Affiliations: | Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences; Texas A&M Institute of Neuroscience. (TAMIN) |
Project Leader: | Omar Sial omarsial@tamu.edu Psychological & Brain Sciences |
Faculty Mentor: | Dr. Carlos Bolanos, Ph.D. |
Meeting Times:
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Fridays ZOOM 10:30-11am (Likely to change) |
Team Size:
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5
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Open Spots: | 0 |
Special Opportunities:
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Students will learn basic laboratory techniques, including how to work with rodents (e.g. husbandry and behavior) and perform biochemical assays (e.g. western blots, PCR, ELISA). Advanced students will present their work to the lab and potentially create a poster for a conference. |
Team Needs:
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There is a wide range of duties that will be required for this project. New members of the team will begin with basic laboratory tasks (i.e., washing dishes/cleaning equipment, data input, buffer washes, etc.). As students in the team spend more time in laboratory, demonstrating responsibility/ reliability, and building trust, they may move to more advanced tasks (i.e., animal husbandry/behavior, data analysis, biochemical assays). Students who spent more than a year in the lab may be able to oversee their own side-project moving forward and will present their work to the lab. Students are expected to take some initiative in the project and be self-motivated. Students will be evaluated every semester to determine whether they will continue participating on the project. Though it is preferred that the applicants aim to go to graduate school or are majoring in neuroscience-related fields, (i.e., neuroscience, psychology, biology, biochemistry, etc.) it is not a requirement |
Description:
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This is a preclinical project that focuses on the effects of concurrent social stress and western-style diet (high fat/carb) during adolescence and the long-term behavioral and neurobiological deficits it may cause. |