[FUN_Mail] A Classic Set of Molecular Genetics- Electrophysiology Papers

DJ Brasier via FUN_Mail fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
Thu Sep 11 13:46:55 EDT 2014


Are there any grad students or postdocs out there reading these e-mails 
who haven't wanted to contribute but who might want to take the lead on 
compiling the list & writing a manuscript?

DJ

On 9/11/14, 1:38 PM, William Grisham via FUN_Mail wrote:
> Dear Colleagues:
>
> I really like Barbara's suggestion that this thread should serve as the
> basis of a JUNE article. Perhaps each nominator could write a paragraph
> about the strengths of their particular nomination. Could somebody step
> forward as the lead?
>
> While I was awaiting your suggestions, I assigned my students these two
> articles:
>
>
>
> Science. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1887219> 1991 Aug
> 30;253(5023):1034-7.
>
> *A difference in hypothalamic structure between heterosexual and homosexual
> men.*
>
> LeVay S
> <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed?term=LeVay%20S%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=1887219>
> .
>
>
> and
>
>
>
> Horm Behav. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11534967> 2001
> Sep;40(2):86-92.
> The interstitial nuclei of the human anterior hypothalamus: an
> investigation of variation with sex, sexual orientation, and HIV status.
>
> Byne W
> <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed?term=Byne%20W%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=11534967>
> 1, Tobet S
> <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed?term=Tobet%20S%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=11534967>
> , Mattiace LA
> <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed?term=Mattiace%20LA%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=11534967>
> , Lasco MS
> <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed?term=Lasco%20MS%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=11534967>
> , Kemether E
> <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed?term=Kemether%20E%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=11534967>
> , Edgar MA
> <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed?term=Edgar%20MA%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=11534967>
> , Morgello S
> <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed?term=Morgello%20S%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=11534967>
> , Buchsbaum MS
> <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed?term=Buchsbaum%20MS%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=11534967>
> , Jones LB
> <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed?term=Jones%20LB%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=11534967>
> .
>
> On the former, I asked them these questions:
> 1) What do his data show?
> 2) What are possible conclusions that he provides for his data?
>
> Here are some critiques that have been leveled at the data and their
> interpretation--see if you agree:
>
> 1) INAH3 is too small to reliably measure.
> 2) Being gay is hopelessly confounded with being HIV+ so no conclusion
> about being gay can be reached.
> 3) Some of the heterosexual men who died of AIDS may have been
> misclassified, as in they were in the closet, so the results cannot be
> regarded as valid.
> 4) Some of the heterosexual men who died of other causes were misclassified
> and were actually gay.
> 5) Since LeVay is gay, he was biased and so the results cannot be trusted.
>
> Some other conclusions that commentators have made:
> 1) This proves that being gay is innate/inborn.
> 2) This proves that being gay is NOT innate/inborn.
> What aspects of his data allow for either conclusion.
>
> The Byne paper is an attempt at a replication, and the authors state, " The
> primary sexually dimorphic cellular characteristic of INAH3, neuronal
> number, did not vary as a function of sexual orientation," which is not
> what LeVay found.
> I'm going to ask my students to take a hard look at the statistics, though,
> and see if the conclusion is well justified.
>
> Notably, in all the suggestions for the most amazing paper in neuroscience,
> only one paper received a second vote. Thanks to all for their
> suggestions--keep them coming and let's all write an article together!
>
> William (Bill) Grisham, Ph.D.
> Adjunct Professor
> Department of Psychology, UCLA
> 1285 Franz Hall
> PO Box 951563
> Los Angeles, CA 90095-1563
>
> (310) 825-7990
> Dr.billgrisham at gmail.com
>
> On Thu, Sep 11, 2014 at 7:42 AM, Joseph Burdo via FUN_Mail <
> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org> wrote:
>
>> As a reminder, once you find a Dropbox or FUN home for papers that are not
>> easily available, or have a pdf link for those that are, ERiN can serve as
>> searchable resource for this repository.
>> http://erin.sfn.org/Suggest-A-Resource will allow you to add your favorite
>> classic paper, along with these great descriptions in the thread letting us
>> know how and why you used the paper.
>>
>> Joe
>>
>> On Thu, Sep 11, 2014 at 10:35 AM, Ilya Vilinsky via FUN_Mail <
>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org> wrote:
>>
>>> All, This is a great topic and definitely a thread worth saving. I think
>>> we should start our own repository of classic neuroscience papers as a
>> FUN
>>> resource.
>>>
>>> I would add a series of papers that described a crucial link between the
>>> electrophysiological propertied of neurons and the molecular mechanisms
>>> (i.e. voltage gated ion channels) that make all this possible. In the
>> late
>>> 1980’s the Jan and Jan labs used the Drosophila Shaker mutant to pull out
>>> the first sequence of a voltage gated channel. Homology cloning from this
>>> sequence allowed discovery of the huge diversity of channels known today.
>>> This story is a great combination of electrophysiology, molecular
>> biology,
>>> genetics, and evolution.
>>>
>>> Cloning of genomic and complementary DNA from Shaker, a putative
>> potassium
>>> channel gene from Drosophila.
>>> Papazian DM, Schwarz TL, Tempel BL, Jan YN, Jan LY. Science. 1987 Aug
>>> 14;237(4816):749-53.
>>>
>>> Sequence of a probable potassium channel component encoded at Shaker
>> locus
>>> ofDrosophila.
>>> Tempel BL, Papazian DM, Schwarz TL, Jan YN, Jan LY. Science. 1987 Aug
>>> 14;237(4816):770-5.
>>>
>>> Ion channels in Drosophila.
>>> Papazian DM1, Schwarz TL, Tempel BL, Timpe LC, Jan LY. Annu Rev Physiol.
