Members
Research Interests
This laboratory studies the activity of neurons that receive dopaminergic synaptic input during behaviors correlated with dopamine transmission. Our long range goal is to better understand the activity of dopamine’s target neurons with respect to reward learning and drug abuse. We record the activity of arrays of single neurons in the striatum of awake, unrestrained rats, in the sensorimotor (putamen) and limbic (accumbens) subregions of the striatum.
Our present models include:
1) Intravenous cocaine self-administration: firing patterns of neurons in accumbens, ventral pallidum and dorsal striatum in relation to conditioned incentive cues that cause relapse to cocaine seeking.
2) Optogenetic identification of striatal neuron subtypes using the cre-recombinase system and channel rhodopsin.
3) Ultrasonic vocalizations of rats, coupled to neural recordings during appetitive or aversive behaviors.
4) Learning dependent changes in the accumbens, as they relate to conditioned approach behavior in a reward (sucrose) probability task.
5) Experience dependent changes in movement-related firing of putamen neurons as a function repeated exposure to cocaine and/or behavioral task.
IN MEMORIAM: Dr. Volodymyr Prokopenko
Research Associate from Bogomoletz Institute for Physiology, Kiev, Ukraine
Our dear colleague died too young of mantle lymphoma in April, 2006.
Current and recent Lab Members
Mark O. West |
Principal Investigator
Professor of Psychology:
Graduate Program In Behavioral Neuroscience, Department of Psychology
Graduate Program In Neuroscience, UMDNJ/Cell Biology & Neuroscience
Degrees:
B.S. University of California, Irvine: Biological Sciences
Ph.D. Wake Forest University School of Medicine: Physiology
contact: markwest@rutgers.edu
Kevin R Coffey
Graduate Program In Behavioral Neuroscience, Department of Psychology
Degrees:
B.A. Rutgers University: Psychology
M.S. Rutgers University: Psychology (Behavioral Neuroscience)
Graduate Program In Behavioral Neuroscience, Department of Psychology
Degrees:
B.A. Rutgers University: Psychology
M.S. Rutgers University: Psychology (Behavioral Neuroscience)
PhD Rutgers University: Psychology (Behavioral Neuroscience)
Contact:
Email: mrcoffey@rutgers.edu
Email: mrcoffey@rutgers.edu
Julianna Kulik
Graduate Program In Behavioral Neuroscience, Department of Psychology
Degrees:
Graduate Program In Behavioral Neuroscience, Department of Psychology
Degrees:
B.A. University of Warsaw: Philosophy & Sociology
M.S. University of Warsaw: Philosophy & Sociology
M.S. University of Amsterdam: Cognitive Science
PhD Rutgers University: Psychology (Behavioral Neuroscience)
Contact:
Email: julianna.kulik@gmail.com
Email: julianna.kulik@gmail.com
Anthony Pawlak
Statistician
Statistical analysis of neurobehavioral data in models of addiction
Degrees:
B.A. Franklin and Marshall College: Psychology
M.S. Rutgers University: Behavioral Neuroscience
PhD. Rutgers University: Quantitative Social Research Methods
Contact:
Email: tonypete@rutgers.edu
Statistical analysis of neurobehavioral data in models of addiction
Degrees:
B.A. Franklin and Marshall College: Psychology
M.S. Rutgers University: Behavioral Neuroscience
PhD. Rutgers University: Quantitative Social Research Methods
Contact:
Email: tonypete@rutgers.edu
Joshua Stamos
Degrees:
B.S. Stony Brook University: Natural Math
B.S. Stony Brook University: Natural Math
Nicholas Beacher
Graduate Student
Degree:B.S. Stony Brook University: Psychology
M.S. Rutgers University: Psychology (Behavioral Neuroscience)
Contact:Email: nicholasjbeacher@gmail.com
Graduate Student
Degree:B.S. Stony Brook University: Psychology
M.S. Rutgers University: Psychology (Behavioral Neuroscience)
Contact:Email: nicholasjbeacher@gmail.com
Angela Dao
Graduate Student (Behavioral Neuroscience)
Degree:
B.S. Binghamton University: Psychology
M.S. Rutgers University: Psychology
Contact:
Email: angela.dao@rutgers.edu
Undergraduate Research Assistants
Annalisa Montemarano
Vivian Mayr
Shivani Chitre
Natasha Griffith
Samuel Hammer
Vidhina Pansare
Neel Rana
David Shafiei