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Research and Graduate Education
Neuroscience
The Graduate Program in Neuroscience offers interdisciplinary biomedical research training leading to the Ph.D. or M.D./Ph.D. degree.
The field of neuroscience is expanding nationwide, as more research centers and academic institutions recognize this diverse field's wide applicability and significant contributions to biomedical knowledge. The WVU Neuroscience Program is positioned to play a key role in the progress of this field.
Reflecting the nature of contemporary neuroscience, we are an interdisciplinary graduate program comprised of faculty from basic and clinical departments. Several of our faculty are also members of the Interdisciplinary Center for Neuroscience, the Blanchette Rockefeller Neurosciences Institute, the Sensory Neuroscience Research Center, and the Center for Advanced Imaging. This interdisciplinary environment affords our faculty and students prime access to the resources needed to conduct world-class neuroscience research.
We strive to ensure that you will gain expertise in your principal research field and broad familiarity with neuroscience as a whole. Coursework is customized to your background and research interests. You are exposed to neuroscience at the molecular, cellular, system, and organism levels through courses, research rotations, workshops, seminars, and journal clubs.
Current research areas include:
Sensory Neuroscience
- Biochemistry of hair cell transduction
- Optical imaging & single-unit electrophysiology of primate sensory cortex
- Mechanisms of auditory and visual system development
- Inhibitory neural circuits in the brain stem and cortex
- Synaptic development of thalamocortical circuits
- Molecular genetic control of retinal development and neural patterning
- G-protein-mediated signal transduction in vertebrate photoreceptors
Cognitive Neuroscience
- Sound recognition, spatial hearing and sensory integration using fMRI
- Neural basis of vision in health and disease
- Advanced imaging studies of visual and auditory signal processing and cognition
Neural Injury
- Blood flow changes during stroke or after brain trauma
- Alcohol affects on developing nervous system
- Drug and toxicant effects on gene expression in the brain
Homeostasis
- Airway Innervation and Asthma
- Structural and functional changes in the hypothalamus of seasonal breeders
- Neurobiological pathways controlling food intake and obesity
- Plasticity in the amygdala
- Pharmacogenetics of cytochrome P450 2D6
- Ethanol neurotoxicity
Behavorial Neuroscience
- Neurochemical and neuroanatomical basis of behavior
- Learning and memory
- Mechanisms of action of psychotherapeutic drugs
- Neural control of hormone function
- Organizing principles of complex behaviors
Diseases studied include:
- Alzheimer’s and related dementias
- Anxiety and stress-related disorders
- Asthma
- Autism
- Blindness
- Depression
- Epilepsy
- Obesity and eating disorders
- Schizophrenia
- Stroke and related cerebrovascular events
Albert Berrebi, Ph.D., Graduate Director
Email: aberrebi@hsc.wvu.edu
(304) 293-2357
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