COBRE Phase III: Delaware Center for Neuroscience Research
Project Number5P30GM145765-03
Contact PI/Project LeaderHARRINGTON, MELISSA A
Awardee OrganizationDELAWARE STATE UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
Overall Proposal
Summary
The Delaware Center for Neuroscience Research, established in 2012 with a
COBRE award, is a collaboration between Delaware State University (DSU) and the
University of Delaware (UD). Our unique Center brings together faculty and research
resources from two very different institutions: a minority-serving, undergraduate
university with an emerging strength in neuroscience research (DSU), and the state’s
flagship research university (UD). Phase II of our Neuroscience Center COBRE was focused strengthening our
infrastructure for neuroscience research, and to continue to support the research and professional development of early
stage investigators that included Project Leads, Pilot Grant PIs, and new faculty who were hired at DSU with COBRE
support. Our Center has been very successful with over 175 publications by COBRE-supported researchers, six Project
Leads “graduated” into R01 support, three pilot investigator graduated to NSF grants including a CAREER award, and
new faculty recruited to DSU with COBRE support winning K01 and R21 awards.
During Phase II our institutions made significant investments in the research infrastructure for neuroscience.
The University of Delaware established the Center for Biomedical and Brain Imaging with a 3T scanner for human
magnetic resonance imaging, and a 9.4T scanner with small bore magnet for MRI with rodent models. Delaware State
University established a Cell Electrophysiology Core facility to provide patch clamp, multi-electrode and automated
patch clamp services with cells and tissue slices to help neuroscience investigators answer their research questions.
Our phase III project will strengthen both our Center and neuroscience research in Delaware by transitioning the core
resources and biomedical research activities our Neuroscience Center into independence and sustainability.
The overarching scientific goal of our Neuroscience Center is to bring together and support neuroscientists
working at multiple scales, from human subjects to rodent and invertebrate models to improve our understanding of
the dynamic function of the brain. During Phase III we will pursue three specific aims for our Center: 1) involving a
new group of investigators in the Center’s integrated mentoring and professional development program with a pilot
grant program that will help junior faculty become independent, externally-funded researchers; 2) strengthening the
research infrastructure and capacity in Delaware by supporting our research core facilities to transition to sustainability;
and 3) to develop the Delaware Center for Neuroscience Research as a supportive, sustainable scientific community
focused on investigating dynamic structure-function relationships in the brain.
Continuing this COBRE program will have two significant long-term benefits. First, we will build on our
success to support more Delaware neuroscientists to achieve NIH funding for their research on understanding the brain.
Second, as the only COBRE based at an Historically-Black institution, our project has a uniquely significant impact in
supporting diversity, equity and inclusion in the IDeA program and biomedical research in general.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Delaware Center for Neuroscience Research
Public Health Relevance
Summary
The foundation of Phase III proposal is Delaware’s expanding set
of human and research resources in neuroscience, which has
Delaware neuroscience research competitive on a national level.
Our project supports research aimed at determining how thoughts, memories, feelings and
actions emerge from dynamic activities in the brain and are changed over time; as well
educational programs to develop a workforce that can participate in and benefit from
advances in our understanding of brain function. An increased understanding of how the
brain and nervous system functions will facilitate treatments for diseases and injuries and
provide insights into human behavior, biases, and cognition.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AnimalsApplications GrantsAwardBasic ScienceBehaviorBiomedical ResearchBrainBrain imagingCaliberCellsCenters of Research ExcellenceCognitionCollaborationsCommunitiesCore FacilityDataDelawareDevelopmentDiseaseEducationElectrodesElectrophysiology (science)EnsureEnvironmentExploratory/Developmental Grant for Diagnostic Cancer ImagingFacultyFaculty RecruitmentFeelingFosteringFoundationsFundingGeneticGoalsGrantHistorically Black Colleges and UniversitiesHumanHuman ResourcesInfrastructureInjuryInstitutionInvertebratesInvestmentsMagnetic Resonance ImagingMemoryMentored Research Scientist Development AwardMentorsMinorityModelingMolecularNervous SystemNervous System PhysiologyNeurosciencesNeurosciences ResearchPhasePhysiologyPilot ProjectsProductivityProgram DevelopmentPublicationsResearchResearch ActivityResearch InfrastructureResearch PersonnelResearch Project GrantsResearch SupportResourcesRodentRodent ModelServicesSliceStructureStructure-Activity RelationshipStudy SectionThinkingTimeTissuesTrainingTraining ActivityTranslational ResearchUnited States National Institutes of HealthUniversitiesVocational Guidancebasebiomedical imagingcareerequity, diversity, and inclusionexperiencehuman subjectimprovedinnovationinsightinter-institutionallife spanmeetingsmemberneuroimagingnon-invasive imagingoperationpatch clampprogramspublic health relevanceresearch data disseminationskillssuccesssymposiumundergraduate student
No Sub Projects information available for 5P30GM145765-03
Publications
Publications are associated with projects, but cannot be identified with any particular year of the project or fiscal year of funding. This is due to the continuous and cumulative nature of knowledge generation across the life of a project and the sometimes long and variable publishing timeline. Similarly, for multi-component projects, publications are associated with the parent core project and not with individual sub-projects.
No Publications available for 5P30GM145765-03
Patents
No Patents information available for 5P30GM145765-03
Outcomes
The Project Outcomes shown here are displayed verbatim as submitted by the Principal Investigator (PI) for this award. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed are those of the PI and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Institutes of Health. NIH has not endorsed the content below.
No Outcomes available for 5P30GM145765-03
Clinical Studies
No Clinical Studies information available for 5P30GM145765-03
News and More
Related News Releases
No news release information available for 5P30GM145765-03
History
No Historical information available for 5P30GM145765-03
Similar Projects
No Similar Projects information available for 5P30GM145765-03