This application requests continued support for a research education program in the neuroscience of addiction to support undergraduate students pursuing short term summer research experiences at the Medical University of South Carolina. Each year, fourteen undergraduate students will have the opportunity to conduct biomedical research projects under the guidance of faculty mentors based primarily in the departments of Neurosciences and Psychiatry. The ten-week summer research projects conducted by the students will culminate in a formal scientific presentation. Additional activities include a lecture series on focused topics; a research ethics component; instruction in rigor, transparency and reproducibility; formal and informal discussions on the meaning of scientific literacy, professional development and career opportunities; and social functions. Our participating faculty constitutes a highly collaborative, interdisciplinary team of laboratory-based researchers. Training opportunities are thematically organized around four areas of research: neurobiological basis of cocaine relapse; neurobiology of methamphetamine dependence; sex and gender-related research in substance use disorders; and stress and substance use disorders. The program builds upon and leverages (1) MUSC's strong and continued commitment to research training; (2) its excellent reputation in providing meaningful research experiences for talented undergraduate students; (3) its track record of attracting students from underrepresented groups and undergraduate institutions, and (4) its effective program management.
The goal of this program is to attract talented undergraduate students into careers in the biomedical sciences,particularlyinfieldsrelevanttothemissionoftheNationalInstituteofDrugAbuse.Thisisexpected to increase the supply of qualified investigators who are studying substance use disorders, as well as contributetooverallscienceliteracybyequippingstudentswithappropriatescienceskillsandanappreciation forbiomedicalresearch.
Kearney-Ramos, Tonisha E; Lench, Daniel H; Hoffman, Michaela et al. (2018) Gray and white matter integrity influence TMS signal propagation: a multimodal evaluation in cocaine-dependent individuals. Sci Rep 8:3253 |
Hanlon, Colleen A; Dowdle, Logan T; Gibson, Nicole B et al. (2018) Cortical substrates of cue-reactivity in multiple substance dependent populations: transdiagnostic relevance of the medial prefrontal cortex. Transl Psychiatry 8:186 |
Hanlon, Colleen A; Dowdle, Logan T; Austelle, Christopher W et al. (2015) What goes up, can come down: Novel brain stimulation paradigms may attenuate craving and craving-related neural circuitry in substance dependent individuals. Brain Res 1628:199-209 |