Systems Neuroscience Research
Systems neuroscience is one of the major foci of the Neuroscience Program at Emory with over 40 faculty working in this area. Research spans the range of motor, sensory, behavioral, and cognitive neuroscience using a wide variety of techniques that encompass in vitro and in vivo electrophysiology, functional brain imaging, anatomy, and molecular techniques.
Areas of interest include neural substrates of learning and memory, cognition and attention, decision-making and reward, cross-modal interactions between sensory systems, mechanisms of vestibular and visual integration into control of eye movements, anatomy and physiology of the basal ganglia, physiology of oculomotor behavior, and central regulation of autonomic functions.
Faculty with interests in Systems Neuroscience:
- Francisco Alvarez
- Jocelyne Bachevalier
- Gregory Berns
- J. Douglas Bremner
- Cathrin Buetefisch
- Ronald Calabrese
- Anita Devineni
- Alan Emanuel
- Sandra M. Garraway
- James G. Greene
- Robert Gross
- Ying Guo
- Ellen Hess
- Shawn Hochman
- P. Michael Iuvone
- Dieter Jaeger
- Shella Keilholz
- Robert Lee
- Robert Liu
- Donna Maney
- Joseph Manns
- Zixu Mao
- Andrew Miller
- Ilya Nemenman
- Opal Ousley
- Chethan Pandarinath
- Brad Pearce
- Marie-Claude Perreault
- Astrid Prinz
- Morten Raastad
- James Rilling
- Christopher Rodgers
- Hillary Rodman
- David B. Rye
- Mar M. Sanchez
- Nicholas T. Seyfried
- Yoland Smith
- Sam Sober
- Lena Ting
- Elaine Walker
- Jay M. Weiss
- Peter A. Wenner
- Thomas Wichmann
- Steven L. Wolf
- Larry Young
- James Zheng