Engineering Core

NIH RePORTER · NIH · U19 · $156,564 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Engineering Core The goal of the Engineering Core is to enable our Team members to surmount their most challenging technological and engineering obstacles. There are many needs for engineering solutions in our proposal -- from behavioral apparatus to optical and electrophysiological rigs, to software for data acquisition and analyses. Even the most technologically sophisticated of the research groups in our Team require special assistance with engineering problems in order to achieve our ambitious aims. In the Center for Brain Science at Harvard there is an existing Engineering Core that consists of (a) an integrated laboratory to design, prototype, iterate, and produce custom devices for neuroscience experiments and (b) Dr. Brett Graham, an engineer-neuroscientist who solves the most challenging engineering problems in the user laboratories and trains young scientists to do this themselves. By adding a dedicated staff engineer, the Engineering Core is able to support the team-based neuroscience research proposed here. The specific aims are to implement engineering solutions to problems faced by the Projects and other Cores. The Engineering Core will (a) design and build apparatuses to image rapidly swimming larval zebrafish; (b) build rigs to record neural activity in larval zebrafish brains and hearts via calcium imaging; and (c) further automate the connectomics imaging pipeline.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10918145
Project number
5U19NS104653-08
Recipient
HARVARD UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
Jeff W Lichtman
Activity code
U19
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$156,564
Award type
5
Project period
2017-09-25 → 2027-08-31