We are accepting applications to the Interdepartmental Neuroscience
Graduate Program (INGP)
<https://ion.uoregon.edu/training-programs/graduate-fellows> at the
Institute of Neuroscience, a robust graduate training in Neuroscience
across departments at the University of Oregon. The goal of INGP is to
train students to think independently, creatively, and critically about
problems in neuroscience. We aim to train students in a variety of skills
that will prepare students for successful research, teaching, policy, or
industry career. Students can enter INGP through the departments of
biology, human physiology, psychology, mathematics, physics, computer and
information science, and the Knight Campus, depending on their interests.
The majority of our students enter through the department of biology, which
allows students to complete three rotations during their first year, in
order to help students identify a laboratory in which to do their
dissertation research. Students who enter through psychology, physiology,
and mathematics begin in their dissertation labs immediately. Regardless of
how students enter INGP, they are provided with a set of mentors at the
peer and faculty levels. All graduate students are required to teach for at
least one academic year during their graduate career; at least a portion of
this teaching takes place the first year.

*Training Program*

Students typically fall into a defined training program, however, training
can be tailored to fit a student’s need and research interest. We offer two
training tracks:
Systems, Cognitive and Theoretical

   - Courses: cellular neuroscience, systems neuroscience, cognitive
   neuroscience, computational neuroscience, combinatorics, stochastic
   processes, neural networks.
   - Journal clubs: systems neuroscience, theoretical neuroscience.
   - Meetings: neural circuits and behavior, zebrafish groupie, joint
   theory lab meetings.

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