
Alan Watts will direct the new Neuroscience Research Institute.
Photo credit: Eva Emerson
|
|
Neuroscience Research Institute Launched
New University Park-focused Institute replaces the Program in Neural, Informational and Behavioral Sciences
By Eva Emerson
November 2005
Neuroscientists describe learning as a process in which new experiences
lead to a physical re-organization of the brains neural circuitry. At
USC, neuroscientists are doing some re-structuring of their own.
USC College recently announced the launch of the Neuroscience Research
Institute (NRI), marking a major re-organization and re-naming of the
23-year-old Neural, Informational and Behavioral Sciences (NIBS)
program. The new institute will operate as an independent unit of USC
College with a mission to facilitate and promote neuroscience research
at the University Park campus.
Alan Watts, a professor of biological sciences in the College who has
led the NIBS program for the last year, will direct the institute.
Since 1982, NIBS has brought together USC scientists interested in
studies of the brain, nervous system and related topics, providing a
forum for interaction, collaboration and education across the
disciplines. It consisted of more than 80 faculty from the College, the
Viterbi School of Engineering, the Keck School of Medicine, the Davis
School of Gerontology, the School of Pharmacy, Childrens Hospital Los
Angeles and the Independent Health Professions.
The creation of NIBS was an inspired move on the Colleges part,
said Watts, crediting Bill Wagner, then dean of natural sciences and
mathematics, as being the prime mover in organizing NIBS. Watts noted
that Wagner established the program to reflect a broader
recognition by psychologists, computer scientists, neurologists,
biologists, gerontologists, linguists, engineers, mathematicians and
others that only through interdisciplinary efforts could scientists
ever hope to understand the brain and nervous system.
Since then, the word neurosciences has become shorthand for this
interdisciplinary approach. Neuroscience has thrived on it, becoming
one of the most promising fields of the 21st century. Modern
neuroscience encompasses many fields, from the biological bases of
emotion and the molecular mechanisms underlying learning to the study of
Alzheimers disease and the design
of new computers based in part upon neural principles.
USC neuroscientists discoveries have led to advances in medicine, technology, education and the social sciences.
NIBS provides a proven model of how to set up an interdisciplinary
research effort, Watts said. But NIBS was established decades ago,
and things have changed.
It was time for the program to change too, Watts said. The kinds of
research we do has grown, and includes topics that dont quite fit into
these categories. So we thought we should re-focus the mission and
re-name NIBS to reflect these changes.
Neuroscientist Michael Quick, dean of research in the College,
concurred: The NIBS name didnt include the cellular and molecular
researchers, a group which has grown in numbers and strength in the
last decade. In some ways, the name reflected the narrower focus of the
program when it was first created.
In 1987, pioneering neuroscientist Richard F. Thompson was recruited to
USC College to build the NIBS program and served as its director until
2001. Thompson holds the W.M. Keck Chair in Biological Sciences and is
a professor of psychology. Since 1989, USC neuroscience efforts have
been centered in the Hedco Neuroscience Building, a facility built to
house NIBS colleagues from an array of disciplines and schools. In
1996, NIBS faculty began the university-wide Neuroscience Graduate
Program (NGP). The program, which now boasts some 90 students, allows
doctoral students to work with any NGP faculty member, no matter the
school or department.
The increasing prominence of the NGP also influenced the recent
decision to change the name of NIBS. According to Watts, many people
mistakenly refer to the NGP when they mean NIBS, the research arm of
the program. The new name will help distinguish the two.
Its partly an identity issue, Watts said. The Neuroscience
Research Institute tells you what it does. People outside of USC
didnt know what NIBS stood for.
Changing the name also topped the list of recommendations made by an
academic review committee in a 2000 evaluation. The report said,
the
current name, while useful and appropriate when the program was
founded, does not reflect the true nature of the current program or its
anticipated future direction
.
Watts said that the establishment of the Zilkha Neurogenetics Institute
at the Keck School of Medicine as well as the recent expansion of
basic neuroscience research at Childrens Hospital Los Angeles has
changed the mission of NIBS.
The NRI will focus on research activities on this campus and will
foster research in a way that individual departments cant, Watts
said. We want to continue the synergy NIBS created between biological
sciences, psychology, computer sciences, biomedical engineering,
gerontology, together with the Dornsife Neuroscience Imaging Center and
the new Institute for the Neurological Study of Emotion, Decision
Making and Creativity led by Antonio Damasio.
But it is also essential for the NRI to maintain its links with the university-wide neuroscience community, he said.
Through membership in the Provosts Neuroscience Advisory Group, as
well as the NGP, University Park neuroscientists will remain closely
linked with those on the Health Sciences campus and, increasingly, at
CHLAs Saban Research Institute.
New Graduate Program Director
Watts also recently announced that vision scientist Norberto Grzywacz
has been named director of the Neuroscience Graduate Program, replacing
Michael Quick in the post. A professor of biomedical engineering and
neuroscience, Grzywacz directs the Center for Vision Science and
Technology and was a 200304 Fellow of the USC Center for
Interdisciplinary Research.
This is a first for the NGP in that Norberto is a faculty member from
the Viterbi School of Engineering, and he will help enormously to
strengthen the ties between the College and Viterbi, said Watts, who
has been standing in as the NGP director for the past months. I think
Norberto will do a tremendous job.
|
 |
|