Community Academic Profiles

Department: Comparative Medicine

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  • Academic Appointments Associate Professor - Med Center Line,  Comparative Medicine
    Associate Professor - Med Center Line (By courtesy),  Psychiatry & Behavioral Science
    Research Interest

    The medical research community has long recognized that “good well-being is good science”. The lab uses an integrated interdisciplinary approach, best described as developmental neuroethology, to explore this interface, while providing tangible deliverables for the well-being of human patients and research animals.

  • Academic Appointments Professor - Med Center Line,  Comparative Medicine
    Member,  Bio-X
    Research Interest

    Research Interests: Xenopus laevis. Husbandry, biology, infectious and parasitic diseases of laboratory Xenopus laevis. Large animal models of disease.

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  • Academic Appointments Professor,  Comparative Medicine
    Research Interest

    The main interest of my lab is to understand how the properties of neocortical neurons and the circuits they form give rise to cortical activity and function. Our approach includes recordings from multiple cells, calcium imaging, two-photon imaging and viral-based optogenetic methods to activate cortical neurons as well as cortical afferents.

  • Academic Appointments Postdoctoral Research fellowComparative Medicine

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  • Academic Appointments Assistant Professor - Med Center Line,  Comparative Medicine
    Research Interest

    Molecular genetics of mammalian sex determination and sexual differentiation, effects of Helicobacter hepaticus, a mouse bacterial pathogen, on colon cancer models, small animal disease models.

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  • Academic Appointments Associate Professor (Research),  Comparative Medicine
    Research Interest

    The ultimate goal of the Shamloo laboratory is to rapidly advance our understanding of brain function at the molecular, cellular, circuit and behavioral levels, and to elucidate the pathological process underlying malfunction of the nervous system following injury and neurologic disorders such as stroke, Alzheimer’s disease and autism. I aim to study the process leading to functional and behavioral malfunction in these disorders, focusing on a set of target genes/proteins.

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