Default image

Leonard White

Program: Neurosciences

Graduation Year: 1992

Thesis Advisor: Joseph L. Price

Thesis Title: "The Functional Anatomy of Limbic Status Epilepticus in the Rat" Short: Limbic Status Epilepticus in Rat

Default image

Lindsay Wieczorek

Program: Neurosciences

Graduation Year: 2012

Thesis Advisor: Louis J. Muglia

Thesis Title: Calcium-Stimulated Adenylyl Cyclases are Critical Modulators of Fear Learning and Experience-Dependent Plasticity

Default image

Natecia Williams

Program: Neurosciences

Graduation Year: 2013

Thesis Advisor: Joseph C. Corbo

Thesis Title: The Role of MicroRNA-124 in Photoreceptor Development and Differentiation

Default image

Philip Williams

Program: Neurosciences

Graduation Year: 2009

Thesis Advisor: Rachel O.L. Wong

Thesis Title: Generation and Circuit Development of Zebrafish Retinal Horizontal Cells

Default image

Jue Xie

Program: Neurosciences

Graduation Year: 2017

Thesis Advisor: Camillo Padoa-Schioppa

Thesis Title: Neuronal reorganization in the orbitofrontal cortex underlying economic decisions in different behavioral contexts.

Default image

Monica Xiong

Program: Neurosciences

Graduation Year: 2021

Thesis Advisor: David M. Holtzman

Thesis Title: Apolipoprotein E immunotherapy for the treatment of Alzheimer disease and cerebral amyloid angiopathy.

Default image

Pei Xu

Program: Neurosciences

Graduation Year: 2014

Thesis Advisor: Timothy E. Holy

Thesis Title: Large-scale cellular imaging of neuronal activity: A study of neural individuality
and a method for imaging mouse cortex

Default image

Yifan Xu

Program: Neurosciences

Graduation Year: 2024

Thesis Advisor: Keith B. Hengen

Thesis Title: Sleep restores an optimal computational regime in cortical networks

Default image

Yunlu Xue

Program: Neurosciences

Graduation Year: 2015

Thesis Advisor: Vladimir J. Kefalov

Thesis Title: Mechanism and regulation of photoreceptor dark adaptation.

Default image

Shaul Yahil

Program: Neurosciences

Graduation Year: 2021

Thesis Advisor: Maria S. Remedi

Thesis Title: The Role of Neuronal ATP-sensitive Potassium Channels in Learning and Memory