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2008 Janelia Graduate Scholars
Bharioke's passion for neurobiology was evident early in his life. As its youngest participant, he won the 2001 International Brain Bee, a competition focused on modern advances in neuroscience. Following this, Bharioke worked at Toronto's Samuel Lunenfield Research Institute (SLRI) with Professor Sabine Cordes studying the serotonergic system in a mouse model of hyperactivity. During high school, Bharioke also represented Canada in the 2003 IChO in Athens, as well as winning the National Biology Competition of Canada twice in a row. Bharioke, then, went on to pursue a wide variety of both experimental and theoretical research opportunities while obtaining a double major in Chemical Physics and Biochemistry, with a minor in Mathematics from the University of Toronto. He did lab work with Professor Katherine Siminovitch, also of the SLRI, characterizing the role of an actin organizing protein, N-WASp, in mouse brain-specific conditional knockouts. Concurrently, Bharioke also worked with University Professor, Professor Paul Brumer, exploring theoretical problems in quantum mechanics, focusing on the control of system dynamics. This work was published, in August 2008, in the Journal of Chemical Physics. In addition, Bharioke also did his fourth year thesis project with Professor Geoffrey Hinton, working on modifying current neural network learning algorithms in order to make them biologically realistic. Bharioke first came to Janelia as a Summer undergraduate student in 2007 in Dr. Karel Svoboda's lab where he studied the neural coding of sensory perception in the somatosensory barrel cortex. Outside the lab, Bharioke plays intramural Division I Ultimate Frisbee, scuba dives, and also holds a Private Pilot's License. An avid lover of nature, he enjoys birdwatching, photography, as well as hiking - in Cambridge, he is a member of the Hill Walking Society. With a keen interest in different areas of science, Bharioke, also, previously organized two university-wide symposia on Space Research and Exploration.
Faust received his B.S. from Stanford University in Biological Sciences with a specialization in Neurobiology. His undergraduate honors thesis research was in the laboratory of Robert C. Malenka. He worked on finding a behavioral correlate of cocaine-induced potentiation of synaptic strength in ventral tegmental area dopamine neurons. After graduating from Stanford, he worked in the laboratory of John Huguenard at Stanford's Medical School. There he was part of an EEG study of anticonvulsant efficacy on pharmacological models of absence epilepsy in transgenic mice. After graduation Faust worked in the laboratory of David Sulzer at Columbia University's Medical Center and examined the mechanisms of dopamine neuron degeneration induced by neuromelanin activation of microglia. Rudi Faust is an avid follower of underground music and has volunteered for several such event production companies. He also enjoys hiking and backpacking.
Resulaj obtained her Bachelor of Applied Sciences in Biomedical Engineering from the University of Toronto in 2007. During this time, she worked under Dr. Robert Macgregor studying the mechanism and kinetics of the self-assembly of the DNA sequence A15G15. She was also a summer student and then went on to complete her undergraduate thesis in the laboratory of Rita Kandel at Mount Sinai Hospital. Resulaj set up and optimized the conditions of a perfusion bioreactor for annulus fibrosus tissue formation and then calculated the mechanical forces to which the cells were exposed during tissue formation. Resulaj initially came to Janelia as a summer undergraduate student in 2007, also with Dmitry Rinberg (Janelia Fellow). She developed a respiratory measuring technique for use in freely moving mice that allows a continuous sniffing signal to be recorded while the mice are learning or performing a behavioral task.
Tuthill graduated from Swarthmore in 2006 with a double major in Honors Biology and Sociology/Anthropology. At Swarthmore, he worked with Rachel Merz on measuring and modeling the spore discharge mechanism of the fungi, Pilobolus Crystallinus. Tuthill also studied Drosophila gustatory mechanisms in the Siwicki lab by silencing populations of neurons and quantifying the robustness of courtship learning. He spent a summer with Sönke Johnsen at Duke University testing the behavioral responses of crayfish to polarized light. After graduating, Tuthill continued to explore visual sensitivity to polarized light in crabs, while working in the laboratory of Daniel Tomsic in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He discovered that crayfish use polarization sensitivity to enhance contrast of an approaching object; crabs, on the other hand, do not. Outside the neurobiology lab at Swarthmore, John received an award for the best senior thesis in Sociology/Anthropology. He has made two films: “An Elder's Story”, about Chester PA (shown on Pennsylvania public television) and “Another Man's Treasure”, about junkyards (shown at the Maine International Film Festival). He has done extensive volunteer work with children and worked in a food bank. He's also a cabinetmaker and plays the tuba. Photos: Bharioke, Paul Fetters; Faust, Resulaj, and Tuthill, courtesy of Janelia Farm Research Campus. AT HHMI
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