Olivia DrakeDecember 20, 200627min
Posted 12/20/06 Professor, Student Study Children's Ability to Count Posted 12/20/06 Online Incite Magazine Pushes Readers to Take Actions Posted 12/20/06 Students Compete in National Putnam Math Competition Posted 12/20/06 Betty Tishler Celebrates 97th Birthday at Wesleyan Posted 12/20/06 Students Inducted into Scholastic Honor Society Phi Beta Kappa Posted 12/20/06 Students, Faculty, Alumni Present Papers at Ethnomusicology Conference Posted 12/20/06 Wesleyan University Press Receives NEA Grant Posted 12/04/06 Wesleyan Receives State Stem Cell Grants Posted 12/04/06 Grant Targets Treatment of Epileptic Seizures Posted 12/04/06 Wesleyan Students Pedal for Affordable Housing Posted 12/04/06 Scott Plous Named CASE Professor of the Year…

Olivia DrakeDecember 20, 20067min
Matthew Donne '07, Jenna Gopilan '07 and Dan Austin '08 received fellowships based on academic achievement and enthusiasm for laboratory science.   Posted 12/20/06 Three Wesleyan students received research bioscience fellowships from the Connecticut Business & Industry Association (CBIA) and the Connecticut United for Research Excellence (CURE). The fellowships are designed to increase the number of qualified scientists interested in pursuing careers in the biosciences. Molecular biology and biochemistry major Dan Austin '08; neuroscience and behavior major Jenna Gopilan '07; and biology major Matthew Donne '07 each received the $5,000 fellowship. The students were selected on the basis of academic…

Olivia DrakeDecember 4, 20066min
Laura Grabel, the Fisk Professor of Natural Sciences and professor of biology, received $878,348 for her study on embryonic stem cells. Posted 12/04/06 Wesleyan and one of its researchers were major beneficiaries of the State of Connecticut’s initial round of nearly $20 million in grants to fund non-federally-sanctioned stem cell research. The awarding of the grants was announced on November 22 in Hartford. Wesleyan was a co-recipient with the University of Connecticut of $2.5 million dedicated for the Human Embryonic Stem Cell Core Facility, which will be located in Farmington. Laura Grabel, the Fisk Professor of Natural Sciences and professor…

Olivia DrakeDecember 4, 20067min
Gloster Aaron, Janice Naegele and Laura Grabel will study if stem cell-based treatment in mice brains could possibly control epileptic seizures in human brains. Posted 12/04/06 A $300,000 grant from the McKnight Foundation will help a Wesleyan University researcher investigate the possibility of using brain transplants of embryonic stem (ES) cells to control epileptic seizures in mice. If successful the study could lay the early groundwork for using similar therapy in human beings. Janice Naegele, chair and professor of biology and professor of neuroscience and behavior at Wesleyan, is the principle investigator in the study that will bring together the…

Olivia DrakeFebruary 16, 20067min
Pictured left to right, front row: Gloster Aaron, assistant professor of biology; John Seamon, professor of psychology; Janice Naegele, associate professor of biology; John Dekker, candidate, department of neurobiology, Harvard Medical School; Megan Carey, postdoctoral fellow, neurobiology department, Harvard Medical School; Allan Berlind, professor of biology, emeritus; Joshua Gooley, postdoctoral fellow, Division of Sleep Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital; David Bodznick, professor of biology; Harry Sinnamon, professor of psychology; John Kirn, chair, neuroscience and behavior program and associate professor, biology; Back row: Sam Sober, postdoctoral fellow, Keck Center for Integrative Neuroscience, UCSF and Mauricio Delgado, assistant professor, department of psychology,…

Olivia DrakeSeptember 9, 20055min
Posted 09/09/05 Accessing creativity will be the topic of discussion during the fourth annual Shasha Seminar for Human Concerns Oct. 6-8 at Wesleyan. “The Shasha Seminar is a wonderful example of Wesleyan's commitment to lifelong learning,” says Linda Secord, director of alumni education. “We expect this year's discussion of creativity to be stimulating, giving participants newly informed perspectives that they will take with them as they return to their personal and professional lives.” Through a series of seminars and hands-on workshops, alumni, parents and friends will expand their understanding of the creative process and its impact on human endeavors. Past…

Olivia DrakeMarch 15, 20059min
  Biology visiting assistant professor Stanley Lin researches ways to prevent brain cell death in stroke patients.   Posted 03/15/05 Q: Professor Lin, you’re among only a handful of scientists, nationwide, studying excitotoxic cell death. Please explain your research, and what this means for stroke victims. A: After a stroke, millions of brain cells can get over excited and the cells can die. This cell death is an ongoing process. This condition can be prevented if the neurological signaling pathways that that cause cell death are inhibited. If we use proteins that block excitotoxic pathways, we could prevent post-stroke death.…