The Institutional National Research Service Award (T32) is a training grant for predoctoral and postdoctoral trainees to prepare for careers with significant impact in health-related research. Erica was recently awarded this grant for the Mathematical, Computational, and Systems Biology (MCSB) program specifically, which, according to their grant description online, “requests support for a pre-doctoral training program designed to produce Ph.D.s with sufficient skills in fundamental biology, mathematical and computational modeling, and data science to attack these challenges [in biomedical science] head on.” The training program will involve an extensive cirriculum, close mentorship, and collaborative learning. Congrats, Erica!
Neurohackademy recap with Daniela and Mike
Daniela and Mike attended Neurohackademy – a 2-week summer school in neuroimaging and data science – at the University of Washington eScience Institute in Seattle, WA. After an initial week of lectures (with topics including reproducibility, programming, data/code management, and advanced neuroimaging techniques and analyses), they joined participant-led teams to get hands-on experience applying what they’d learned to existing, openly available, neuroimaging data.
Pictured: The 2022 Neurohackademy cohort
Daniela’s team worked with diffusion MRI to create software that functionally segments white matter connections to generate task-specific subcomponents of fiber bundles. Mike’s team applied functional connectivity and multivoxel pattern classification to functional imaging data on a memory task.
Pictured: Mike’s Neurohackademy team
Morgan and Nikhita present at the Summer Institute Research Symposium hosted by UCI’s CNLM
The Summer Institute in Neuroscience Program is a research experiences program hosted by UCI’s Center for the Neurobiology of Learning and Memory (CNLM), the NSF and DoD-Funded Research Experience for Neuroscience Program, and the UC Office of the President UC-HBCU Program. Our lab mentored 2 students from the 2022 cohort, and they each led their own research projects.
Morgan Skinner analyzed path preferences within an immersive virtual environment, and Nikhita Kaushik analyzed the relationship between survey and graph knowledge. At the conclusion of their 8-week program, they presented their work at the Summer Institute Research Symposium during an elevator pitch presentation and a poster session. Great work, Morgan and Nikhita!

Left photo: Morgan Skinner. Right photo (left to right): Nikhita Kaushik, Alina Tu
Chrastil Lab publishes new paper on a new spatial activities questionnaire!
Chrastil Lab publishes a paper in Proceedings of the 44th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (2022), “Large-scale vs small-scale spatial abilities: Development of a broad spatial activities questionnaire”
Authors: Munns, M.E., Tranquada-Torres, B., Chrastil, E.R., & Hegarty, M.
*See link under publications tab!
Mitch presents on the Spatial Activities Questionnaire at CSS 2022
Mitchell Munns, one of our lab’s collaborators at UC Santa Barbara, presented an oral talk at the Cognitive Science Society (CSS) 2022 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He shared the work from his newly-published paper (with co-authors Bailey Tranquada-Torres, Liz Chrastil, and Mary Hegarty) titled Large-Scale vs Small-Scale Spatial Abilities: Development of a Broad Spatial Activities Questionnaire. Way to go!





