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Neuroscience @ Michigan








Keeping you informed of Neuroscience seminars,

symposiums, related news and events

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NGP 4 DEI

DEI Event: Celebrating Black & Asian Solidarity

Saturday, July 24th 1 - 4 P.M.

 
Southeast Area Park
2901 E. Ellsworth Rd., Ann Arbor, MI

Please join us for good food, music, conversations, and casual games. Donations to Community Action Network (CAN) encouraged at the event, with staff available to answer questions on their childcare and support programs. We look forward to seeing your families there!

NGP Task Force Champion Awards
The DEI Committee is proud to present Task Force Champion Awards to all of the NGP students that have participated in one of the NGP Task Forces this year.  Thanks to Rackham Faculty Ally funds for supporting these awards.  These are small tokens of our thanks for the hours of hard work to improve NGP and strengthen our community.  Thanks all!
 
DEI Photo and Video Session | Seeking Student, Faculty & Staff Participants

The Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion is seeking students, faculty and staff who are interested in representing our diverse community at the University of Michigan.
 
If you would like to participate in our photo and/or video sessions and represent the University in future visual materials, please sign up by clicking on the link below.


PHOTO SESSION DETAILS
 
Wednesday, August 4, 2021


Michigan Medicine | 9-10 AM
North Campus | 11:30 AM - 12:30 PM
 
Thursday, August 5, 2021
Central Campus | 3:30-4:30 PM


VIDEO SESSION DETAILS
 
Share your thoughts on camera by answering one or both of the following questions:
 

What does diversity, equity and inclusion mean to you?
What does the future of DEI at U-M look like? 


Wednesday, August 4, 2021

Michigan Medicine | 9-10 AM
North Campus | 11:30 AM - 12:30 PM 

Thursday, August 5, 2021
Central Campus | 3:30-4:30 PM
Sign Up

NGP DEI Outreach and Activism

NGP/DEI Outreach and Activism Task Force Event

Argo Park Canoe and Kayak
Sunday, August 22nd at 11 a.m.
The NGP's DEI Outreach and Activism Task Force would like to give a giant thank you to the NGP students who have been showing up to our past pick-up events and have worked together to make the events a huge success!
 
After receiving input from our past events, we decided to shift our focus from the river banks to inside the river, as we noticed that inside the river had the most trash. More so, we thought the best way to clean the river was to go kayaking! 

If you are interested in participating, please fill out this form.

 
The NGP’s DEI Outreach & Activism task force has set up an opportunity to come together and help those in the community facing housing inequality, and we need your help! 

 
Our goal for completion is September 1, 2021.

Avalon Housing and HouseN2Home have paired up to facilitate the construction of a 70-unit apartment complex for adults transitioning from shelters to permanent housing, and they need our help to furnish a unit. The Outreach & Activism DEI task force aims to collect donations and move them into one of the units once construction is complete at the end of the summer. 
 
Visit our SignUpGenius page to donate items. We are aiming to collect NEW items, but if donating something used, please ensure the item is gently used/like new. Feel free to donate in groups and make sure to look out for the running list of donors in the NGP Weekly! Donations will be collected in the Resting Potential Room (RPR), Keith Duncan’s lab (5323 Med Sci I), or Keith Duncan’s home (email to coordinate).
 
For monetary donations to the Avalon Housing/HouseN2Home project, visit the Avalon/HouseN2Home website
 
Email NGP-DEI-Housingproject@umich.edu for more information.
.

