PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Society for Neuroscience 2024 Early Career Scientists’ Achievements and Research Awards

2024-09-16
(Press-News.org) Embargoed until Monday, September 16, noon EDT               Contact: development@sfn.org

 

 

CHICAGO – The Society for Neuroscience (SfN) will honor nine early career researchers whose work will be presented during Neuroscience 2024, SfN's annual meeting.

“Early career researchers are often the ones who bring fresh ideas and perspectives to the field,” said SfN President Marina Picciotto. “These awardees and their novel approaches to microscopy, machine learning, circuits and behavior will drive neuroscience forward for many years to come” Picciotto said.

Jennifer N. Bourne Prize in Brain Ultrastructure: Yuuta Imoto

The Jennifer N. Bourne Prize in Brain Ultrastructure recognizes early career neuroscientists for outstanding work that advances our understanding of brain structure and function at the nanometer scale. Named for Jennifer N. Bourne, an electron microscopist and core facility director who studied the structural plasticity of synapses, the award honors brain ultrastructure researchers who are within their first five years of academic appointments. The award is funded by Kristen M. Harris and includes a $5,000 prize and travel to SfN’s annual meeting.

This year’s Bourne Prize recipient is Yuuta Imoto, PhD, assistant member in the Department of Developmental Neurobiology at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. Imoto’s research approach integrates synaptic vesicle fusion and vesicle recycling to dissect how individual molecular components contribute to the dynamic structural changes that underlie synaptic transmission. Imoto is a rising leader in the field of ultrastructure imagery who combines meticulous ultrastructural analysis of synapses with time-resolved electron microscopy and super-resolution microscopy images. These dynamic images enable a deeper exploration of membrane dynamics at millisecond time scale and the protein localization at nanometer level within synapses. By combining these cutting-edge microscopy methods with structural biology, genetic engineering, and biochemistry, Imoto has uncovered proteins and molecular mechanisms responsible for the fastest synaptic vesicle recycling pathway, a process that has remained an unresolved mystery in the field for decades. Ultimately, Imoto’s contributions to understanding these complex synaptic processes can inform research on neurological disorders caused by alterations in neurotransmitter levels and lead to advancements in the development of treatments for medical conditions such as Parkinson’s disease, schizophrenia, depression, and Alzheimer’s disease. Furthermore, his research will uncover how synaptic structure and function in modern animals were established during evolution, providing insights into the fundamental mechanisms that have shaped neural systems over time.

 

Donald B. Lindsley Prize in Behavioral Neuroscience:
Marissa Applegate and Tom Hindmarsh Sten

Endowed by The Grass Foundation, the Donald B. Lindsley Prize in Behavioral Neuroscience recognizes an outstanding PhD thesis in the area of general behavioral neuroscience. The award was established in 1979 in honor of Donald B. Lindsley, an early trustee of the Grass Foundation. The award includes a $5,000 prize shared by the recipients and recipients’ travel to the SfN annual meeting.

This year’s awardees are Marissa Applegate, PhD, and Tom Hindmarsh Sten, PhD, whose doctoral research focused on how animal brains respond to different cues and adapt their behavior accordingly. Their research findings offer insights into the neural bases of emotion, memory and behavior. Using a combination of behavioral studies and neural analysis, they revealed how animals process both internal and external information to inform behaviors.

As a PhD student at Columbia University, Applegate worked with food-caching black-capped chickadees that remember and manage the locations of thousands of hidden seeds. Applegate developed a new behavioral paradigm for the quantitative analysis of seed-caching behavior and its underlying neurobiology in a controlled laboratory setting. Her work investigated the neural foundation of these behaviors, applying anatomical and functional approaches to identify specific brain regions that exhibit striking parallels to memory systems in mammals. These research findings expand and sharpen our understanding of the avian hippocampus and how its neural connections enable these behaviors. Applegate completed her PhD in 2023 and is currently a postdoctoral associate at Yale University.

