Funded Awards

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) BRAIN Initiative funds a wide-variety of research: toolmakers, trainees, individual labs testing new hypotheses, and large, team-based efforts aiming to catalyze neuroscience inquiry forward. Explore NIH BRAIN Initiative funded awards listed below. Click on the project title to learn more about it within NIH RePORTER.

To see more NIH-funded awards and associated publications, please visit the NIH RePORTER

Title
Investigator(s)
Institution
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunity #
Title Implications of Prefrontal Cortex Development for Adolescent Reward Seeking Behavior
Investigator
Gabriela Manzano Nieves
Institute
weill medical coll of cornell univ
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

PROJECT SUMMARY As we get older, we learn to modulate our behaviors to optimize reward outcomes. These adaptive choices are orchestrated by current sensory conditions, internal cognitive states, and future expectations.

Title Improving Recruitment, Engagement, and Access for Community Health Equity for BRAIN Next-Generation Human Neuroimaging Research and Beyond (REACH for BRAIN)
Investigator
Susie Yi Huang, Jonathan David Jackson, Francis X Shen
Institute
harvard medical school
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Project Summary / Abstract Although BRAIN 2.0 called for the BRAIN Initiative to “prioritize diversity and inclusion as a fundamental pillar,” research with the human neuroimaging technologies being developed by BRAIN Initiative continues to rely on non-representative convenience samples.

Title Integrating single-cell connectivity, gene expression, and function in zebra finches
Investigator
Justus M Kebschull
Institute
johns hopkins university
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

PROJECT SUMMARY The courtship song of male zebra finches is a classical model for learning complex motor behaviors and shows important parallels to human speech and communication. Male zebra finches learn a song from an adult tutor and then reproduce this song throughout adulthood.

Title Integrative Analysis of Adaptive Information Processing and Learning-Dependent Circuit Reorganization in the Auditory System
Investigator
Wiliam Mcintyre Debello, Mark H Ellisman, Brian J Fischer, Jose L Pena
Institute
albert einstein college of medicine
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Abstract Decades of research have revealed the principles of information processing that give rise to auditory spatial tuning and experience-dependent adaptive plasticity in the owl auditory system.

Title Integrative circuit dissection in the behaving nonhuman primate
Investigator
Wyeth Daniel Bair, Farran Briggs, Anitha Pasupathy, Anqi Wu
Institute
university of washington
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

In natural vision, recognizing objects based on the retinal image is challenging and is often an ill-posed problem because a single image is compatible with multiple interpretations.

Title Intersubject Synchrony in Neural and Behavioral Representations of Social Uncertainty Among Adults and Adolescents
Investigator
William John Mitchell
Institute
temple univ of the commonwealth
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Project Summary Uncertainty is an often pervasive, stressful experience that arises when making judgments about others' beliefs, intentions, or emotions (i.e., ambiguous social situations). Excessive uncertainty can have pernicious effects upon memory, mood, and physical and mental outcomes.

Title Intrinsic and Extrinsic factors regulating neurogenic competence in hypothalamic tanycytes
Investigator
Leighton Hosea Duncan
Institute
johns hopkins university
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Hypothalamic tanycytes have limited postnatal neurogenic competence, but the extrinsic and intrinsic factors that promote this are not well understood. My predoctoral research identified a defined developmental window during which neurogenic competence is lost from hypothalamic tanycytes.

Title Investigating the Recruitment of Different Neuronal Subpopulations by Intracortical Micro Stimulation Using Two Photon-Microscopy
Investigator
Christopher Hughes
Institute
university of pittsburgh at pittsburgh
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Project Summary Intracortical microstimulation (ICMS) of the sensory cortices is an emerging approach to restore sensation to people who have lost it due to neurological injury or disease.

