CNBC logo

CNBC

2012 Annual CNBC Retreat
2012 Annual CNBC Retreat
2012 Annual CNBC Retreat
2012 Annual CNBC Retreat
2012 Annual CNBC Retreat
2012 Annual CNBC Retreat
2012 Annual CNBC Retreat
2012 Annual CNBC RetreatSeven Springs Mountain Resort
bwd stop start fwd
Home Faculty Fanselow, Erika

Fanselow, Erika

fanselow.jpg Assistant Professor, Neurobiology
University of Pittsburgh


Phone: (412) 648-9563

Fax: (412-) 648-1441
Email: circuit@pitt.edu This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Ph.D., Duke University

 

Research Interests

 

The neocortex is composed of numerous types of neurons, which are highly interconnected with one another. While much is understood about how individual neurons function, there is much neurobiologists do not understand about how neurons function as circuits or networks. Work in Dr. Fanselow’s laboratory focuses on several main questions: How are excitatory and various subtypes of inhibitory interneurons connected to one another? When are different types of inhibitory neurons active within the neocortical circuit and what influence do they have on the surrounding cells? In what functional states can the neocortical circuit exist and how do inhibitory neurons contribute to the generation of these states? How do such functional states affect information processing in the neocortex?

In order to address these questions, two preparations are used in Dr. Fanselow’s lab. First, a thalamocortical slice preparation from the rodent somatosensory system is used to investigate cellular-level questions about connectivity, input and output of neurons and mechanisms underlying functional network states. Second, in vivo recordings, also from the rodent somatosensory system, are performed to address how neurons function in intact circuits and how naturally induced circuit states alter sensory processing. Trainees in Dr. Fanselow’s lab have the opportunity to learn intracellular whole-cell recordings, as well as extracellular in vivo recording techniques. 

 

Recent Publications

  • Fanselow, EE, Richardson, KA, and Connors, BW. Selective, state-dependent activation of somatostatin-expressing inhibitory interneurons in mouse neocortex. J Neurophysiol, (in press).
  • Richardson, KA, Fanselow, EE, and Connors, BW. Neocortical Anatomy and Physiology, in Epilepsy: A Comprehensive Textbook, ed. J Engel Jr. and T.A. Pedley, (2008).
  • Nicolelis, MAL and Fanselow, EE. Thalamocortical optimization of tactile processing according to behavioral state. Nat Neurosci 5(6): 517-523, (2002).
  • Fanselow, EE, Sameshima, K, Baccala, LA and Nicolelis, MAL. Thalamic bursting in rats during different awake behavioral states. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 98(26): 15330-15335, (2001).
  • Fanselow, EE, Reid, AP, and Nicolelis, MAL. Reduction of pentylenetetrazole-induced seizure activity in awake rats by seizure-triggered trigeminal nerve stimulation. J Neurosci 20(21): 8160-8168, (2000).
  • Fanselow, EE and Nicolelis, MAL. Behavioral modulation of tactile responses in the rat thalamocortical loop.  J Neurosci 19(17): 7603-7616, (1999).