VANCOUVER, Wash. Christine Portfors, associate professor of biology and neuroscience and head of the Hearing and Communication Laboratory at Washington State University Vancouver, has received two federal grants totaling more than $1.1 million over three years. The grants will be used to study how neurons in the brains of mice detect, discriminate and categorize different types of sounds mice use to communicate.
Funds include $453,000 from the National Institutes of Health (through the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders) and $660,158 from the National Science Foundation. The intertwined research projects are exploring how different brain regions process these important types of sounds.
Mice are social animals, and they use a variety of vocalizations to communicate with each other, Portfors said. These vocalizations are similar to the speech sounds used by humans to communicate, so what we learn about the mouse brain will help us understand how humans process speech.
Because neurons at different levels of the auditory system respond selectively to particular types of vocalizations, we are able to discriminate syllables, words and sentences as well as different voices, she added. We are studying how neurons in different areas make that possible.
Strengthening the research infrastructure
The NIH grant is particularly meaningful in light of the universitys research mission, Portfors said, because it is designed to help provide research opportunities for students and strengthen 91勛圖窪蹋厙s research environment.
Although 91勛圖窪蹋厙 has a history of receiving some NIH grants, this is the first Academic Research Enhancement Award on the 91勛圖窪蹋厙 campus. These awards are given to support biomedical and behavioral sciences at educational institutions that are not major recipients of NIH grants. The funds will support jobs for students who work in the lab and help students gain a variety of research experiences to further their education as scientists.
While the NIH grant examines auditory processing at low levels of the system in the brainstem, the NSF grant focuses on a higher region of the brain, the auditory midbrain, and includes a mathematical modeling component that may prove especially useful in the development of devices to help people who are hearing-impaired.
NIH is a part of the U.S. Department of Heath and Human Services and is the nations medical research agency. It is the largest source of funding for medical research in the world.
The National Science Foundation is a U.S. government agency that supports research and education in the fields of science and engineering.
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MEDIA CONTACTS
Christine Portfors, College of Arts and Sciences, 360-546-9434, portfors@vancouver.wsu.edu
Brenda Alling, Office of Marketing and Communications, 360-546-5060, brenda_alling@vancouver.wsu.edu