Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute announces third round of seed grants
By Nathan Collins
The Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute has announced its third round of seed grants to six interdisciplinary teams of researchers who collectively span departments from neurosurgery to music.
First awarded in 2015, the seed grants go to teams whose members bring together varied approaches and methods to the table to solve problems related to neuroscience. The grants are intended to help launch new collaborations and pilot risky but potentially high-reward research.
This year, the grants will go to 18 researchers from 13 departments in the schools of Engineering, Humanities and Sciences and Medicine. Their projects include the development of injectable photovoltaic cells that could be used to improve deep brain stimulation, a study of the effects of a particular gene on schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and an effort to understand how emotional affect is transmitted through speech and speech-like sounds such as whistling and singing.
Quantifying audio-vocal affect in human social communication
- Karen Parker, psychiatry and behavioral sciences
- Jonathan Berger, music
- Michael Frank, psychology
- Daniel Bowling, psychiatry and behavioral sciences
Sensory processing in a pre-seizure state
- John Huguenard, neurology and neurological sciences
- Anthony Norcia, psychology
- Brenda Porter, neurology and neurological sciences, pediatrics
Genetic tools to determine circuit-specific roles of myelination
- Bradley Zuchero, neurosurgery
- Ivan Soltesz, neurosurgery
- Polly Fordyce, bioengineering, genetics
Investigating the role of a human-specific repeat element in neuropsychiatric disease risk and cerebellar function
- David Kingsley, developmental biology
- Jennifer Raymond, neurobiology
Ultrasonic neural control and neuroimaging in the awake, mobile and behaving small rodent
- Raag Airan, radiology
- Jeremy Dahl, radiology
- Butrus “Pierre” Khuri-yakub, electrical engineering
Injectable photovoltaics for a wireless, gliosis-free neural stimulation interface
- Guosong Hong, materials science and engineering
- Alberto Salleo, materials science and engineering
- Marion Buckwalter, neurology and neurological sciences, neurosurgery