DESCRIPTION: (provided by applicant)
This application requests a further 5 years of support for an Institutional
National Research Service Award to support multi-disciplinary postdoctoral
training in drug abuse (including nicotine and tobacco dependence) research. We
request support for eight post-doctoral fellows (3-4 MD, 4-5 PhD), for primary
training in one of 7 major areas: (i) systems neurobiology, (ii) molecular and
cellular mechanisms, (iii) cognitive neuroscience, (iv) genetic methodology,
(v) genetic epidemiology and behavioral genetic research, (vi) gene-mapping
studies, or (vii) molecular genetic research on substance use disorders. In
addition to specialization in a primary discipline, trainees will be 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. psychology,
psychiatry, endocrinology, mathematics, economics, anthropology, sociology,
neuroscience), or 2 years for those with pertinent research experience.
1-2-year post-doctoral fellowships are also offered for experienced drug abuse
researchers seeking training in a new area of drug abuse research (e.g. human
genetics). Thus on average 3 new trainees will be recruited each year (4 in
years 11, 14). The training program will emphasize a research apprenticeship
model, combining research under the mentorship of one or more experienced
research mentors with more formal training through didactic courses or
individualized tutorials. Major strengths of the program are the availability
of a large multi-disciplinary faculty with an active program of research on
substance use disorders, representing expertise in many aspects of
statistical/quantitative, molecular and genetic epidemiologic and neuroscience
research on substance use disorders; the highly productive research environment
(with preceptors having a total of 60 relevant funded research projects, career
awards and science cores); the availability of major genetic epidemiologic
data-bases, and access to a large number of ongoing projects, that offer many
research options to trainees; the program's location in one of the nation's
leading medical schools, allowing trainees to take advantage of a rich array of
didactic courses and seminars and research experiences; and the long tradition
at Washington University of successful mentoring and research training of
scientists and physician scientists from diverse intellectual backgrounds for
research on substance use disorders.
No Sub Projects information available for 5T32DA007261-15
Publications
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