Patricia Shoer was born in
Salem, Massachusetts. Her father, Irving Shoer, was the son of Latvian immigrants and her mother, Jenny Pearl, was a Ukrainian immigrant from Ostroh (which was an occupied land by the Russian Empire at the time). She grew up in
Peabody, Massachusetts and attended
Peabody High School. Goldman-Rakic earned her bachelor's degree cum laude in
neurobiology from
Vassar in 1959, and her doctorate from the
University of California at
Los Angeles in experimental Developmental Psychology in 1963. After postdoctoral positions at UCLA and
New York University, Goldman-Rakic worked at the
National Institute of Mental Health in
neuropsychology starting in 1965 and later as Chief of
Developmental Neurobiology from 1975-1979. She moved to
Yale School of Medicine in 1979 where she remained until her death. She was The Eugene Higgins Professor of Neuroscience in the neurobiology department with joint appointments in the departments of psychiatry, neurology, and psychology. In 1988 she was granted a five-year, $6 million grant to establish the Center for Neuroscience Research at Yale. == Research ==