The University of California, Berkeley, where Diamond was a professor emerita of integrative biology, confirmed Diamond died July 25 at her home in Oakland, California.
She was 90.
In 1984, after receiving four blocks of the preserved brain of Einstein, she found that it had more support cells than average.
In her work with rats, she showed that an enriched environment -- toys and companions -- changed the anatomy of the brain.
She found that the brains of all animals, including humans, benefit from an enriched environment, and that impoverished environments can lower the capacity to learn.
Her findings were initially resisted by some neuroscientists. At one meeting, Diamond later recalled, a man stood up after her talk and said loudly, "Young lady, that brain cannot change!"
"It was an uphill battle for women scientists then -- even more than now -- and people at scientific conferences are often terribly critical," she wrote in her 1998 book, "Magic Trees of the Mind: How to Nurture your Child's Intelligence, Creativity, and Healthy Emotions from Birth through Adolescence," co-authored with Janet Hopson. "But I felt good about the work, and I simply replied, 'I'm sorry, sir, but we have the initial experiment and the replication experiment that shows it can.'"
For decades she could be seen walking through campus to her anatomy class carrying a flowered hat box containing a preserved human brain.
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