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.

2001 Fellows

Herwig Baier, Ph.D.

Behavior-genetic analysis of nervous-system excitability and adaptability

Institution

  • University of California, San Francisco

Lab Website

Vadim Bolshakov, Ph.D.

Synaptic mechanisms of fear-conditioning

Institution

  • Harvard University

Lab Website

Aniruddha Das, Ph.D.

Understanding the Intracortical Interactions that Underlie Primary Visual Cortex Neuronal Responses to Complex Visual Stimuli

Institution

  • Columbia University

Lab Website

Daniel E. Feldman, Ph.D.

Cellular Mechanisms for Experience-dependent Plasticity in Rat Somatosensory Cortex

Institution

  • University of California, San Diego

Lab Website

Marla B. Feller, Ph.D.

Cellular mechanisms underlying correlated activity in the developing mammalian retina

Institution

  • University of California, San Diego

Lab Website

Guoping Feng, Ph.D.

Mechanisms that Regulate Formation of an Accessible Neuron-Neuron Synapse

Institution

  • Duke University

Lab Website

Steven Michael Finkbeiner, Ph.D.

NMDA-mediated Signal Transduction and Gene Expression

Institution

  • University of California, San Francisco

Lab Website

Joseph G. Gleeson, Ph.D.

Molecular Mechanisms of Epilepsy

Institution

  • University of California, San Diego

  • Robert H. Ebert Clinical Scholar

Lab Website

Kelsey C. Martin, Ph.D.

Identification of novel mRNAs involved in long-lasting synaptic plasticity

Institution

  • University of California, Los Angeles

Lab Website

Kamal Sharma, Ph.D.

Genetic analysis of the interneuron function in rhythmic motor behaviors

Institution

  • The University of Chicago

Lab Website