From the Lab to the Limelight - Blog version of our #TraineeTuesday Twitter series
For today's #TraineeTuesday, please welcome Andrew Moberly, PhD, a postdoc in the labs of Michael Higley, MD, PhD, and Jessica Cardin, PhD! Andrew was recently awarded a K99/R00, marking a significant step forward toward running his own research lab.
Before Andrew started his postdoc, he had no experience in optical imaging. He came to Yale for the chance to use cutting-edge imaging techniques, specifically to study the neocortex (a part of the brain that plays a key role in cognition, sensation, and perception).
Imaging came in handy: In a paper published in Nature Neuroscience, Andrew looked at how acetylcholine (a neuromodulator) coordinates activity in neural networks during different behavioral states. Collaborating with Sweyta Lohani, PhD, a postdoc in the Cardin Lab, Andrew was interested in how this neuromodulator can confer flexibility to activity patterns in neural circuits.
Now he's interested in how learning changes neural circuit activity.
How does fear learning—a process that teaches the brain to fear a certain stimulus—impact reconfiguration of cortical networks? Andrew's current K99 project aims to determine which specific cortical cells and circuits are impacted when visual cues become associated with emotion.