Continued support is requested for interdisciplinary training in the vision sciences at the University of California, Davis. Training is provided by 36 vision scientists (22 preceptors and 14 associate preceptors) across 9 departments at the University of California, Davis. The goal of the training program is to produce vision scientists who will be capable of establishing independent research programs that will address significant problems in vision science. It will operate under the auspices of existing graduate programs at UC Davis as they offer the broad flexibility needed to achieve our training objectives. UC Davis has a strong institutional commitment to vision science training as evidenced by substantial support and a newly formed Center for Visual Science. The training program requests support for 4 predoctoral and 2 postdoctoral trainees to be selected by an Advisory Committee. Predoctoral trainees will typically receive two years of support from the training grant, while postdoctoral trainees will typically be supported for one year. Internal support mechanisms and extramural grants will be used for the other years of training (~5 years for Ph.D. training and ~3 years for postdoctoral training). The trainees will participate in one or more of the five areas in which UC Davis has groups with vision science expertise: (i) molecular biology and genetics, (ii) anatomy and physiology, (iii) retinal imaging, (iv) central mechanism neurophysiology and behavior, and (v) functional imaging, computational modeling and psychophysics. Each of the 22 preceptors has an active program of vision science research, a strong commitment to training and sufficient extramural funding to support predoctoral and/or postdoctoral trainees. The training program draws on the rigorous research training of the admitting graduate programs, but also includes survey courses that cover the broader vision sciences and clinical vision science. Graduate trainees will be supported only after their first year of graduate school and will thus be a highly selective group that has completed much of their basic science curriculum. Predoctoral and postdoctoral trainees will participate in an active colloquium series in the vision sciences, journal clubs and a course on the ethical conduct of research. All trainees will be engaged in vision science research that will be presented at national meetings and submitted to peer-reviewed journals. Postdoctoral training will have a strong emphasis on achieving independent research funding.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Eye Institute (NEI)
Type
Institutional National Research Service Award (T32)
Project #
5T32EY015387-08
Application #
7936873
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZEY1-VSN (03))
Program Officer
Agarwal, Neeraj
Project Start
2003-09-30
Project End
2013-08-31
Budget Start
2010-09-01
Budget End
2011-08-31
Support Year
8
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$157,103
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California Davis
Department
Ophthalmology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
047120084
City
Davis
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
95618
Mitsven, Samantha G; Cantrell, Lisa M; Luck, Steven J et al. (2018) Visual short-term memory guides infants' visual attention. Cognition 177:189-197
Miesfeld, Joel B; Moon, Myung-Soon; Riesenberg, Amy N et al. (2018) Rbpj direct regulation of Atoh7 transcription in the embryonic mouse retina. Sci Rep 8:10195
Ramamurthy, Deepa L; Krubitzer, Leah A (2018) Neural Coding of Whisker-Mediated Touch in Primary Somatosensory Cortex Is Altered Following Early Blindness. J Neurosci 38:6172-6189
Kowalchuk, Angelica M; Maurer, Kate A; Shoja-Taheri, Farnaz et al. (2018) Requirements for Neurogenin2 during mouse postnatal retinal neurogenesis. Dev Biol 442:220-235
Maurer, Kate A; Kowalchuk, Angelica; Shoja-Taheri, Farnaz et al. (2018) Integral bHLH factor regulation of cell cycle exit and RGC differentiation. Dev Dyn 247:965-975
Peinado Allina, Gabriel; Fortenbach, Christopher; Naarendorp, Franklin et al. (2017) Bright flash response recovery of mammalian rods in vivo is rate limited by RGS9. J Gen Physiol 149:443-454
Gaspelin, Nicholas; Leonard, Carly J; Luck, Steven J (2017) Suppression of overt attentional capture by salient-but-irrelevant color singletons. Atten Percept Psychophys 79:45-62
Rathbun, Daniel L; Alitto, Henry J; Warland, David K et al. (2016) Stimulus Contrast and Retinogeniculate Signal Processing. Front Neural Circuits 10:8
Ramamurthy, Deepa L; Krubitzer, Leah A (2016) The evolution of whisker-mediated somatosensation in mammals: Sensory processing in barrelless S1 cortex of a marsupial, Monodelphis domestica. J Comp Neurol 524:3587-3613
Seelke, Adele M H; Perkeybile, Allison M; Grunewald, Rebecca et al. (2016) Individual differences in cortical connections of somatosensory cortex are associated with parental rearing style in prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster). J Comp Neurol 524:564-77

Showing the most recent 10 out of 60 publications