>>> 1988;50:379-94.
>>>
>>> Molecular studies of voltage-gated potassium channels.
>>> Isacoff E1, Papazian D, Timpe L, Jan YN, Jan LY. Cold Spring Harb Symp
>>> Quant Biol. 1990;55:9-17.
>>>
>>>
>>> More papers, please!
>>>
>>> -Ilya
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Ilya Vilinsky, PhD
>>> Director, Undergraduate Neuroscience Program
>>> Education Associate Professor, Department of Biological Sciences
>>> University of Cincinnati
>>> 613B Rieveschl Hall
>>> Cincinnati, OH, 45221-0006
>>> ilya.vilinsky at uc.edu
>>> Phone: 513-556-9749
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Sep 11, 2014, at 9:56 AM, via FUN_Mail <fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Send FUN_Mail mailing list submissions to
>>>>        fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>
>>>> To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
>>>>        http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>> or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
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>>>>
>>>> You can reach the person managing the list at
>>>>        fun_mail-owner at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>
>>>> When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific
>>>> than "Re: Contents of FUN_Mail digest..."
>>>> FUN_Mail Daily DigestToday's Topics:
>>>>
>>>>    1. Re: Fwd: Another classic paper (Noah Sandstrom via FUN_Mail)
>>>>    2. Re: Fwd: Another classic paper (Schettino, Luis F. via FUN_Mail)
>>>>
>>>> From: Noah Sandstrom via FUN_Mail <fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>> Subject: Re: [FUN_Mail] Fwd: Another classic paper
>>>> Date: September 11, 2014 at 9:25:59 AM EDT
>>>> To: "FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org" <fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>> Reply-To: Noah Sandstrom <nsandstr at williams.edu>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Apologies for the repeated post, but several folks have asked for a
>> copy
>>> of
>>>> the Brown-Sequard paper that I described. I'll attach it here as I
>> don't
>>>> think it is easily accessible online. I hope you enjoy it as much as me
>>> and
>>>> just caution you to not present it at your brown-bag lunch meeting.
>>>>
>>>> Cheers,
>>>> Noah
>>>>
>>>> On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 6:28 PM, Mike Wiest via FUN_Mail <
>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Along the lines of the optogenetic inception paper(s) from the
>> Tonegawa
>>>>> lab, I just heard about these two attached from Deadwyler and Hampson,
>>>>> which are similarly Matrix-like.  Essentially they are programing the
>>>>> hippocampus with task-specific activity patterns to enhance memory
>>>>> performance....
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks all for generating this awesome list--and for links to the
>> oldies
>>>>> but goodies!
>>>>>
>>>>> Mike Wiest
>>>>> Wellesley College Neuroscience
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 10:38 AM, Chiye Aoki via FUN_Mail <
>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> I agree with Tara and Joe. I am in the midst of forwarding this link
>> to
>>>>>> students who are about to defend their thesis and apply to grad
>> school.
>>>>>> Thank you, Joe!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Chiye Aoki, PhD
>>>>>> Professor of Neural Science & Biology
>>>>>> New York University
>>>>>> 212-998-3929 (office)    212-998-3926 (Lab)
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 10:36 AM, White, Tara via FUN_Mail <
>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> That is a wonderful pick -- And a potent weapon for our students
>>>>>> grappling
>>>>>>> with the 'imposter syndrome', which is my experience seems to hit
>>> those
>>>>>> who
>>>>>>> are best positioned for creative futures in neuroscience
>>>>>>> -Tara
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 10:22 AM, Joseph Burdo via FUN_Mail <
>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> While a bit off topic, I would argue that if they are considering
>>>>>>> research
>>>>>>>> for a career, the most important paper for them to read is a more
>>>>>> general
>>>>>>>> methodological one: How to be productively stupid!
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> "
>>>>>>>> "The importance of stupidity in scientific research"
>>>>>>>> http://jcs.biologists.org/content/121/11/1771.long
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Joe
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 10:09 AM, Megan Hagenauer via FUN_Mail <
>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org> wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Great discussion!
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> My contributions have a sleep/circadian slant:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Dement, W.C., and Kleitman, N. (1957). Cyclic Variations in EEG
>>>>>> during
>>>>>>>>> Sleep and their Relation to Eye Movements, Body Motility, and
>>>>>> Dreaming.
>>>>>>>> EEG
>>>>>>>>> Clinical Neurophysiology 9: 673-690.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> "With dreaming and hypnagogie reverie assigned to a definite EEG
>>>>>> stage,
>>>>>>>>> there exists at least a fairly consistent relation between the EEG
>>>>>> and
>>>>>>>>> levels of consciousness and it becomes possible to undertake the
>>>>>> second
>>>>>>>>> step of considering the neural origin of these patterns as
>>>>>> representing
>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>> basis of consciousness itself."
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> - This paper is long-winded (good for teaching skimming!), but it
>>>>> is
>>>>>>>>> excellent for starting discussions of consciousness!
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Aschoff, J. (1965). Circadian Rhythms in Man. Science 148 (3676):
>>>>>>>>> 1427-1432.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> "Since in this case I myself was the subject, I can add a few
>>>>> remarks
>>>>>>> on
>>>>>>>>> personal feelings. After a great curiousity about 'true time'
>>>>> during
>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>> first 2 days of bunker life, I lost all interest in the matter and
>>>>>> felt
>>>>>>>>> perfectly comfortable to live 'timeless'."
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> - A short elegant paper, chronicling the original circadian bunker
>>>>>>>>> experiments in which student volunteers (and Aschoff himself!) go
>>>>>> into
>>>>>>>>> isolation to experience timelessness.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Ralph M.R., Foster R.G., Davis F.C., Menaker M. (1990)
>> Transplanted
>>>>>>>>> Suprachiasmatic Nucleus Determines Circadian Period. Science 247:
>>>>>>>> 975-978.