Hindmarsh Sten’s doctoral research at The Rockefeller University focused on how internal and external factors coalesce in the neural circuits of fruit flies to sculpt behavioral priorities, such as fighting and mating. His multidisciplinary approach combined neurogenetics with neuronal stimulation and recordings of brain activity to gain a mechanistic understanding of how the fruit fly brain processes information in a context-dependent manner. Sten developed an elegant virtual reality system that allowed him to employ functional imaging to quantify the neuronal responses of a male fly as it perceived and interacted with a female fly or another male. He documented activation of distinct sensorimotor circuits that mediate mating behaviors such as pursuing a potential mate or repelling a rival male. The combination of detailed behavioral observations and manipulation of specific neural pathways provide a fuller picture of how internal states interact with sensory cues in fruit flies to influence complex social interactions. Sten completed his PhD in 2023 and is currently a postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University.

Nemko Prize in Cellular or Molecular Neuroscience: Marisol Soula

The Nemko Prize in Cellular or Molecular Neuroscience, supported by The Nemko Family, recognizes a young neuroscientist’s outstanding PhD thesis advancing our understanding of molecular, genetic, or cellular mechanisms underlying higher brain function and cognition. The award includes a $2,500 prize and travel to the SfN annual meeting.

The 2024 awardee of the Nemko Prize is Marisol Soula, who obtained her PhD in 2023. As a doctoral student in the Department of Neuroscience and Physiology at New York University, she combined cutting-edge electrophysiological and surgical techniques with behavioral tests in mice to examine the role of communication between brain regions and the patterns of electrical activity in neurons involved in memory. By recording electrical activity in the hippocampus of healthy mice and comparing those patterns with patterns of electrical activity in mice that had been genetically engineered as an animal model of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), Soula discovered an abnormal pattern in the transgenic AD mice, which she found interferes with their memory storage processes. Comparing the abnormal patterns from the AD mice to patterns known to occur in humans diagnosed with epilepsy or AD, Soula found striking similarities. These elegant cross-species comparisons are key to better understanding how brains acquire, store, and use information. Soula’s discovery that this abnormal pattern is a common and epilepsy-independent phenomenon that perturbs communication between the hippocampus and other brain regions could inform strategies for restoring neuronal coordination. As such, her research could lead to the development of methods to ameliorate memory processes that go wrong in patients with neurodegenerative diseases. Soula plans to continue this work in patients with memory disorders as a neurosurgeon-scientist. During her graduate studies, she also trained and mentored undergraduate student volunteers in the laboratory.

Peter and Patricia Gruber International Research Award in Neuroscience:

Angelo Forli, Aditya Nair, and Camille Testard

The Peter and Patricia Gruber International Research Award in Neuroscience recognizes up to three young neuroscientists for outstanding research and educational pursuit in an international setting. The award is supported by The Gruber Foundation and includes a $25,000 prize and travel to the SfN annual meeting.

This year’s awardees are Angelo Forli, PhD, PhD candidate Aditya Nair, and Camille Testard, PhD. Each of these researchers uses advanced technologies to investigate the different brain pathways involved in social behaviors. Using both natural and laboratory environments, they incorporate interdisciplinary collaborations from fields such as physics, neurobiology, ethology, and machine learning to integrate different perspectives into their work.

Forli is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of California, Berkeley. In his investigation into how animals navigate in collective settings, Forli developed an innovative system that combines precise tracking of large groups of free-flying bats with wireless neural recording methods. He focused on the bats’ hippocampus, a fundamental brain area for navigation and memory. Using this highly sophisticated setup, he identified neural mechanisms underlying navigation in highly dynamic social settings as bats naturally forage. His research reveals that when bats forage together, they organize themselves in spatially and socially structured ways, and several features of this organization are encoded in the hippocampus. Beyond spatial coding, he found that the hippocampus tracks and maps the presence of other bats, their location, identity and sensory cues of other conspecifics, enabling successful navigation within the group. Forli’s groundbreaking study is the first to identify a neurobiological mechanism behind collective spatial behavior and reveal how brain mechanisms control naturalistic group behavior in animals. Moving forward, Forli plans to combine cutting-edge behavioral and neurophysiological technologies to simultaneously characterize the behavioral and neurophysiological mechanisms of collective behavior (one example of what he calls “natural intelligence”) at the neural network level.

