Functional & Molecular Imaging
Seema Agarwala
Associate Professor in Neurobiology
Cellular and molecular mechanisms of neuronal development.
Richard Aldrich
Professor and Chair of Neurobiology
Understanding the mechanisms of ion channel function and the role of ion channels in electrical signaling and physiology.
Andrew Dunn
Assistant Professor
The development of advanced functional optical imaging techniques and application of these techniques to functional brain imaging.
Francisco Gonzalez-Lima
George I. Sanchez Centennial Professor
Brain systems mediating learning and memory in health and Alzheimer's disease.
Andreana Haley
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Alexander C. Huk
Assistant Professor, Ph.D.
Neural mechanisms underlying perceptual decision-making: Neurophysiology and functional imaging.
Helmut Koester
Assistant Professor of Neurobiology
Neuronal signaling in cortical networks.
Risto Miikkulainen
Professor
Computational neural network models of vision, memory and language.
Hitoshi Morikawa
Associate Professor in Neurobiology
Neurophysiology of the brain reward circuit and drug addiction.
Hiroshi Nishiyama
Assistant Professor in Neurobiology
Cerebellum as a primary model system and a combination of two-photon in vivo time-lapse imaging, virus-mediated gene delivery and neuronal tracing, an
Martin Poenie
Associate Professor in Molecular Cell & Developmental Biology
How microtubules interact with the synapse and in particular how microtubule motor proteins become anchored there.
Russell Poldrack
Professor of Psychology and Neurobiology
Our research is strongly focused on translation of basic cognitive neuroscience into the clinical domain, with collaborations on studies of schizophre
Alison Preston
Assistant Professor of Psychology
High resolution fMRI as a tool for understanding how memory is implemented in the human brain.
David M. Schnyer
Associate Professor
Understanding the functional and neural basis of Implicit memory and metamemory using EEG, MEG and fMRI.
Eyal Seidemann
Associate Professor, Psychology
Neural population coding in the primate cortex
Jason Shear
Professor in Chemistry & Biochemistry
Design and implementation of optical strategies for investigating the chemistry of neurotransmission at the individual synapse.