>>>>>>>>> "Small neural grafts from the suprachiasmatic region restored
>>>>>> circadian
>>>>>>>>> rhythms to arrhythmic animals whose own nucleus had been ablated."
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> - Successful *brain transplants* after which the behavior of the
>>>>> host
>>>>>>>>> animal is determined by the genotype of the donor.  Soooo cool!
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 9:56 AM, DJ Brasier via FUN_Mail <
>>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> As a fan of teaching controversy, two sets that I especially love
>>>>>> are
>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>>> pre- vs. post-synaptic LTP:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Malinow & Tsien 1990 and Stevens & Wang 1994 vs. Kauer & Nicoll
>>>>>> 1988
>>>>>>> &
>>>>>>>>>> Liao & Malinow 1995
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> And the equally vicious debate about alpha- vs.
>>>>>>> beta/gamma-G-proteins:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Logothetis & Clapham 1987 and Reuveny & Jan 1994 vs. Yatani &
>>>>>>> Birbaumer
>>>>>>>>>> 1988 and Birbaumer & Brown (Scientific Correspondence in Nature)
>>>>>>> 1987.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> It's fun for me to tell students how both of these nearly came to
>>>>>>> blows
>>>>>>>>>> between the opposing sides after numerous insults were exchanged.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> DJ
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> On 9/9/14, 8:10 AM, Lom, Barbara via FUN_Mail wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> I’m not even going to try to top Noah’s example, but this is a
>>>>> fun
>>>>>>>>>>> conversation so I’ll toss in a few favorites from the turn of
>>>>> the
>>>>>>> more
>>>>>>>>>>> recent century regarding what was, at the time a controversial
>>>>>>>>> assertion of
>>>>>>>>>>> neurogenesis in the adult primate/human brain.  Not sure I’d
>>>>> call
>>>>>>>> these
>>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>>>> most amazing ever neuroscience papers ever, but they are easy
>>>>> for
>>>>>>>>>>> undergrads to read and the contrary results reliably generate
>>>>>> lively
>>>>>>>>> class
>>>>>>>>>>> discussions (null results published in Science).  Plus there’s a
>>>>>> New
>>>>>>>>> Yorker
>>>>>>>>>>> article that describes some of the context for the science and
>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>> drama:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9809557
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10521353
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11739948
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>> http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2001/07/23/rethinking-the-brain
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> _____________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Barbara Lom, PhD
>>>>>>>>>>> Professor & Chair of Biology
>>>>>>>>>>> Davidson College
>>>>>>>>>>> Box 7118 - Davidson, NC 28035-7118
>>>>>>>>>>> 704-894-2338 (office) 704-894-2512 (fax)
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.davidson.edu/academics/biology/faculty/barbara-lom
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> On 9/9/14, 5:36 AM, "Noah Sandstrom via FUN_Mail" <
>>>>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Richard, Sam, do you really consider 1952 and 1962 to be "old
>>>>>>> school"?
>>>>>>>>>>> While perhaps predating what we might consider "modern
>>>>>>> neuroscience" I
>>>>>>>>>>> would put Brown-Séquard's *1889* article in *Lancet* ("Note on
>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>> effects
>>>>>>>>>>> produced on man by subcutaneous injections of a liquid obtained
>>>>>> from
>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>>>> testicles of animals") at the top of my list! In this paper,
>>>>>>>>> Brown-Séquard
>>>>>>>>>>> explores the behavioral and cognitive effects of extracts from
>>>>> dog
>>>>>>> and
>>>>>>>>>>> guinea pig testicles when self-injected. It is a tour-de-force
>>>>>> that
>>>>>>>>>>> reflects the passion, commitment, and fortitude we should all
>>>>>> strive
>>>>>>>> to
>>>>>>>>>>> have as scientists (how strongly do you believe in the
>>>>> importance
>>>>>> of
>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>>>> questions you are asking?); it raises thought-provoking
>>>>> questions
>>>>>>>> about
>>>>>>>>>>> quantification, methodology, standardization (what, exactly, are
>>>>>>>> "great
>>>>>>>>>>> powers of defecation?); and it makes clear that, as rough as
>>>>> some
>>>>>> of
>>>>>>>> our
>>>>>>>>>>> research students may think they have it, they are way better
>>>>> off
>>>>>>> than
>>>>>>>>>>> those of Brown-Séquard who had to measure the length of his jet
>>>>> of
>>>>>>>>> urine.
>>>>>>>>>>> In all seriousness, though, this is the first paper I have
>>>>>> students
>>>>>>> in
>>>>>>>>> my
>>>>>>>>>>> Hormones and Behavior class read. Great questions, after all,
>>>>>> stand
>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>>>> test of time!
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Thanks for asking this great question, Bill!