Neuroscience Dissertation Defense

Thursday, August 12th at 3 p.m.
Neuroscience Dissertation Defense

Veronica Beck 
will present:
 
"
"Role of Scn1b in Colonic Myenteric Neuron Function in a Model of Developmental and Epileptic Encephalopathy"

Dr. Isom, Chair
Join Zoom Meeting
Meeting ID:  912 5520 5196     Passcode:  Beck
Upcoming Neuroscience Dissertation Defense

August 25th     Stefan Sweha
 

Neuroscience Seminars and Workshops

Wednesday, July 28th at 1:30 - 2:30 P.M.
Udall PD Research Update Presentations
 
Drs. Nicolaas Bohnen, Martin Sarter, Omar Ahmed, and Nancy Laracey will present overviews of their individual Parkinson’s disease research projects: 
 
Project I:  Evolution of cholinergic deficits within multisensory, cognitive, and motor integration brain regions and development of PIGD features in people with Parkinson’s 

Project II: Circuit mechanisms of attentional-motor interface dysfunction in Parkinson’s disease falls 

Project III: Cingulo-opercular task control network cholinergic dysfunction in Parkinson’s disease 

Catalyst Research Project: Retrosplenial cholinergic and attentional-motor integration dysfunction 
Join Zoom Meeting

Health and Wellness

Upcoming Grad Student Group!
MANAGING STRESS & ANXIETY
 
Tuesday, July 27 | 5:30-7:00 p.m. EST | REGISTER HERE!
 
These FREE virtual education/support groups are a service of the U-M's Eisenberg Family Depression Center in partnership with the U-M Engineering’s C.A.R.E. Center and Munger Graduate Residences, and are run by professional staff.
 
These Campus Mind Works wellness groups are open to any U-M student who is interested in obtaining information about stress, depression, anxiety and related conditions, and/or is interested in learning positive coping strategies to help address these issues. The groups are designed for education and support purposes only and are not intended to be a substitute for medical or mental health treatment. 

Looking Ahead!

2021 NGP Retreat: Save the Date!
October 1 - 2 at Maumee Bay Lodge
NGP Retreat is coming back for 2021! We will be holding an in-person retreat October 1-2 at the Maumee Bay lodge in Oregon, OH (45 minutes from Ann Arbor)! See the website for information on the location. All faculty and students are invited to attend! Friday, October 1st will feature faculty talks, a Keynote speaker, dinner, and a student poster session. Saturday, October 2nd will feature morning activities, a DEI event, and the faculty data blitz. Look out for an RSVP form in the next few weeks!

There's more to the Science Communication Series. Save the dates below! 4 - 5 pm

July 23
You want me to change citation styles again?! Endnote basics for citation management

July 27
How to Prepare and Give a Good Scientific Presentation


August 6
Learn the Hidden Tools of Microsoft Word to Ease Writing

 

Reconnect at Neuroscience 2021

One Meeting, Two Experiences — Participate Online, November 8-11, and in Chicago, November 13-16
 



The Society for Neuroscience (SfN) is excited to announce details for Neuroscience 2021, with opportunities to participate online and in person. SfN’s Annual Meeting Focus Group, led by the Program Committee Chairs, has reimagined the digital experience, specifically virtual poster sessions, and we're excited to celebrate SfN's 50th anniversary meeting with neuroscientists around the world at our most inclusive experience to date.

Join the nearly half a million neuroscientists from around the world who have propelled their careers by presenting an abstract at an SfN annual meeting — the premier global neuroscience event.

Faculty Openings

The University of Michigan Concussion Center is seeking passionate concussion researchers to help the center through the development and sharing of groundbreaking ideas that translate laboratory, clinic, and community observations into knowledge products that reduce concussion risk and improve outcomes in those affected by the injury. All research domains related to concussion will be considered, and in partnership with the university’s anti-racism hiring initiative, we are also interested in candidates that focus on social and cultural health disparities in concussion prevention, identification, and management.
Three tenure track faculty positions:
• 1 senior concussion faculty member (currently associate or full professor)
• 2 junior concussion faculty members (currently PhD student, post-doc, medical resident/fellow, or assistant professor)
More information can be found in our downloadable PDF HERE. 
The Center for RNA Biomedicine, a pioneering program of the $150M University of Michigan Biosciences Initiative, solicits applications for faculty positions at the assistant professor level. The faculty positions will be on the tenure track with university year appointments starting Sep. 1, 2022, or Jan. 1, 2023.  Downloadable PDF HERE.

