This proposal continues and evolves an undergraduate and graduate (NRSA and non-NRSA) Training Program in Neural Computation and Engineering. The University of Washington has a rich history and a large and growing breadth of active teaching and research in this area, with faculty mentors distributed through many departments and schools, including Physiology and Biophysics, Biological Structure, Computer Science and Engineering, Applied Math, Biology, Psychology and Bioengineering. This program evolves the extremely successful previous five-year program which saw the development of an active and highly visible training program, including new undergraduate and graduate program, website, community activities, to take advantage of new opportunities and momentum in Seattle. Support for undergraduate and graduate education and research will enhance interaction between theorists and experimentalists; expand and integrate coursework in emerging approaches in neuroscience, particularly novel offerings in neuroengineering and big data; enhance interactions between undergraduate and graduate students; provide opportunities for undergraduate research and draw together the community across campus to strengthen our already excellent interdisciplinary exchange and collaboration. The undergraduate training program is a 2-year sequence in computational neuroscience, with support for 6 trainees yearly from neurobiology or from a computational/engineering major (Physics, Computer Science and Engineering, Bioengineering, Applied and Computational Mathematics). Trainees take a core curriculum including a research seminar, a choice of laboratory neurobiology sequence and common quantitative courses. Choice of additional electives in an individualized curriculum and career development is guided by a mentoring committee. All students will complete at least 1 and preferably 4 quarters of mentored laboratory research. The graduate training program will support up to 6 students from multiple graduate programs. Students will apply for training grant support at the end of the first year and carry out a core curriculum consisting of neurobiology, quantitative and journal club courses. Individually tailored curricula including electives selected from offerings in computational neuroscience, mathematics, computer science and physics will be devised in consultation with a mentoring committee. Trainees will have access to the UW/Allen Institute Summer Workshop for the Dynamic Brain on San Juan Island. All trainees will attend a regular seminar and and present their research at an annual retreat. The program will be co-directed by Profs. Adrienne Fairhall, Physiology and Biophysics and Eric Shea-Brown, Applied Mathematics, assisted by Leadership Team Prof. Bill Moody, Director, Undergraduate Neurobiology Program and Prof. David Perkel, Director, Neuroscience Graduate Program.

Public Health Relevance

This training grant aims to train young neuroscientists to use mathematical and computational tools to understand the highly dynamical processing capabilities of the brain and neural circuitry. It will also give students in physics, mathematics, engineering and computer science deeper insight into the biology of the brain in order to devise more appropriate theoretical models and methods to interface with brain signals. This program will allow students to use and devise methods to deal with the large and complex data collected from new recording technologies and to engage in the development of assistive technologies that integrate with nervous system function.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Interdisciplinary Research Training Award (T90)
Project #
5T90DA032436-08
Application #
9543461
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDA1)
Program Officer
Pariyadath, Vani
Project Start
2011-09-01
Project End
2021-08-31
Budget Start
2018-09-01
Budget End
2019-08-31
Support Year
8
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Washington
Department
Physiology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
605799469
City
Seattle
State
WA
Country
United States
Zip Code
98195
Resnick, Jesse M; O'Brien, Gabrielle E; Rubinstein, Jay T (2018) Simulated auditory nerve axon demyelination alters sensitivity and response timing to extracellular stimulation. Hear Res 361:121-137
Pang, Rich; van Breugel, Floris; Dickinson, Michael et al. (2018) History dependence in insect flight decisions during odor tracking. PLoS Comput Biol 14:e1005969
Budzillo, Agata; Duffy, Alison; Miller, Kimberly E et al. (2017) Dopaminergic modulation of basal ganglia output through coupled excitation-inhibition. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 114:5713-5718
Sinha, Raunak; Hoon, Mrinalini; Baudin, Jacob et al. (2017) Cellular and Circuit Mechanisms Shaping the Perceptual Properties of the Primate Fovea. Cell 168:413-426.e12
Lajoie, Guillaume; Lin, Kevin K; Thivierge, Jean-Philippe et al. (2016) Encoding in Balanced Networks: Revisiting Spike Patterns and Chaos in Stimulus-Driven Systems. PLoS Comput Biol 12:e1005258
Pang, Rich; Lansdell, Benjamin J; Fairhall, Adrienne L (2016) Dimensionality reduction in neuroscience. Curr Biol 26:R656-60
König, Seth D; Buffalo, Elizabeth A (2016) Modeling Visual Exploration in Rhesus Macaques with Bottom-Up Salience and Oculomotor Statistics. Front Integr Neurosci 10:23
Pang, Rich; Fairhall, Adrienne L (2015) Let Music Sound while She Doth Make Her Choice. Neuron 87:1126-1128
Houston, Brady; Blumenfeld, Zack; Quinn, Emma et al. (2015) Long-term detection of Parkinsonian tremor activity from subthalamic nucleus local field potentials. Conf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc 2015:3427-31
Huber, Elizabeth; Webster, Jason M; Brewer, Alyssa A et al. (2015) A lack of experience-dependent plasticity after more than a decade of recovered sight. Psychol Sci 26:393-401

Showing the most recent 10 out of 14 publications