>>>>>>>>>>> Noah
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Brown-Séquard CE. Note on the effects produced on man by
>>>>>>> subcutaneous
>>>>>>>>>>> injections of a liquid obtained from the testicles of
>>>>>>> animals.*Lancet*
>>>>>>>>>>> 1889;
>>>>>>>>>>> 2: 105-107.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>>>>>>>>>> From: Richard Olivo via FUN_Mail <fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>> <mailto:
>>>>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Date: Mon, Sep 8, 2014 at 8:14 PM
>>>>>>>>>>> Subject: [FUN_Mail] Another classic paper
>>>>>>>>>>> To: "fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>> "
>>>>>>>>>>> <fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> I suppose I'm old school too, but my nominee would be Hubel and
>>>>>>>> Wiesel's
>>>>>>>>>>> classic paper on primary visual cortex:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Hubel DH & Wiesel TN (1962). Receptive fields, binocular
>>>>>> interaction
>>>>>>>> and
>>>>>>>>>>> functional architecture in the cat's visual cortex. J Physiol
>>>>> 160,
>>>>>>>>>>> 106–154.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> This paper made sense of what neurons in the cortex were doing
>>>>> in
>>>>>>>>> creating
>>>>>>>>>>> the next step in visual perception, and it also revealed how
>>>>> they
>>>>>>> were
>>>>>>>>>>> arranged anatomically. It was a major step in advancing our
>>>>>>>>> understanding
>>>>>>>>>>> of the mammalian brain, and it opened a huge field of research
>>>>> on
>>>>>>>> visual
>>>>>>>>>>> processing that is still flourishing today.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Best wishes,
>>>>>>>>>>> Richard Olivo
>>>>>>>>>>> rolivo at smith.edu<mailto:rolivo at smith.edu>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> On Sep 8, 2014, at 1:16 PM, "Gizerian, Samantha via FUN_Mail" <
>>>>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Call me old school, but the paper that really blew my mind, and
>>>>>>>>> continues
>>>>>>>>>>> to amaze students is Hodgkin and Huxley J. Physiol. (1952) 117,
>>>>>>>> 500-44.
>>>>>>>>>>> (here:
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.sfn.org/~/media/SfN/Documents/ClassicPapers/
>>>>>>>>>>> ActionPotentials/hodgkin5.ashx)
>>>>>>>>>>> The whole series is great, but the last paper summing up the
>>>>>>>> experiments
>>>>>>>>>>> is
>>>>>>>>>>> really the one that is amazing.  In context of the time and
>>>>>>> techniques
>>>>>>>>>>> available, it is a pretty stunning achievement as well.  Not to
>>>>>>>> mention
>>>>>>>>>>> that finally we have the tangible connection that students are
>>>>>>> looking
>>>>>>>>> for
>>>>>>>>>>> between the physics they didn't want to learn and the
>>>>> neuroscience
>>>>>>>> they
>>>>>>>>>>> signed up for.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Sam
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> _____________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> Samantha S Gizerian, PhD
>>>>>>>>>>> Clinical Assistant Professor
>>>>>>>>>>> Associate Director for Undergraduate Studies
>>>>>>>>>>> Dept. of Integrative Physiology and Neuroscience
>>>>>>>>>>> College of Veterinary Medicine
>>>>>>>>>>> Washington State University
>>>>>>>>>>> Pullman, WA 99164-7620
>>>>>>>>>>> sgizerian at vetmed.wsu.edu<mailto:sgizerian at vetmed.wsu.edu>
>>>>>>>>>>> 509-335-0986
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>>>>>>>>> From: FUN_Mail [mailto:fun_mail-bounces at lists.funfaculty.org]
>>>>> On
>>>>>>>> Behalf
>>>>>>>>>>> Of Mike Wiest via FUN_Mail
>>>>>>>>>>> Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 10:04 AM
>>>>>>>>>>> To: Schettino, Luis F.
>>>>>>>>>>> Cc: FUN Mail
>>>>>>>>>>> Subject: Re: [FUN_Mail] FW: [Faculty for Undergraduate
>>>>>> Neuroscience
>>>>>>>>>>> newsletter] Faculty for Undergraduate Neuroscience newsletter
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> The "Inception" paper from the Tonegawa lab was the one that
>>>>> came
>>>>>> to
>>>>>>>>> mind
>>>>>>>>>>> for me too...!
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Cheers
>>>>>>>>>>> Mike
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> On Sun, Sep 7, 2014 at 9:44 PM, Schettino, Luis F. via FUN_Mail
>>>>> <
>>>>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Wow, this is EXACTLY what came to my mind when I read the
>>>>>> question.
>>>>>>> No
>>>>>>>>>>> doubt this article is one of the coolest studies out there. It
>>>>> is
>>>>>>>>>>> incredibly creative and technically challenging. Great
>>>>> suggestion
>>>>>>> Ian!
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Luis F. Schettino
>>>>>>>>>>> Psychology Department
>>>>>>>>>>> Oechsle Hall
>>>>>>>>>>> Lafayette College
>>>>>>>>>>> Easton, PA 18042
>>>>>>>>>>> (610)330-5934
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>>>>>>>>>> From: "Ian via FUN_Mail Harrington" <
>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>>> <mailto:fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Cc: "FUN Mail" <FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists
>>>>>>> .
>>>>>>>>>>> funfaculty.org>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Sent: Sunday, September 7, 2014 9:37:16 PM
>>>>>>>>>>> Subject: Re: [FUN_Mail] FW: [Faculty for Undergraduate
>>>>>> Neuroscience
>>>>>>>>>>> newsletter] Faculty for Undergraduate Neuroscience newsletter
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> What a great question, Bill! BTW, it sounds like a nice way to
>>>>> put
>>>>>>>>>>> together the perfect reading list for a seminar class. Can I
>>>>>> suggest
>>>>>>>>>>> either that the replies go to the whole list or that Bill posts
>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>>>> results?
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Maybe I'm guilty of some kind of recency effect with this
>>>>>> suggestion
>>>>>>>>>>> since I just used it in class but if they have some interest in
>>>>>>>>>>> plasticity and behavior I'd have to suggest von Melchner,
>>>>> Pallas,
>>>>>> &
>>>>>>>> Sur
>>>>>>>>>>> (2000):
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://web.mit.edu/msur/www/publications/visual.pdf
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> It was preceded by a companion paper by Sharma, Angelucci, & Sur
>>>>>>>>>>> (2000) that is purely physiological:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://web.mit.edu/msur/www/publications/induction.pdf
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> I suppose if you're going to publish in Nature you might as well
>>>>>> do
>>>>>>> it
>>>>>>>>>>> in bunches!
