Skip to Main Content

Stephanie Towns, PsyD, ABPP

she/her/hers
Neuropsychology
Telehealth is available
Learn more about telehealth
Patient type treated
Adult
Accepting new patients
Yes
Referral required
From physicians only
Board Certified in
Clinical Neuropsychology

Biography

Stephanie Towns, PsyD (an advanced degree in psychology), is a clinical neuropsychologist who evaluates patients with different neurological conditions, including epilepsy, Parkinson’s disease, stroke, dementia, and traumatic brain injury. She frequently sees patients referred to her due to concerns about memory loss.

Clinical neuropsychologists are trained to evaluate a patient’s behavior and cognitive functioning through detailed interviews and a battery of tests that include a range of tasks, from recalling information to solving puzzles. They then collaborate with a patient’s doctors to help form a treatment plan. “A patient’s MRI image cannot capture everything. We still sometimes need to assess the behavioral expression of brain problems. Someone could be forgetting things or having trouble paying attention or interpreting visual information—my specialty is that behavior expression piece,” Dr. Towns says.

During graduate school, Dr. Towns discovered how much she enjoyed putting together the puzzle pieces of cognitive testing that help determine how a person’s brain is performing. “People are not good at describing their own cognitive function,” she says. As an example, someone might say they have a severe memory problem, but cognitive tests point to a language problem.

“The most rewarding part of my job is telling a person what they can do about the problem. Giving people that sense of hope is important,” Dr. Towns says.

Dr. Towns also dedicates time to her ongoing research into the relationship between sleep and cognition in people with neurological diseases. “Sleep is an intervention point we can target easily and inexpensively to improve someone’s cognition,” she says. Patients with multiple sclerosis, for example, have reported a higher quality of life after changing their sleep habits.

Dr. Towns is an assistant professor of clinical neurology at Yale School of Medicine.

Titles

  • Associate Professor of Neurology
  • Training Director, Neuropsychology

Education & Training

  • Postdoctoral fellow
    Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth (2016)
  • PsyD
    Antioch University New England, Clinical Psychology (2014)
  • Neuropsychology Intern
    James A Haley VA Medical Center (2014)
  • MS
    Loyola University of Maryland, Clinical Psychology (2008)
  • BS
    Miami University of Ohio, Psychology

Additional Information

Locations
Yale Department of Neurology
Greenwich Hospital
15 Valley Drive
Greenwich, CT 06831
  • Yale Department of Neurology
    Greenwich Hospital
    15 Valley Drive
    Greenwich, CT 06831

Biography

Stephanie Towns, PsyD (an advanced degree in psychology), is a clinical neuropsychologist who evaluates patients with different neurological conditions, including epilepsy, Parkinson’s disease, stroke, dementia, and traumatic brain injury. She frequently sees patients referred to her due to concerns about memory loss.

Clinical neuropsychologists are trained to evaluate a patient’s behavior and cognitive functioning through detailed interviews and a battery of tests that include a range of tasks, from recalling information to solving puzzles. They then collaborate with a patient’s doctors to help form a treatment plan. “A patient’s MRI image cannot capture everything. We still sometimes need to assess the behavioral expression of brain problems. Someone could be forgetting things or having trouble paying attention or interpreting visual information—my specialty is that behavior expression piece,” Dr. Towns says.

During graduate school, Dr. Towns discovered how much she enjoyed putting together the puzzle pieces of cognitive testing that help determine how a person’s brain is performing. “People are not good at describing their own cognitive function,” she says. As an example, someone might say they have a severe memory problem, but cognitive tests point to a language problem.

“The most rewarding part of my job is telling a person what they can do about the problem. Giving people that sense of hope is important,” Dr. Towns says.

Dr. Towns also dedicates time to her ongoing research into the relationship between sleep and cognition in people with neurological diseases. “Sleep is an intervention point we can target easily and inexpensively to improve someone’s cognition,” she says. Patients with multiple sclerosis, for example, have reported a higher quality of life after changing their sleep habits.

Dr. Towns is an assistant professor of clinical neurology at Yale School of Medicine.

Titles

  • Associate Professor of Neurology
  • Training Director, Neuropsychology

Education & Training

  • Postdoctoral fellow
    Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth (2016)
  • PsyD
    Antioch University New England, Clinical Psychology (2014)
  • Neuropsychology Intern
    James A Haley VA Medical Center (2014)
  • MS
    Loyola University of Maryland, Clinical Psychology (2008)
  • BS
    Miami University of Ohio, Psychology

Additional Information

Locations
Yale Department of Neurology
Greenwich Hospital
15 Valley Drive
Greenwich, CT 06831
  • Yale Department of Neurology
    Greenwich Hospital
    15 Valley Drive
    Greenwich, CT 06831
Yale Department of Neurology
Greenwich Hospital
15 Valley Drive
Greenwich, CT 06831
  • Yale Department of Neurology
    Greenwich Hospital
    15 Valley Drive
    Greenwich, CT 06831