Cohen was born in St. Paul, Minnesota. He was raised in Stanford, California. In 1974, Cohen began his undergraduate studies in engineering at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology before transferring to
Stanford University in 1976, where he received his
A.B. degree in human biology in 1979. He then went to the
Rockefeller University, where he trained under Victor Wilson, Donald Pfaff, and Susan Schwartz Giblin, receiving his
Ph.D. in 1985 for his work on the pudendal nerve evoked response and its modulation by steroid hormones. In 1985 Cohen joined the MRI Applications Group at
Siemens Medical Solutions where he began a career in MRI that was focused originally on education and on technological improvements to reduce scan times. From 1988 to 1990 he directed the applications program at Advanced NMR Systems in Woburn Massachusetts, a small startup dedicated to the creation of a practical echo planar imaging instrument. He joined the faculty at Harvard Massachusetts General Hospital in 1990, where he directed the "Hyperscan" fast imaging laboratory and was the director of the MRI education program until 1993. In 1993 Cohen joined the faculty at
UCLA, holding professorships in
Psychiatry,
Neurology,
Radiology,
Biomedical Physics,
Psychology and
Bioengineering. He served on the UCLA Council for Research from 2011 to 2016 and as its chair for two years. In 2005 Cohen established the UCLA/Semel Neuroimaging Training Program (NITP), funded by
NIH, and he directed the program for ten years. The NITP, which provided stipend support for both US and International students, provided core training in statistics, analog and digital signal processing, computation, electronics, neurophysiology, and a range of imaging methods. NITP summer training sessions provided immersive training in advanced MRI methods for more than 350 attendees and were simulcasted to more than 2,000 viewers in more than 160 countries. The NITP was profiled in both Science and Nature magazines. ==Educator==