Nair’s graduate research in the Computation and Neural Systems program at the California Institute of Technology combines neurobiology and machine learning to explore how the brain controls social behaviors that are disrupted in a wide range of developmental and mental health conditions. Originally from Singapore and India, Nair’s interdisciplinary work provides a theoretical framework of how emotional states are encoded in the brain, deepening our understanding of the persistence and intensity of complex behaviors such as aggression. His computational expertise enabled him to provide the first demonstration that an aggressive state in a mouse is encoded in the emergent dynamics of neural populations in a brain area called the ventromedial hypothalamus. This finding represents a new way of thinking about the hypothalamus and suggests that a common network computation is used to encode diverse affective states. Nair’s research also reveals that this computation is influenced by hormones and neuropeptides, offering insights into mechanisms used to implement long time-scale signals in the brain. His research raises new questions about how our internal affective states are influenced by genes, environmental factors, and neuropsychiatric drugs. Nair plans to return to Singapore as a principal investigator at the Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biology (IMCB), A*STAR, where he hopes to investigate how internal affective states are altered in a wide range of mental health conditions.

Testard’s innovative field and laboratory research explores the complex relationship between the environment and social behaviors in animals. A junior fellow at Harvard University, she combines techniques from field ethology, brain imaging, and advanced genetic analysis. One of Testard’s groundbreaking approaches to studying primate brain function includes the first-ever wireless array neurophysiological brain recordings in pairs of macaques during spontaneous social interactions in the laboratory. The direct assessment of how neurons encode social information showed that neurons in the prefrontal and temporal cortex are involved in specific social behaviors such as grooming. She also is studying changes in neuroanatomy in a population of macaques on an uninhabited Puerto Rican island before and after a 2017 hurricane. She found that after the hurricane’s environmental devastation, the macaques became more social. As global warming exacerbates natural disasters, knowledge of how animals respond to extreme ecological changes and how their brains orchestrate rapid adaptive changes in social behavior is timely and vital. Deeper understanding of the neural mechanisms underlying the effects of animal sociality — such as resilience to trauma and adaptive impact of social support for survival and reproductive success — has clear human health implications regarding causes and consequences of social function and dysfunction.

SfN Tianqiao and Chrissy Chen Young Investigator Award: Nicholas Bellono and Catherine Jensen Peña

The SfN Tianqiao and Chrissy Chen Young Investigator Award recognizes the outstanding achievements and contributions by young neuroscientists who lead independent research groups. The award is supported by the Tianqiao and Chrissy Chen Institute and includes a $25,000 prize shared by the recipients and recipients’ travel to the SfN annual meeting.

This year’s recipients are Nicholas Bellono, PhD, and Catherine Jensen Peña, PhD. Both researchers apply interdisciplinary approaches to basic-science investigations of how neural pathways in the brain are affected by factors in an organism’s environment.

Bellono, a professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology at Harvard University, tackles long-standing fundamental questions in sensory biology that have yielded detailed descriptions of how unconventional model animals adapt to their ever-changing environments. His PhD thesis explored molecular mechanisms that control pigmentation in human skin in response to environmental factors such as sunlight, winning Brown University’s Joukowsky Foundation Outstanding Dissertation Prize. Bellono’s approach of reducing complex behaviors and physiological processes to their simplest components, such as a signaling pathway or single protein function, continued in his postdoctoral work exploring the molecular basis of chemosensation by the gut and electroreception in sharks.

The Bellono laboratory investigation of how jellyfish and sea anemones selectively sting prey but ignore irrelevant stimuli led to the discovery of ion channels that integrate both chemical and mechanical stimuli to control stinging. Bellono has also identified a novel family of receptors in octopuses’ suction cups that are involved in detection of surface-localized chemicals, which octopuses use to find prey. He has since continued exploring non-model systems including limb formation in walking fish, mechanisms of photosynthesis in animals, the piranha feeding frenzy, and more.

