This application requests a further five years of support for an
Institutional National Research Service Award to support
multidisciplinary training in drug abuse research. We request support for
seven post-doctoral fellows (2-3 MDs and 4-5 PhDs) per year for primary
training in (i) genetics (statistical/ quantitative, behavioral or
molecular), (ii) neurobiology and molecular biology of substance use
disorders, (iii) epidemiology and nosology of drug abuse and its role in
the transmission of HIV and infectious diseases. In addition to
specialization in a primary discipline, trainees are encouraged to obtain
a sufficient familiarity with at least one other focus area to facilitate
fruitful cross-disciplinary collaborations in their research careers. The
training program will ordinarily be of 3 years duration, reflecting the
diverse background of our applicant pool (e.g. psychiatry, infectious
diseases, mathematics, chemical engineering, biostatistics, neurobiology,
molecular genetics, social work, sociology, anthropology, psychology,
economics, neuroscience), or 2 years for those with pertinent research
experience. One-year post-doctoral fellowships are also offered for
experienced drug abuse researchers seeking training in a new area of drug
abuse research (e.g. genetics). Trainees are housed in specially designed
post-doctoral offices in the Psychiatry section of the University's
Biotechnology Center and in the laboratory facilities of the Clinical
Sciences Research Building. The program emphasizes a research
apprenticeship model in combination with formal training through didactic
courses and individualized tutorials.
Major strengths of the program are the expertise of the faculty in
genetic, epidemiologic and nosologic, molecular biologic and
neurobiologic research on substance use disorders (including HIV-related
research), the long tradition of successful research training of
individuals from diverse backgrounds, the highly productive research
environment (with the preceptors holding a total of 42 federally funded
grants), and the access to major ongoing projects and to existing
epidemiologic and family data-bases that offer many research
possibilities to trainees.
No Sub Projects information available for 5T32DA007261-08
Publications
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