavioral indications for ‘wanting’ and ‘liking’ in goal-directed behavior, dynamic aspects of emotional experience induced by film clips and music excerpts, and the neural mechanism of emotion regulation. The research group she leads specializes in a wide range of advanced imaging methods which, in combination with physiological and behavioral data, focus on the study of emotional and perceptual processing in the healthy and pathological brain.

Hendler and her team studied patients with post-traumatic stress disorder from battles. In the study, brain responses to images with an emotionally traumatic charge, such as images from a battlefield, were examined. Hendler and her colleagues found that the patients' brains responded even when the image shown to the patients was so blurry that they claimed they could not distinguish the image. Despite this claim, the subjects' visual cortex - an area associated with perception rather than emotion - responded strongly to the images. This study highlighted the profound effect of emotions on memory.