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Joining Janelia
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We are interested in reconstituting mammalian development by devising ex utero culture systems for natural embryos and stem-cell derived embryo models.

We are exploring the cognitive repertoire of adult Danionella fish to understand distributed circuits underlying naturalistic behavior.

We use a combination of molecular, cellular, and systems level tools to study how the nervous system contributes to these processes.

Our goal is to understand how the nervous system and the cells of organs, specifically the pancreas, interact during development and in disease states. We use state-of-the-art imaging and genetic tools for temporal manipulation of cells in zebrafish and mouse.

We study the cellular mechanisms and neural circuits that underlie body-brain interactions, with a focus on the respiratory system.

We combine embryonic and reconstitution approaches to investigate how mammalian organs are built by cells and extracellular matrices.

We use modern microscopy methods, computational approaches, and the study of behavior, genes and anatomy to investigate mechanisms underlying behavioral flexibility, memory, and learning. We study how both neurons and glial cells underlie these processes, which are relevant for species from fish to humans.

How are cellular structures and functions coupled, how do they exhibit heterogeneity across the scale in live organisms, and how do they undergo changes with time as an organism grow old? We want to study these questions using multidisciplinary approaches.

We invent optical and computational tools to improve fluorescence microscopy. We are passionate about applying our tools to problems of outstanding biological significance.

We take a joint theory-experiment approach to understanding how groups of cells integrate information about their environment and each other to work together.

How does the brain build models of the world that allow animals to flexibly react to events that haven't occurred before? To answer this question, we look at the complex computations that occur when rodents engage in naturalistic behaviors.

We study the operating principles of cell-surface signaling in two "sense-n’-response" systems: the nervous and immune systems.