Peña is an assistant professor at the Princeton Neuroscience Institute. Her work focuses on understanding how early life stress in humans and rodents shape brain development. Her research has led to the discovery of epigenetic, molecular, and cellular changes in several key brain regions that result from early life trauma. These genome-wide changes increase one’s risk of developing brain disorders such as depression and other mood, anxiety, and drug disorders. As a postdoctoral fellow and in her own lab, Peña has demonstrated creativity and pushed technological boundaries: using a combination of transgenic mice to track brain activity, genome-wide sequencing and computational methods, and gene therapy to regulate both molecules and brain activity in mice, Peña and her lab have identified new ways that early life stress increases stress vulnerability. Her discoveries push the field closer to more targeted treatments for individuals who experienced early life trauma.

###

The Society for Neuroscience (SfN) is an organization of nearly 35,000 basic scientists and clinicians who study the brain and the nervous system.

 

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Society for Neuroscience 2024 Education and Outreach Awards

2024-09-16
Embargoed until Monday, September 16, noon EDT          Contact: development@sfn.org   CHICAGO – The Society for Neuroscience (SfN) will present six neuroscientists with this year’s Science Education and Outreach Awards, comprising the Award for Education in Neuroscience, the Science Educator Award, and the Next Generation Awards. The awards will be presented during SfN’s annual meeting. “The Society is honored to recognize these passionate neuroscientists ...

Society for Neuroscience 2024 Promotion of Women in Neuroscience Awards

2024-09-16
Embargoed until Monday, September 16, noon EDT               Contact: development@sfn.org   CHICAGO — The Society for Neuroscience (SfN) will honor seven researchers who have made significant contributions to the advancement of women in neuroscience. The awards will be presented during Neuroscience 2024, SfN's annual meeting. “Neuroscience is both a field of research and a community of researchers,” said SfN President Marina Picciotto. “These awardees not only advance our field’s understanding of the brain through their own research, they strengthen and support ...

Baek conducting air quality monitoring & simulation analysis

2024-09-16
Baek Conducting Air Quality Monitoring & Simulation Analysis B.H. Baek, Research Associate Professor, Center for Spatial Information Science and Systems, College of Science, received funding for: “EPA Air Quality Modeling and Simulation Analysis (AQM- Office of Air Quality, Planning Standards (OAQPS) Program.” Baek will perform work in support of the U.S. EPA Office of Air Quality Policy and Standards (OAQPS) Air Quality Modeling and Simulation Analysis. Baek received $27,316 from General ...

Albanese receives funding for scholarship grant program

2024-09-16
Massimiliano Albanese, Associate Professor, Information Sciences and Technology; Associate Chair for Research, School of Computing; College of Engineering and Computing (CEC), received funding for: “DoD Cyber Scholarship Grant Program.” George Mason will continue administering its Cybersecurity Scholarship Program during the 2024-2025 academic year, under the Department of Defense (DoD) Cyber Service Academy (CSA) program, formerly known as the DoD Cybersecurity Scholarship Program (CySP). The objective ...

Generative AI model study shows no racial or sex differences in opioid recommendations for treating pain

2024-09-16
A new study from Mass General Brigham researchers provides evidence that large language models (LLMs), used for generative artificial intelligence (AI), ChatGPT-4 and Google’s Gemini, demonstrated no differences in suggested opioid treatment regimens for different races or sexes. Results are published in PAIN.  “I see AI algorithms in the short term as augmenting tools that can essentially serve as a second set of eyes, running in parallel with medical professionals,” said corresponding author Marc Succi, ...

New study links neighborhood food access to child obesity risk

2024-09-16
Key Takeaways: A new study led by the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute examined whether neighborhood food access in early life is associated with trajectories of child body mass index and obesity risk. Study results show that neighborhood food access matters. Residing in low-income, low-food-access neighborhoods during pregnancy or early childhood is linked to a higher body mass index (BMI) z-score and a more than 50% increased risk of obesity and severe obesity from childhood to adolescence. Investing in neighborhood resources to improve food access ...

Efficacy and safety of erenumab for nonopioid medication overuse headache in chronic migraine

2024-09-16
About The Study: In this study, monthly, 140 mg erenumab injections safely and effectively achieved medication overuse headaches remission in patients with nonopioid chronic migraine and medication overuse headaches within 6 months. Quote from corresponding author Stewart J. Tepper, MD: “Those patients with medication overuse headache (MOH) have higher disability and a significant unmet clinical need. Erenumab proved effective versus placebo in significantly higher rates of MOH remission and marked reduction in days in which acute migraine treatment was taken in a randomized controlled trial, with these benefits sustained through ...

