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The Neuroscience and Behavior (NSB)
Program is an independent, graduate degree-granting academic unit
that brings together faculty members from a number of different
departments and colleges to provide cutting-edge interdisciplinary
research training in Neuroscience and Behavior. Graduate students
are recruited and admitted directly into the NSB Program and not
through the home departments of participating faculty members,
as is the case at many institutions.
Participating NSB Program faculty are actively
involved in research on the nervous system and/or behavior in laboratory
or natural settings. The largest number of participating NSB Program
faculty (80%) reside in the Biology or Psychology departments. In
addition, several other departments, including Computer Science,
Kinesiology, Microbiology, Biochemistry, and Plant, Soil & Insect Sciences have participating faculty members who train graduate students
through the NSB Program.
Five broadly defined areas of research and training
are represented within the NSB Program. Due to the extensive interactive
and collaborative environments which exist within the program, many
NSB Program faculty actively participate in one or more of the following
research clusters:
- Neuroendocrinology This nationally recognized
group of faculty has formed a Center
for Neuroendocrine Studies, which emphasizes interdisciplinary
and collaborative studies on the interactions between hormones,
brain function, and behavior. Current research interests include
hormones and neuronal development, regulation of neuroendocrine
cells and behavior, circadian rhythms, environmental endocrine
disruptors, and neuronal integration of experiential, metabolic,
and hormonal signals. There is particular emphasis on reproductive
neuroendocrinology and the role of gonadal steroids in ovulation
and female mating behavior, sexual differentiation, and feeding
behavior.
- Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience
Faculty members within this area apply state-of-the-art molecular
and genetic techniques to the analysis of neuronal function and
development in a variety of model systems. Particularly noteworthy
is a strong and highly interactive group using zebrafish as a
model organism to investigate the molecular mechanisms of neural
development and organization. Another major area of interest involves
alteration of gene expression in the mammalian brain by various
chemical (hormones, neurotransmitters, drugs, phytochemicals,
and industrial pollutants) and environmental (light-dark cycle,
social stimuli) factors. Members of this group also belong to
the interdepartmental Molecular
and Cellular Biology (MCB) Program.
- Animal Behavior and Learning These NSB
faculty members share common interests in the evolutionary, comparative,
physiological, and social mechanisms underlying vertebrate and
invertebrate behavior in laboratory and field settings. Areas
of study are focused on species-typical behaviors and cognitive
function in a variety of species ranging from jumping spiders
to non-human primates, as well as mechanisms and computational
modeling of simple forms of learning. Collaborative studies are
underway with other Neuroscience and Behavior faculty interested
either in neural and behavioral development or cellular and molecular
neuroscience. Many members of this group also belong to the interdepartmental
Organismic and Evolutionary
Biology (OEB) Program.
- Neural and Behavioral Development This
research cluster spans a broad range of interests including molecular
genetic analyses of model systems, developmental psychobiology,
and cognitive development in human infants. Specific research
areas include the development and genetic control of neural pathways
and synapse formation, involvement of hormones and neuropeptides
in prenatal development, reorganizational and plastic responses
to injury, drugs, or environmental changes, learning and behavior
in neonates, central visual pathway organization, and the development
of sensorimotor coordination. A common theme within this group
is elucidating the mechanisms by which molecular and cellular
events (e.g., temporal changes in gene expression, apoptotic cell
death) sculpt the developing nervous system, and how these mechanisms
give rise to normal behavioral maturation as well as the emergence
of abnormal behavior patterns when development has been disrupted
by genetic or epigenetic factors.
-
Sensorimotor, Cognitive, and Computational
Neuroscience NSB faculty members within this group are concerned
with the organization and function of sensory and motor systems,
sensorimotor integration underlying specific behavioral outputs,
brain mechanisms that mediate complex cognitive processes such
as attention and learning, and neural network modeling of cognitive
function. Techniques such as event-related potential (ERP) recording
are used to investigate real-time neural processing of sensory
information. Current research projects encompass such topics
as mechanisms of visual attention and object recognition, selective
auditory attention in speech processing, the development of
reaching movements in human infants, motor control and coordination
in people with neurological damage, computational modeling of
dynamic biological and behavioral processes, and machine learning.
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