Expanding Chapter Horizons: Connecting Local and International Communities
- Featured in:
- SfN Annual Meeting Recordings
Jun 01, 2016
Interest in neuroscience is increasing across the world. Chapters can play a prime role in connecting people who are interested with the field. Hear SfN chapter leaders from Texas, Michigan, and Maine discuss their experiences developing local and international connections. For more information about SfN chapters and how to get involved, visit SfN.org.
Speakers
Tanea Reed, PhD
Tanea Reed is an associate professor of biochemistry at Eastern Kentucky University, where she serves as a research mentor for undergraduate and graduate students. Her research focuses on post injury treatments for moderate traumatic brain injury, and she was recently awarded an area enrichment award from the National Institutes of Health.
Julia Gerson
Julia Gerson is a doctoral student at The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. Her Galveston chapter won SfN’s 2015 Chapter-of-the-Year Award.
Alexandra Colón-Rodriguez, PhD
Alexandra Colón-Rodriguez is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of California, Davis. Currently, her postdoctoral research in Megan Dennis’ lab is using zebrafish as a model to characterize epilepsy and autism spectrum disorder candidate genes that are involved in synaptic function. She holds a dual major PhD in comparative medicine and integrative biology, and environmental Toxicology, from Michigan State University. She obtained her Bachelor’s degree in microbiology from Universidad del Este-Carolina, Puerto Rico. Colón-Rodriguez’s graduate research in the lab of William Atchison focused on understanding the toxicity of methylmercury, an environmental neurotoxicant, on spinal cord motor neurons.
Chelsea Tiernan, PhD
Chelsea Tiernan is a postdoctoral fellow in the department of translational science and molecular medicine at Michigan State University. Her current research projects investigate the Alzheimer's disease–associated protein tau, and how truncation or phosphorylation events influence the aggregation and toxicity of tau.
Edward Bilsky, PhD
Edward Bilsky is a professor of pharmacology and the founding director of the Center of Excellence in Neuroscience at the University of New England. Bilsky's laboratory conducts translational research in the areas of pain, addiction, and other neurological disorders. Bilsky is also the co-founder of a small biotechnology company, Aiko Pharmaceuticals, that is developing a unique class of opioid antagonists for the management of opioid-mediated side effects.
Laura Colgin, PhD
Dr. Laura Lee Colgin serves as the 2024 SfN Program Committee Chair and is a Professor in the Department of Neuroscience and Director of the Center for Learning and Memory at The University of Texas at Austin. She received her postdoctoral training in the laboratory of Drs. Edvard and May-Britt Moser at the Norwegian Institute of Science and Technology. Prior to that, she completed her PhD work in Dr. Gary Lynch’s laboratory at the University of California, Irvine. Her research goal is to understand neuronal and network mechanisms of learning and memory and how these mechanisms are disrupted in memory disorders. Her lab employs multisite neurophysiological recordings in behaving rats to study how coordinated neuronal populations encode, retrieve, and consolidate memories.
4 of 5 articles left
Login
or
Become a Member
to unlock content