Air pollution and Parkinson disease in a population-based study

2024-09-16
About The Study: The findings of this study suggest that a reduction in air pollution may help reduce Parkinson disease risk, modifying the Parkinson disease phenotype and the risk of dyskinesia in patients with Parkinson disease.  Corresponding Authors: To contact the corresponding authors, email Brittany Krzyzanowski, PhD, (brittany.krzyzanowski@barrowneuro.org) and Rodolfo Savica, MD, PhD, (savica.rodolfo@mayo.edu). To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.33602) Editor’s ...

Neighborhood food access in early life and trajectories of child BMI and obesity

2024-09-16
About The Study: Residence in low-income, low–food access neighborhoods in early life was associated with higher subsequent child body mass index and higher risk of obesity and severe obesity. Future studies should examine the effectiveness of investments in neighborhood resources to improve food access in preventing child obesity. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Izzuddin M. Aris, PhD, email izzuddin_aris@hphci.harvard.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamapediatrics.2024.3459) Editor’s ...

Real-time exposure to negative news media and suicidal ideation intensity among LGBTQ+ young adults

2024-09-16
About The Study: This intensive longitudinal cohort study found that suicidal ideation intensity modestly increased in the hours immediately following exposure to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer (LGBTQ+) negative news or media among LGBTQ+ young adults. These findings have timely implications for research and intervention, particularly within sociopolitical and geographic contexts where news or media coverage about LGBTQ+ topics is intensified. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Kirsty A. Clark, MPH, PhD, email kirsty.clark@vanderbilt.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Rugged Falklands landscape was once a lush rainforest

Dizziness in older adults is linked to higher risk of future falls

Triptans more effective than newer, more expensive migraine drugs

Iron given through the vein corrects iron deficiency anaemia in pregnant women faster and better than iron taken by mouth

The Lancet Neurology: Air pollution, high temperatures, and metabolic risk factors driving global increases in stroke, with latest figures estimating 12 million cases and over 7 million deaths from st

Incidence of neuroleptic malignant syndrome during antipsychotic treatment in children and youth

Levels of protection from different cycle helmets revealed by new ratings

Pupils with SEND continue to fall behind their peers

Half of heavier drinkers say calorie labels on alcohol would lead to a change in their drinking habits

Study first to link operating room design to shorter surgery

New study uncovers therapeutic inertia in the treatment of women with multiple sclerosis

Cancer Cooperative Group leaders propose a re-engineering of the nation’s correlative science program for cancer

Nawaz named ASME Fellow

U2opia signs license to commercialize anomaly-detection technology for cybersecurity

Explaining dramatic planetwide changes after world’s last ‘Snowball Earth’ event

Cleveland Clinic study is first to show success in treating rare blood disorder

Bone marrow cancer drug shows success in treatment of rare blood disorder

Clinical trial successfully repurposes cancer drug for hereditary bleeding disorder

UVA Engineering professor awarded $1.6M EPA grant to reduce PFAS accumulation in crops

UVA professor receives OpenAI grant to inform next-generation AI systems

New website helps researchers overcome peer reviewers’ preference for animal experiments

Can the MIND diet lower the risk of memory problems later in life?

Some diabetes drugs tied to lower risk of dementia, Parkinson’s disease

Propagated corals reveal increased resistance to bleaching across the Caribbean during the fatal heatwave of 2023

South African rock art possibly inspired by long-extinct species

Even marine animals in untouched habitats are at risk from human impacts

Hexagonal electrohydraulic modules shape-shift into versatile robots

Flexible circuits made with silk and graphene on the horizon

Scott Emr and Wesley Sundquist awarded 2024 Horwitz Prize for discovering the ESCRT pathway

Versatile knee exo for safer lifting

[Press-News.org] Society for Neuroscience 2024 Early Career Scientists’ Achievements and Research Awards