News
News
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Congrats Kelly-Anne!
Kelly Anne Duffy has been awarded the Dunlevie Honors Undergraduate Research Award. Congratulations Kelly Anne!
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Welcome Mae!
Mae Nicopolis has joined the lab as the EEG Lab Manager. Welcome to the lab Mae!
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Welcome Hannah!
Hannah Reed has joined the lab as a clinical research instructor. Welcome to the lab Hannah!
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Welcome Erin!
Erin King has joined the lab as a Post-Baccalaureate Research Fellow, after working as a undergraduate research assistant since December 2012. Congratulations Erin!
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NIRL Research Poster Presented at UNC’s Annual Translational Medicine Symposium
Mariko Weber presented UNC NIRL research titled “Impulsivity in Veterans with Comorbid PTSD and TBI: An fMRI Study” at UNC’s Annual Translational Medicine Symposium. PDF Link
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Karen Gil Presentations
Liz Bailey and Evan Melton present research at the Karen Gil Internship Program in Psychology Showcase.
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Undergraduate Research Presentations
Ashley Creese and Erin King present research at the UNC annual Celebration of Undergraduate Research Celebration of Undergraduate Research annual research symposium
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Paper Accepted in Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders
Paper by Franc C. L. Donkers, Sarah E. Schipul, Grace T. Baranek, Katherine M. Cleary, Michael T. Willoughby, Anna M. Evans, John C. Bulluck, Jeanne E. Lovmo, and Aysenil Belger, Attenuated Auditory Event-Related Potentials and Associations with Atypical Sensory Response Patterns in Children with Autism published online in Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders.
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Crystal Schiller Receives NARSAD Award
200 New Brain and Behavior Research Foundation Grants Awarded to Young Scientists Crystal Edler Schiller, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow conducting research in the NIRL, has been awarded a 2013 NARSAD Young Investigator Grant by the Brain and Behavior Research foundation … Read more
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UNC NIRL Research Featured in Raleigh News and Observer
N&O – April 2, 2013: “Research from UNC-CH points to early warning signs for schizophrenia” Changes in brain function may foreshadow schizophrenia as early as puberty, nearly a decade before most patients begin showing obvious symptoms, new research from the … Read more