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> IH
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> On Sun, Sep 7, 2014 at 8:16 PM, Calin-Jageman, Robert via
>>>>>> FUN_Mail <
>>>>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Here’s a thought-provoking question from Bill Grisham.  Respond
>>>>>> back
>>>>>>>>>>> to him directly
>>>>>>>>>>> (dr.billgrisham at gmail.com<mailto:dr.billgrisham at gmail.com
>>>>>>> <mailto:
>>>>>>>>>>> dr.billgrisham at gmail.com>
>>>>>>>>>>> )
>>>>>>>>>>> or back to the whole list (FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>> <mailto:
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org><mailto:
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> )
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> In the course of working with undergraduates on a research
>>>>> project
>>>>>>>>>>> this summer, we have read relevant research articles. As my
>>>>>> students
>>>>>>>>>>> are wrapping up their research project, they asked to read the
>>>>>> most
>>>>>>>>>>> amazing neuroscience article ever. What would YOU recommend?
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> William (Bill) Grisham, Ph.D.
>>>>>>>>>>> Adjunct Professor
>>>>>>>>>>> Department of Psychology, UCLA
>>>>>>>>>>> 1285 Franz Hall
>>>>>>>>>>> PO Box 951563
>>>>>>>>>>> Los Angeles, CA 90095-1563
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> (310) 825-7990
>>>>>>>>>>> Dr.billgrisham at gmail.com<mailto:Dr.billgrisham at gmail.com
>>>>>> <mailto:
>>>>>>>>>>> Dr.billgrisham at gmail.com>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> *Ian A. Harrington, Ph.D.*
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Augustana College, Psychology
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Director, Program in Neuroscience
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> 639 38th St., Rock Island, IL 61201
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> 011 Evald Hall, (309) 794-7243
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>> Megan Hastings Hagenauer, Ph.D.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Post-Doctoral Researcher in the Molecular, Behavioral Neuroscience
>>>>>>>>> Institute
>>>>>>>>> Instructor in the Department of Psychology
>>>>>>>>> University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>> list!!
>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the list!!
>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Tara L. White, Ph.D.
>>>>>>> Assistant Professor
>>>>>>> Laboratory of Affective Neuroscience
>>>>>>> Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences
>>>>>>> Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies
>>>>>>> Brown School of Public Health
>>>>>>> Brown University
>>>>>>> Box G-S121-4
>>>>>>> 121 S. Main St.
>>>>>>> Providence, RI 02912
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Tel: +1 401 863-6625
>>>>>>> Fax: +1 401 863-6647
>>>>>>> E-mail: Tara_White at Brown.edu
>>>>>>> Web page: http://brown.edu/whitelab
>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the list!!
>> --
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>
>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the list!!
>> --
>>>>>>
>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>
>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the list!! --
>>>>>
>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> From: "Schettino, Luis F. via FUN_Mail" <fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>
>>>> Subject: Re: [FUN_Mail] Fwd: Another classic paper
>>>> Date: September 11, 2014 at 9:56:21 AM EDT
>>>> To: Noah Sandstrom <nsandstr at williams.edu>
>>>> Cc: "FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org" <fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>> Reply-To: "Schettino, Luis F." <schettil at lafayette.edu>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Noah,
>>>> I don't think you attached the paper. Could you give it another try?
>>>> Thanks,
>>>> Luis
>>>>
>>>> Luis F. Schettino
>>>> Psychology Department
>>>> Oechsle Hall
>>>> Lafayette College
>>>> Easton, PA 18042
>>>> (610)330-5934
>>>>
>>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>>> From: "Noah Sandstrom via FUN_Mail" <fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>> To: "FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org" <fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>> Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 9:25:59 AM
>>>> Subject: Re: [FUN_Mail] Fwd: Another classic paper
>>>>
>>>> Apologies for the repeated post, but several folks have asked for a
>> copy
>>> of
>>>> the Brown-Sequard paper that I described. I'll attach it here as I
>> don't
>>>> think it is easily accessible online. I hope you enjoy it as much as me
>>> and
>>>> just caution you to not present it at your brown-bag lunch meeting.
>>>>
>>>> Cheers,
>>>> Noah
>>>>
>>>> On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 6:28 PM, Mike Wiest via FUN_Mail <
>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Along the lines of the optogenetic inception paper(s) from the
>> Tonegawa
>>>>> lab, I just heard about these two attached from Deadwyler and Hampson,
>>>>> which are similarly Matrix-like.  Essentially they are programing the
>>>>> hippocampus with task-specific activity patterns to enhance memory
>>>>> performance....
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks all for generating this awesome list--and for links to the
>> oldies
>>>>> but goodies!
>>>>>
>>>>> Mike Wiest
>>>>> Wellesley College Neuroscience
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 10:38 AM, Chiye Aoki via FUN_Mail <
>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> I agree with Tara and Joe. I am in the midst of forwarding this link
>> to
>>>>>> students who are about to defend their thesis and apply to grad
>> school.
>>>>>> Thank you, Joe!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Chiye Aoki, PhD
>>>>>> Professor of Neural Science & Biology
>>>>>> New York University
>>>>>> 212-998-3929 (office)    212-998-3926 (Lab)
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 10:36 AM, White, Tara via FUN_Mail <
>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> That is a wonderful pick -- And a potent weapon for our students
>>>>>> grappling
>>>>>>> with the 'imposter syndrome', which is my experience seems to hit
>>> those
>>>>>> who
>>>>>>> are best positioned for creative futures in neuroscience
>>>>>>> -Tara
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 10:22 AM, Joseph Burdo via FUN_Mail <
>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> While a bit off topic, I would argue that if they are considering
>>>>>>> research
>>>>>>>> for a career, the most important paper for them to read is a more
>>>>>> general
>>>>>>>> methodological one: How to be productively stupid!