Internal Postdoc Openings

 
WATSON LAB                                    

The laboratory of Brendon Watson at the University of Michigan Medical School is searching for 1 full-time fully-funded postdoctoral fellow in systems neuroscience.

We seek a postdoctoral fellow to perform combined behavior and electrophysiology in rodents chronically in their homecages, with the goal of determining electrophysiologic correlates of stress and antidepressant treatment.

Our lab expertise is in electrophysiology and brain network function. In this project, we combine that with a novel system we have developed to record from animals over weeks in their homecages.   This recording system classifies behavior at sub-second resolution while allowing multi-region electrophysiologic recordings simultaneously.  In this study we will use this powerful system to study the effects of chronic stress on the electrophysiology of limbic system circuitry.  We will also study how subsequent ketamine acts on those same circuits to potentially reverse stress effects.

We seek experimentalists with a PhD and expertise in in vivo electrophysiology and  behavior with an interest in the neurobiology of mood-related circuits.  Coding experience is preferred. We will work in collaboration with the machine learning group of Dr. Ivaylo Dinov.

We are at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, in the department of psychiatry and this project will be NIH funded. Positions will begin as early as July 1, 2021 and are funded for 1 year at the standard NIH postdoctoral fellow payscale with option to extend if it is mutually agreeable to both lab director and fellow.

The Watson Lab is committed to making neuroscience a more open and inclusive field, so we strongly encourage applications from individuals with non-traditional backgrounds or from underrepresented groups.

Interested applicants please reply to brendonw@umich.edu, Please include CV, letter of intent/summary of background and copies of published articles relevant to your application.

For more lab information:  http://watsonneurolab.org/

 
AHMED and SARTER LAB
The labs of Drs. Omar Ahmed (http://www.omarlab.org/) and Martin Sarter (https://sites.lsa.umich.edu/msarter/) at the University of Michigan are seeking two outstanding, driven postdoctoral fellows for research on a newly funded, five-year project on cortico-striatal circuitry and the integration of cognitive, spatial and motor functions. Together, the two labs combine state-of-the art methods and research approaches to conduct systems and behavioral neuroscience research. Our labs have enjoyed a record of continuous, high productivity and successful pre- and postdoctoral training. Our joint research is embedded in a larger, well-funded multi-disciplinary research program aimed at determining the neuronal circuitry underlying complex movement disorders in Parkinson’s disease. Therefore, trainees and their research will benefit from intense interactions with clinical researchers conducting converging research in patients. We seek trainees with prior training in systems and behavioral neuroscience in rodents and who aspire to a productive and visible career. For more information please contact Omar or Martin (ojahmed@umich.edu; msarter@umich.edu).  Posting HERE.

XU LAB
Dr. Shawn Xu’s lab in the Life Sciences Institute is seeking postdoctoral fellows to study sensory neuroscience. The Xu lab focuses on identifying novel sensory receptors and channels that sense temperature, touch, odors, tastants and light, and investigating how they regulate sensory signaling and behavior using both C. elegans and mouse models. See details at: https://www.lsi.umich.edu/science/our-labs/xz-shawn-xu-lab. Email contact: shawnxu@umich.edu


APOSTOLIDES LAB
Information here


LI  LAB
The laboratory of Dr. Peng Li at the Life Sciences Institute of the University of Michigan is seeking postdoctoral fellows to study neural control of breathing (http://www.lsi.umich.edu/labs/peng-li-lab).
Contact Peng Li, PhD

LOWENSTEIN LAB
Information here

DUS LAB
The Dus lab has an open postdoctoral position to study how dietary environment persistently alters sensory and reward circuits to promote maladaptive behaviors in flies and rodents. Techniques used in the lab are in vivo imaging, behavior, molecular biology, neuro & optogenetics, and genomics. Interested candidates should apply by emailing mdus@umich.edu

DUAN LAB
Seeking postdoc with extensive experience in developmental biology for an NSF-funded project on brain development in zebrafish.
Please email: Cuming Duan, PhD

RAPHAEL LAB
Postdoctoral position is available for gene editing of auditory neurons in cultured explants and in vivo. Please contact Yehoash Raphael for more information.

