Fellowship Programs

KLINGENSTEIN FELLOWSHIP AWARDS IN NEUROSCIENCE

The Klingenstein Fellowship Awards in Neuroscience supports early career investigators engaged in basic or clinical research that may lead to a better understanding of neurological and psychiatric disorders. The fellowship awards promote high-risk, and potentially high-reward, projects.

Aimed at advancing cutting-edge investigations, the awards are presented to highly promising, early career scientists. At this critical juncture in their careers, funding can be a challenge.

1999 Fellows

Carrolee Barlow, Ph.D.

Analysis of Diseases of the Nervous System Using Animal Models

Institution

  • The Salk Institute for Biological Studies

Lab Website

Diego Contreras, Ph.D.

Mechanisms of generation of seizures in corticothalamic networks

Institution

  • University of Pennsylvania

Lab Website

Peter Benjamin Crino, Ph.D.

Molecular Pathogenesis of Human Focal Cortical Dysplasia

Institution

  • University of Pennsylvania

Lab Website

Graeme Davis, Ph.D.

Synaptic Basis of Epilepsy: A Genetic Analysis

Institution

  • University of California, San Francisco

Lab Website

Michael D. Ehlers, Ph.D.

Molecular Regulation of NMDA Receptors

Institution

  • Duke University

Eric Gouaux, Ph.D.

Structural and Functional Studies of the GluR5 Ligand Binding Core: Evaluation of Potential Anti-Epileptic Drugs

Institution

  • Columbia University

Lab Website

Xi He, Ph.D.

Transcriptional Regulation in Vertebrate Neural Induction

Institution

  • Boston Childrens Hospital

Lab Website

Guy M. McKhann II, Ph.D.

Astrocytic function in epilepsy

Institution

  • Columbia University

Lab Website

Richard J. O’Brien, Ph.D.

The Role of the Inducible Immediate Early Gene NARP in the Formation of Excitatory Synapses in Cultured Neurons

Institution

  • Johns Hopkins University

  • Robert H. Ebert Clinical Scholar

Lab Website

Jennifer L. Raymond, Ph.D.

Linking Molecules and Behavior in Mutant Mice

Institution

  • Stanford University

Lab Website

Catherine C. Thompson, Ph.D.

Mechanism of thyroid hormone action in neural development

Institution

  • Kennedy Krieger Institute