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> "
>>>>>>>> "The importance of stupidity in scientific research"
>>>>>>>> http://jcs.biologists.org/content/121/11/1771.long
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Joe
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 10:09 AM, Megan Hagenauer via FUN_Mail <
>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org> wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Great discussion!
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> My contributions have a sleep/circadian slant:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Dement, W.C., and Kleitman, N. (1957). Cyclic Variations in EEG
>>>>>> during
>>>>>>>>> Sleep and their Relation to Eye Movements, Body Motility, and
>>>>>> Dreaming.
>>>>>>>> EEG
>>>>>>>>> Clinical Neurophysiology 9: 673-690.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> "With dreaming and hypnagogie reverie assigned to a definite EEG
>>>>>> stage,
>>>>>>>>> there exists at least a fairly consistent relation between the EEG
>>>>>> and
>>>>>>>>> levels of consciousness and it becomes possible to undertake the
>>>>>> second
>>>>>>>>> step of considering the neural origin of these patterns as
>>>>>> representing
>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>> basis of consciousness itself."
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> - This paper is long-winded (good for teaching skimming!), but it
>>>>> is
>>>>>>>>> excellent for starting discussions of consciousness!
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Aschoff, J. (1965). Circadian Rhythms in Man. Science 148 (3676):
>>>>>>>>> 1427-1432.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> "Since in this case I myself was the subject, I can add a few
>>>>> remarks
>>>>>>> on
>>>>>>>>> personal feelings. After a great curiousity about 'true time'
>>>>> during
>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>> first 2 days of bunker life, I lost all interest in the matter and
>>>>>> felt
>>>>>>>>> perfectly comfortable to live 'timeless'."
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> - A short elegant paper, chronicling the original circadian bunker
>>>>>>>>> experiments in which student volunteers (and Aschoff himself!) go
>>>>>> into
>>>>>>>>> isolation to experience timelessness.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Ralph M.R., Foster R.G., Davis F.C., Menaker M. (1990)
>> Transplanted
>>>>>>>>> Suprachiasmatic Nucleus Determines Circadian Period. Science 247:
>>>>>>>> 975-978.
>>>>>>>>> "Small neural grafts from the suprachiasmatic region restored
>>>>>> circadian
>>>>>>>>> rhythms to arrhythmic animals whose own nucleus had been ablated."
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> - Successful *brain transplants* after which the behavior of the
>>>>> host
>>>>>>>>> animal is determined by the genotype of the donor.  Soooo cool!
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 9:56 AM, DJ Brasier via FUN_Mail <
>>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> As a fan of teaching controversy, two sets that I especially love
>>>>>> are
>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>>> pre- vs. post-synaptic LTP:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Malinow & Tsien 1990 and Stevens & Wang 1994 vs. Kauer & Nicoll
>>>>>> 1988
>>>>>>> &
>>>>>>>>>> Liao & Malinow 1995
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> And the equally vicious debate about alpha- vs.
>>>>>>> beta/gamma-G-proteins:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Logothetis & Clapham 1987 and Reuveny & Jan 1994 vs. Yatani &
>>>>>>> Birbaumer
>>>>>>>>>> 1988 and Birbaumer & Brown (Scientific Correspondence in Nature)
>>>>>>> 1987.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> It's fun for me to tell students how both of these nearly came to
>>>>>>> blows
>>>>>>>>>> between the opposing sides after numerous insults were exchanged.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> DJ
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> On 9/9/14, 8:10 AM, Lom, Barbara via FUN_Mail wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> I’m not even going to try to top Noah’s example, but this is a
>>>>> fun
>>>>>>>>>>> conversation so I’ll toss in a few favorites from the turn of
>>>>> the
>>>>>>> more
>>>>>>>>>>> recent century regarding what was, at the time a controversial
>>>>>>>>> assertion of
>>>>>>>>>>> neurogenesis in the adult primate/human brain.  Not sure I’d
>>>>> call
>>>>>>>> these
>>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>>>> most amazing ever neuroscience papers ever, but they are easy
>>>>> for
>>>>>>>>>>> undergrads to read and the contrary results reliably generate
>>>>>> lively
>>>>>>>>> class
>>>>>>>>>>> discussions (null results published in Science).  Plus there’s a
>>>>>> New
>>>>>>>>> Yorker
>>>>>>>>>>> article that describes some of the context for the science and
>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>> drama:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9809557
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10521353
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11739948
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>> http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2001/07/23/rethinking-the-brain
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> _____________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Barbara Lom, PhD
>>>>>>>>>>> Professor & Chair of Biology
>>>>>>>>>>> Davidson College
>>>>>>>>>>> Box 7118 - Davidson, NC 28035-7118
>>>>>>>>>>> 704-894-2338 (office) 704-894-2512 (fax)
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.davidson.edu/academics/biology/faculty/barbara-lom
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> On 9/9/14, 5:36 AM, "Noah Sandstrom via FUN_Mail" <
>>>>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Richard, Sam, do you really consider 1952 and 1962 to be "old
>>>>>>> school"?
