Bridging Brain, Mind, and Behavior:
2001 Collaborative Awards
Duke University, Durham, North Carolina
Miguel Nicolelis, John Chapin, John Kaas
Funded over two years in support of a collaborative activity project to
study how neuronal
networks accomplish motor learning.
Salk Institute, La Jolla, CA
Funded over three years. The impact of the Williams Syndrome mutations
on neural organization and brain function: A window into social cognition
Principal Investigator: Ursula Bellugi, Co-Principal Investigators: David
Amaral (UC-Davis), Julie Korenberg (UCLA), Marcus Raichle, (Washington
University), Steve Suomi (NIH) and Edward Callaway (Salk).
University of Massachusetts Medical School, Amherst, MA
Adele Diamond, B.J. Casey and Yuko Munakata
Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience Eunice Kennedy Shriver Center,
funded over eighteen months in support of a multi-institutional
study panel and textbook on developmental cognitive neuroscience.
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Exploring the neurosubstrates ofEEG asymmetry
Principal Investigator: Charles A. Nelson, Co-Principal Investigators:
David Amaral (University of California-Davis), Judy Cameron (University
of Pittsburgh), and Nathan Fox (University of Maryland), funded over two
years.
University of Rochester, Rochester, New York
Richard N. Aslin and Jacques Mehler
Funded over two years in support of a task
force on infant looking methods used to assess cognitive development.
Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri and the Rotman Research
Center, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
Brain recovery: Return of cognitive and social function
Principal Investigators: Carolyn Baum and Donald Stuss, funded over three
years.
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