This is a competing renewal application for funds to support pre- and postdoctoral training in visual neuroscience at New York University in the Center for Neural Science (CNS) and the Cognition and Perception Program in the Department of Psychology (CP). We seek to renew training support for 6 predoctoral and 1 postdoctoral fellows. This level of support is justified by the need for the training program to provide for the training of a diverse yet coherent group of trainees. With the help of previous NEI support, the Visual Neuroscience Training Program has become a leading center for research training and has launched and shaped the careers of many who have made important contributions to the field. The 20 faculty of the training program seek to understand the visual system from a variety of disciplinary perspectives, but all share a consistent focus on understanding visual function. The quality, experience, breadth, and productivity of the training faculty has in the past and will in the future provide a fertile intellectual environment in which young scientists can thrive. Three newly recruited faculty have invigorated the program and made it even better, and have broadened its reach into the general area of visual disorders. There is ample instruction through courses and especially through mentoring in the research labs of CNS and CP that helps bring trainees to the frontiers of vision research. Many active researchers supported by NEI and other agencies provide direction, leadership, and support for students once they emerge as more independent senior scholars. Extensive shared facilities, including MRI scanners, an MEG and a TMS facility operated solely for research the two participating departments, facilitate collaborations among faculty and trainees. The students who join the CNS and CP doctoral programs are of outstanding quality and a very high proportion have historically gone on to successful and in some cases stellar careers in visual neuroscience.

Public Health Relevance

This project will train researchers in vision research, to provide the next generation of advances that will fuel national and international research progress in the visual sciences. The trainees will enhance our understanding of visual function and enable remediation of disabling diseases of the eye and central visual system.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Eye Institute (NEI)
Type
Institutional National Research Service Award (T32)
Project #
5T32EY007136-27
Application #
9937811
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZEY1)
Program Officer
Agarwal, Neeraj
Project Start
1993-01-01
Project End
2024-03-31
Budget Start
2020-04-01
Budget End
2021-03-31
Support Year
27
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
New York University
Department
Neurosciences
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
041968306
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10012
Denison, Rachel N; Adler, William T; Carrasco, Marisa et al. (2018) Humans incorporate attention-dependent uncertainty into perceptual decisions and confidence. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:11090-11095
Zimmermann, Jan; Glimcher, Paul W; Louie, Kenway (2018) Multiple timescales of normalized value coding underlie adaptive choice behavior. Nat Commun 9:3206
Favila, Serra E; Samide, Rosalie; Sweigart, Sarah C et al. (2018) Parietal Representations of Stimulus Features Are Amplified during Memory Retrieval and Flexibly Aligned with Top-Down Goals. J Neurosci 38:7809-7821
Yoo, Aspen H; Klyszejko, Zuzanna; Curtis, Clayton E et al. (2018) Strategic allocation of working memory resource. Sci Rep 8:16162
Donovan, Ian; Carrasco, Marisa (2018) Endogenous spatial attention during perceptual learning facilitates location transfer. J Vis 18:7
Rahnev, Dobromir; Denison, Rachel N (2018) Suboptimality in Perceptual Decision Making. Behav Brain Sci :1-107
Roberts, Mariel; Ashinoff, Brandon K; Castellanos, F Xavier et al. (2018) When attention is intact in adults with ADHD. Psychon Bull Rev 25:1423-1434
Denison, Rachel N; Heeger, David J; Carrasco, Marisa (2017) Attention flexibly trades off across points in time. Psychon Bull Rev 24:1142-1151
Yashar, Amit; White, Alex L; Fang, Wanghaoming et al. (2017) Feature singletons attract spatial attention independently of feature priming. J Vis 17:7
van den Berg, Ronald; Yoo, Aspen H; Ma, Wei Ji (2017) Fechner's law in metacognition: A quantitative model of visual working memory confidence. Psychol Rev 124:197-214

Showing the most recent 10 out of 39 publications