Congrats to Kaitlin Snider for winning a Presidential Fellowship!

Kaitlin Snider

Kaitlin, a student in Dr. Karl Obreitan’s lab, has been chosen as a recipient of a Presidential Fellowship, which is the most prestigious award given out by the Graduate School. This competitive fellowship provides a full year of funding for a student to finish their dissertation.

More information about this fellowship and the process by which awardees and nominated and chosen can be found here.

Congrats to Dan McKim & Luke Russell for winning travel awards!

NGP students win travel awards

Dan McKim (5th from left) and Luke Russell (last on right) win travel awards

The 16th annual OSUWMC Trainee Research Day took place this past Thursday, April 13th, featuring poster presentations and research talks by graduate students and post docs, as well as undergraduate students, clinical residents, and research fellows. Faculty members judged the talks and poster presentations and those trainees who scored the highest received $1000 travel awards. NGP students Dan McKim, who presented a poster, and Luke Russell, who gave an oral presentation, were both recipients of this travel award.

Congrats to Jeremy Borniger on passing his dissertation defense!

Jeremy BornigerJeremy defended his thesis titled “Sleep and Metabolic Abnormalities in a Syngeneic Mouse Model of Breast Cancer” on Thursday, April 13th.

Jeremy grew up in Washington, DC and received a Bachelor’s degree in biological anthropology from Indiana University in 2011. He joined the neuroscience program in Dr. Randy Nelson’s lab in 2012. During his time in the program, he has worked on several different projects focusing on circadian disruption by light at night, photoperiodic regulation of brain blood flow, and behavioral phenotyping of transgenic mice. His dissertation work focuses on how cytotoxic chemotherapy and peripheral non-metastatic tumors alter sleep in mice. Following graduation, Jeremy will start a post-doctoral position at Stanford University with Dr. Luis de Lecea.