August 25, 2014

Salk neuroscientist Charles Stevens receives NSF grant under BRAIN Initiative

Two-year award will advance novel approach to understanding the brain

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Salk neuroscientist Charles Stevens receives NSF grant under BRAIN Initiative

Two-year award will advance novel approach to understanding the brain

LA JOLLA–Charles Stevens, a professor in the Salk Institute’s Labor für molekulare Neurobiologie, will receive one of 36 Early Concept Grants for Exploratory Research (EAGER) from the Nationale Wissenschaftsstiftung to further research on how complex behaviors emerge from the activity of the brain.

The EAGER program, part of President Obama’s $100 million BRAIN (Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies) Initiative, aims to uncover how the brain works and potential ways to treat, prevent and cure brain disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease, schizophrenia, autism, epilepsy and traumatic injury. The $300,000 awards, announced on August 18, will support short-term, proof-of-concept projects.

“I’m really excited about the opportunity this grant presents because we are exploring a completely new way of looking at how the brain works,” Stevens says. “And if it’s correct, it will provide a critical piece of the puzzle.”

Stevens will use the funds to investigate the function of the olfactory cortex, hippocampus, cerebellum and basal ganglia, employing a cutting-edge mathematical theory called compressed sensing. He hypothesizes that in these four parts of the brain, which are especially focused on learning, a critical mass of cells is responsible for representing information. Much like a music or a photo file becomes compressed for storage, neural information is compressed in such a way that only a small portion of the data needs to be readily available for those regions of the brain to function effectively. Stevens speculates that the four regions of the brain he is targeting represent information in similar, but slightly different ways. At the end of the two-year grant period, he hopes to gain insight into how the brain uses compressed sensing and why.

The EAGER award will also allow Stevens to generate quantitative information, such as the number of cells involved in each area, and other knowledge critical for developing mathematical models of how brain circuits work. For example, he has already established that the mouse brain’s olfactory processing is contained in the output of 1,000 cells, but those cells then transfer the information to 100,000 additional cells, which allow an animal to learn the multitude of odors it will encounter.

Über das Salk Institute for Biological Studies:
Das Salk Institute for Biological Studies ist eine der weltweit führenden Institutionen für Grundlagenforschung, an der international anerkannte Fakultätsmitglieder in einem einzigartigen, kollaborativen und kreativen Umfeld grundlegende Fragen der Biowissenschaften erforschen. Mit dem Fokus auf Entdeckungen und die Ausbildung zukünftiger Forschergenerationen leisten Salk-Wissenschaftler bahnbrechende Beiträge zu unserem Verständnis von Krebs, Altern, Alzheimer, Diabetes und Infektionskrankheiten durch die Erforschung von Neurowissenschaften, Genetik, Zell- und Pflanzenbiologie sowie verwandten Disziplinen.

Die Leistungen der Fakultät wurden mit zahlreichen Auszeichnungen gewürdigt, darunter Nobelpreise und Mitgliedschaften in der National Academy of Sciences. Gegründet im Jahr 1960 von Jonas Salk, MD, dem Pionier der Polio-Schluckimpfung, ist das Institut eine unabhängige gemeinnützige Organisation und ein architektonisches Wahrzeichen.

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