>>>>>>>>>>> While perhaps predating what we might consider "modern
>>>>>>> neuroscience" I
>>>>>>>>>>> would put Brown-Séquard's *1889* article in *Lancet* ("Note on
>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>> effects
>>>>>>>>>>> produced on man by subcutaneous injections of a liquid obtained
>>>>>> from
>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>>>> testicles of animals") at the top of my list! In this paper,
>>>>>>>>> Brown-Séquard
>>>>>>>>>>> explores the behavioral and cognitive effects of extracts from
>>>>> dog
>>>>>>> and
>>>>>>>>>>> guinea pig testicles when self-injected. It is a tour-de-force
>>>>>> that
>>>>>>>>>>> reflects the passion, commitment, and fortitude we should all
>>>>>> strive
>>>>>>>> to
>>>>>>>>>>> have as scientists (how strongly do you believe in the
>>>>> importance
>>>>>> of
>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>>>> questions you are asking?); it raises thought-provoking
>>>>> questions
>>>>>>>> about
>>>>>>>>>>> quantification, methodology, standardization (what, exactly, are
>>>>>>>> "great
>>>>>>>>>>> powers of defecation?); and it makes clear that, as rough as
>>>>> some
>>>>>> of
>>>>>>>> our
>>>>>>>>>>> research students may think they have it, they are way better
>>>>> off
>>>>>>> than
>>>>>>>>>>> those of Brown-Séquard who had to measure the length of his jet
>>>>> of
>>>>>>>>> urine.
>>>>>>>>>>> In all seriousness, though, this is the first paper I have
>>>>>> students
>>>>>>> in
>>>>>>>>> my
>>>>>>>>>>> Hormones and Behavior class read. Great questions, after all,
>>>>>> stand
>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>>>> test of time!
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Thanks for asking this great question, Bill!
>>>>>>>>>>> Noah
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Brown-Séquard CE. Note on the effects produced on man by
>>>>>>> subcutaneous
>>>>>>>>>>> injections of a liquid obtained from the testicles of
>>>>>>> animals.*Lancet*
>>>>>>>>>>> 1889;
>>>>>>>>>>> 2: 105-107.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>>>>>>>>>> From: Richard Olivo via FUN_Mail <fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>> <mailto:
>>>>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Date: Mon, Sep 8, 2014 at 8:14 PM
>>>>>>>>>>> Subject: [FUN_Mail] Another classic paper
>>>>>>>>>>> To: "fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>> "
>>>>>>>>>>> <fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> I suppose I'm old school too, but my nominee would be Hubel and
>>>>>>>> Wiesel's
>>>>>>>>>>> classic paper on primary visual cortex:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Hubel DH & Wiesel TN (1962). Receptive fields, binocular
>>>>>> interaction
>>>>>>>> and
>>>>>>>>>>> functional architecture in the cat's visual cortex. J Physiol
>>>>> 160,
>>>>>>>>>>> 106–154.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> This paper made sense of what neurons in the cortex were doing
>>>>> in
>>>>>>>>> creating
>>>>>>>>>>> the next step in visual perception, and it also revealed how
>>>>> they
>>>>>>> were
>>>>>>>>>>> arranged anatomically. It was a major step in advancing our
>>>>>>>>> understanding
>>>>>>>>>>> of the mammalian brain, and it opened a huge field of research
>>>>> on
>>>>>>>> visual
>>>>>>>>>>> processing that is still flourishing today.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Best wishes,
>>>>>>>>>>> Richard Olivo
>>>>>>>>>>> rolivo at smith.edu<mailto:rolivo at smith.edu>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> On Sep 8, 2014, at 1:16 PM, "Gizerian, Samantha via FUN_Mail" <
>>>>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Call me old school, but the paper that really blew my mind, and
>>>>>>>>> continues
>>>>>>>>>>> to amaze students is Hodgkin and Huxley J. Physiol. (1952) 117,
>>>>>>>> 500-44.
>>>>>>>>>>> (here:
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.sfn.org/~/media/SfN/Documents/ClassicPapers/
>>>>>>>>>>> ActionPotentials/hodgkin5.ashx)
>>>>>>>>>>> The whole series is great, but the last paper summing up the
>>>>>>>> experiments
>>>>>>>>>>> is
>>>>>>>>>>> really the one that is amazing.  In context of the time and
>>>>>>> techniques
>>>>>>>>>>> available, it is a pretty stunning achievement as well.  Not to
>>>>>>>> mention
>>>>>>>>>>> that finally we have the tangible connection that students are
>>>>>>> looking
>>>>>>>>> for
>>>>>>>>>>> between the physics they didn't want to learn and the
>>>>> neuroscience
>>>>>>>> they
>>>>>>>>>>> signed up for.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Sam
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> _____________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> Samantha S Gizerian, PhD
>>>>>>>>>>> Clinical Assistant Professor
>>>>>>>>>>> Associate Director for Undergraduate Studies
>>>>>>>>>>> Dept. of Integrative Physiology and Neuroscience
>>>>>>>>>>> College of Veterinary Medicine
>>>>>>>>>>> Washington State University
>>>>>>>>>>> Pullman, WA 99164-7620
>>>>>>>>>>> sgizerian at vetmed.wsu.edu<mailto:sgizerian at vetmed.wsu.edu>
>>>>>>>>>>> 509-335-0986
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>>>>>>>>> From: FUN_Mail [mailto:fun_mail-bounces at lists.funfaculty.org]
>>>>> On
>>>>>>>> Behalf
>>>>>>>>>>> Of Mike Wiest via FUN_Mail
>>>>>>>>>>> Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 10:04 AM
>>>>>>>>>>> To: Schettino, Luis F.
>>>>>>>>>>> Cc: FUN Mail
>>>>>>>>>>> Subject: Re: [FUN_Mail] FW: [Faculty for Undergraduate
>>>>>> Neuroscience
>>>>>>>>>>> newsletter] Faculty for Undergraduate Neuroscience newsletter
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> The "Inception" paper from the Tonegawa lab was the one that
>>>>> came
>>>>>> to
>>>>>>>>> mind
>>>>>>>>>>> for me too...!