BORJIGIN LAB
Please email Dr. Borjigin directly for more information.

EBAN-ROTHSCHILD LAB
Neuronal Circuitry of Sleep and Wakefulness using highly innovative techniques. For details please contact: adae@umich.edu. 

WALDHAUS LAB
Seeking a postdoctoral candidate with interest in Regenerative Medicine of the inner ear. The study is about tracing the process of auditory hair cell regeneration at single cell level and whole transcriptome resolution. Information
 

SATIN LAB
A NIH-funded POSTDOCTORAL position is available immediately in the Satin Lab for a PhD or an MD to study stimulus-secretion coupling mechanisms and ion channels in mouse and human pancreatic islets. Candidates should have experience in live cell imaging, image acquisition and analysis, molecular biology, and using adenoviruses to express novel optical probes in cells, as well as other proteins. Experience in patch clamping would be an additional strength, as is knowledge of ion channel physiology, metabolic biochemistry, and/or familiarity with mathematical models. 
Interested individuals should supply a current CV and the names of 3 individuals who could be used as references directly to Les Satin, PhD

OLSON LAB
The Olson lab is focused on understanding the neurons and neural circuitry within the central nervous system that regulate feeding, energy balance and metabolism.  We combine neuron-specific Cre recombinase expressing transgenic mouse lines with stereotaxic delivery of Cre-inducible viruses to acutely and chronically manipulate subsets of neurons in order to understand their physiologic functions.  Active project areas include genetic dissection of the paraventricular hypothalamus, ventromedial hypothalamic regulation of blood glucose and mechanisms of feeding regulation housed in the lateral parabrachial nucleus. We currently have an opening for a post-doctoral fellow interested in the central control of energy balance.  The ideal candidate will have a working knowledge of rodent neuroanatomy, an interest in physiology and exposure to rodent surgery.  Interested candidates should contact Dr. David Olson:  dpolson@med.umich.edu.

SHORE LAB
Research fellow Kresge Institute

 

External Postdoc Openings

The Neurocircuitry of Motivated Behavior (NMB) Laboratory at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (PI: K.T. Wakabayashi, Ph.D. Please see https://psychology.unl.edu/ken-wakabayashi) invites applications for a full-time Postdoctoral Researcher in Behavioral Neuroscience. We are looking for an enthusiastic and motivated postdoctoral researcher to take a key role in planning and executing both behavioral and basic neuroscience experiments. The NMB laboratory studies brain circuits that regulate motivated behavior, particularly as they relate to natural, alcohol and drug reward and abuse.
The Psychology Department at St. Mary’s University invites applications for an adjunct faculty position for the Fall semester, starting Fall 2021, to teach Physiological Psychology.  Candidates for the position should have a PhD in Psychology, preferable in physiological psychology, biological psychology, cognitive/behavioral neuroscience, or related psychological discipline. ABD candidates will be considered. Experience of at least two years of demonstrated excellence in teaching at the university level is strongly preferred. Teaching responsibilities in the Fall semester will include one section of Physiological Psychology taught face-to-face (or virtually/synchronously will be considered). Candidate will be responsible for administering and grading exams and other course related assignments, and for holding office hours.

Funding Opportunities

Please refer to this list of predoctoral funding opportunities for more information.

  


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Neuroscience Graduate Program
204 Washtenaw Ave., Suite 4137
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2215
Website:http://neuroscience.med.umich.edu

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