Title Investigations of cAMP-dependent brain-barrier permeability in choroid plexus
Investigator
Dario Xavier Figueroa Velez
Institute
boston children's hospital
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

PROJECT SUMMARY The choroid plexus (ChP) comprises a network of cells that form a critical brain barrier that can mediate secondary damage in certain brain disorders and trauma. The Lehtinen lab has developed a suite of tools to study the ChP across development ex vivo and in vivo.

Title Large-scale calcium and voltage imaging to illuminate neural mechanisms of visual experience
Investigator
Michelle Redinbaugh
Institute
stanford university
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Project Summary: The majority of lived experience depends on neural activity conveying sensory information about the world.

Title Live spike sorting for multichannel and high-channel recordings
Investigator
Tim Chifong Lei, Achim Klug
Institute
popneuron, llc
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

The goal of this project is to create two prototypes of a novel live spike sorting system which can be used by investigators to spike sort streams of neural data recorded by multi-channel, high channel and ultra-high channel probes.

Title Local Circuit Control of Rapid Plasticity and Tunable Ensemble Formation in the Hippocampus
Investigator
Attila Losonczy, Ivan Soltesz
Institute
columbia university health sciences
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Project Summary/Abstract Neural representations supporting spatial and episodic learning form, and transform rapidly in the mammalian hippocampus.

Title Manipulation of neuron identity towards in-vivo circuit reprogramming in the cerebral cortex
Investigator
Lee O Vaasjo
Institute
tulane university of louisiana
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Project Summary Sub-Cerebral Projection Neurons (SCPNs) are a clinically relevant neuron class that controls voluntary movement and whose loss in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and Fronto-temporal dementia or injury (e.g., damaged by spinal cord injury) leads to paralysis.

Title Mechanisms of experience-dependent plasticity in an innate social behavior circuit
Investigator
Emma E Boxer
Institute
california institute of technology
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Project Summary Many social behaviors, such as defense and aggression, are innate- requiring no prior experience to be expressed and presumably ‘hardwired’ into neural circuits.

Title Mechanisms of neural circuit dynamics in working memory and decision-making
Investigator
Carlos D Brody, Ila R. Fiete, Mark S Goldman, Jonathan William Pillow, Hyunjune Sebastian Seung, David W Tank, Samuel Sheng-Hung Wang, Ilana Witten
Institute
princeton university
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Project Summary/Abstract: Overall The overarching goal of this U19 program is to determine how neural computations across brain regions produce two core cognitive processes, working memory and decision-making, and thus to derive fundamental principles of brain function.

Title Models for accumulation of evidence through sequences in a navigation-based, decision-making task
Investigator
Lindsey Shoemaker Brown
Institute
princeton university
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Decision making is a fundamental cognitive process, and many decisions are based on gradually accumulated evidence. Thus, it is critical to understand the mechanistic basis underlying this accumulation process.

Title Multiphon imaging for understanding social brain function in tadpoles
Investigator
Na Ji, Lauren A O'connell
Institute
stanford university
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Project Summary Mother-infant bonding is a key relationship that lays a foundation for wellness throughout life. Social recognition is an important component of this relationship, as infants imprint on the smell of their mothers and use olfaction to distinguish their mother from others.

Title Multisensory integration and self-motion perception in primate vestibular cortex
Investigator
Alejandra Gomez
Institute
johns hopkins university
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Project Summary In vertebrate animals, the vestibular system (primarily known as the “balance system” of the brain) interprets head-movement and orientation signals to provide organisms with a sense of self-motion.

Title Nanoparticle Coated Microelectrode Arrays for Electrochemically Controlled Gene Editing at the Electrode Site
Investigator
Nathaniel P Williams
Institute
university of pittsburgh at pittsburgh
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Abstract Microelectrode arrays (MEAs) have great potential for therapeutic use in direct brain-computer interface (BCI) control of robotic prostheses to improve the lives of patients suffering from debilitating conditions related to loss of limbs or limb function.

Title Neural basis of collective behavior during environmental stress
Investigator
Tara Raam
Institute
university of california los angeles
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Project Summary Social interactions are critical to the physical and emotional health of a wide variety of species.

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