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Cheers
>>>>>>>>>>> Mike
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> On Sun, Sep 7, 2014 at 9:44 PM, Schettino, Luis F. via FUN_Mail
>>>>> <
>>>>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Wow, this is EXACTLY what came to my mind when I read the
>>>>>> question.
>>>>>>> No
>>>>>>>>>>> doubt this article is one of the coolest studies out there. It
>>>>> is
>>>>>>>>>>> incredibly creative and technically challenging. Great
>>>>> suggestion
>>>>>>> Ian!
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Luis F. Schettino
>>>>>>>>>>> Psychology Department
>>>>>>>>>>> Oechsle Hall
>>>>>>>>>>> Lafayette College
>>>>>>>>>>> Easton, PA 18042
>>>>>>>>>>> (610)330-5934
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>>>>>>>>>> From: "Ian via FUN_Mail Harrington" <
>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>>> <mailto:fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Cc: "FUN Mail" <FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists
>>>>>>> .
>>>>>>>>>>> funfaculty.org>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Sent: Sunday, September 7, 2014 9:37:16 PM
>>>>>>>>>>> Subject: Re: [FUN_Mail] FW: [Faculty for Undergraduate
>>>>>> Neuroscience
>>>>>>>>>>> newsletter] Faculty for Undergraduate Neuroscience newsletter
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> What a great question, Bill! BTW, it sounds like a nice way to
>>>>> put
>>>>>>>>>>> together the perfect reading list for a seminar class. Can I
>>>>>> suggest
>>>>>>>>>>> either that the replies go to the whole list or that Bill posts
>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>>>> results?
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Maybe I'm guilty of some kind of recency effect with this
>>>>>> suggestion
>>>>>>>>>>> since I just used it in class but if they have some interest in
>>>>>>>>>>> plasticity and behavior I'd have to suggest von Melchner,
>>>>> Pallas,
>>>>>> &
>>>>>>>> Sur
>>>>>>>>>>> (2000):
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://web.mit.edu/msur/www/publications/visual.pdf
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> It was preceded by a companion paper by Sharma, Angelucci, & Sur
>>>>>>>>>>> (2000) that is purely physiological:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://web.mit.edu/msur/www/publications/induction.pdf
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> I suppose if you're going to publish in Nature you might as well
>>>>>> do
>>>>>>> it
>>>>>>>>>>> in bunches!
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> IH
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> On Sun, Sep 7, 2014 at 8:16 PM, Calin-Jageman, Robert via
>>>>>> FUN_Mail <
>>>>>>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Here’s a thought-provoking question from Bill Grisham.  Respond
>>>>>> back
>>>>>>>>>>> to him directly
>>>>>>>>>>> (dr.billgrisham at gmail.com<mailto:dr.billgrisham at gmail.com
>>>>>>> <mailto:
>>>>>>>>>>> dr.billgrisham at gmail.com>
>>>>>>>>>>> )
>>>>>>>>>>> or back to the whole list (FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>> <mailto:
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org><mailto:
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> )
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> In the course of working with undergraduates on a research
>>>>> project
>>>>>>>>>>> this summer, we have read relevant research articles. As my
>>>>>> students
>>>>>>>>>>> are wrapping up their research project, they asked to read the
>>>>>> most
>>>>>>>>>>> amazing neuroscience article ever. What would YOU recommend?
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> William (Bill) Grisham, Ph.D.
>>>>>>>>>>> Adjunct Professor
>>>>>>>>>>> Department of Psychology, UCLA
>>>>>>>>>>> 1285 Franz Hall
>>>>>>>>>>> PO Box 951563
>>>>>>>>>>> Los Angeles, CA 90095-1563
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> (310) 825-7990
>>>>>>>>>>> Dr.billgrisham at gmail.com<mailto:Dr.billgrisham at gmail.com
>>>>>> <mailto:
>>>>>>>>>>> Dr.billgrisham at gmail.com>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> *Ian A. Harrington, Ph.D.*
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Augustana College, Psychology
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Director, Program in Neuroscience
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> 639 38th St., Rock Island, IL 61201
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> 011 Evald Hall, (309) 794-7243
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org<mailto:
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>>>>> list!!
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>> Megan Hastings Hagenauer, Ph.D.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Post-Doctoral Researcher in the Molecular, Behavioral Neuroscience
>>>>>>>>> Institute
>>>>>>>>> Instructor in the Department of Psychology
>>>>>>>>> University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the
>> list!!
>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the list!!
>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Tara L. White, Ph.D.
>>>>>>> Assistant Professor
>>>>>>> Laboratory of Affective Neuroscience
>>>>>>> Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences
>>>>>>> Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies
>>>>>>> Brown School of Public Health
>>>>>>> Brown University
>>>>>>> Box G-S121-4
>>>>>>> 121 S. Main St.
>>>>>>> Providence, RI 02912
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Tel: +1 401 863-6625
>>>>>>> Fax: +1 401 863-6647
>>>>>>> E-mail: Tara_White at Brown.edu
>>>>>>> Web page: http://brown.edu/whitelab
>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the list!!
>> --
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>>
>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the list!!
>> --
>>>>>>
>>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>>
>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the list!! --
>>>>>
>>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>>
>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the list!! --
>>>>
>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the list!! --
>>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>>>
>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>
>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the list!! --
>>>
>>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>>
>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
>> _______________________________________________
>> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the list!! --
>>
>> FUN_Mail mailing list
>> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
>> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
>> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>>
> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG WRAP
> _______________________________________________
> --remember replies to the mailing list go to everyone on the list!! --
>
> FUN_Mail mailing list
> FUN_Mail at lists.funfaculty.org
> http://lists.funfaculty.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fun_mail
> http://www.funfaculty.org/drupal/mailarchive/FUN_mail
> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
>



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