Student Research Program Explores Brain Wellness

Summer program supported by UM Flagship Constellations initiative

University of Mississippi junior Lexi Hansen, a biomedical engineering major from Athens, Georgia, explains her research poster presentation during the university’s inaugural Neuroscience Summer Research Education Program expo. Photo by Shea Stewart/University Marketing and Communications

OXFORD, Miss. – Six University of Mississippi undergraduate students spent their summer exploring research opportunities in neuroscience and brain wellness as part of the inaugural Neuroscience Summer Research Education Program.

An initiative of the university’s Flagship Constellations, the program provided stipends for undergraduate students to engage in eight-week collaborative research with a mentor exploring neuroscience related to brain wellness.

Split between the Oxford campus and the University of Mississippi Medical Center, the program aims to develop new pipelines for pre-graduate and pre-medical students interested in neuroscience.

“The participating students gained research experience and developed connections with neuroscience faculty at the Oxford and Jackson campuses,” said Kristie Willett, a team leader of the Brain Wellness Flagship Constellation, which funded the program. Willett is chair of biomolecular sciences and a professor of pharmacology and environmental toxicology in the UM School of Pharmacy.

“Our aim was to expose the students to firsthand knowledge of scientific methods, critical thinking and professional networking within the discipline.”

The six Ole Miss students enrolled in the program were Matthew Foster, a pharmacy student in his second year of the professional program from Biloxi; Lexi Hansen, a junior majoring in biomedical engineering from Athens, Georgia; Christopher Lemon, a senior majoring in psychology from Dallas; Aalaa Matalgah, a junior majoring in psychology from Oxford; Cody Porter, a senior majoring in biology from Spartanburg, South Carolina; and Riya Trivedi, a junior majoring in chemistry with an emphasis in biochemistry from New Delhi.

The 10 students involved with the inaugural Neuroscience Summer Research Education Program pose with their mentors during the program’s summer expo. Photo by Shea Stewart/University Marketing and Communications

“The research program has been amazing for me,” Hansen said. She worked with a program known as EEGLAB that processes data generated by recording the electrical properties of the brain. She also used virtual reality in her research.

“Learning to work with EEGLAB would have to be my favorite part because I have found a lot of different ways to analyze the data we have taken.”

The program supported 10 undergraduate students. Joining the Ole Miss students in the program were students from Millsaps College, Mississippi State University, Nazareth College and Wesleyan College.

“The students expressed a great deal of satisfaction with the program, and several indicated that they are ready to attend graduate school after completing their degree,” said Gregg Roman, a team leader of the Brain Wellness Flagship Constellation. Roman also is professor and chair of biology at UM.

“Several faculty participants expressed great enthusiasm with the outcome and would even like to see it expanded. I view the program as a success.”

At the end of the program, students presented their work during an expo at the School of Pharmacy. The July 23 event included five-minute presentations from neuroscientist mentors and other neuroscientists, poster presentations by the students and a keynote address from Harry Pantazopoulos, an assistant professor of neurobiology and anatomical sciences at UMMC.

The program kicked off with an early June visit to UMMC’s Translational Research Center in Jackson, which houses the Gertrude C. Ford MIND Research Center and the Neuro Institute, among other research areas.

The Flagship Constellations initiative, unveiled in November 2017, is a collaborative effort among faculty, staff and students from the Oxford campus and UMMC to explore and solve complex issues through the diversity of ideas. The initiative includes multidisciplinary teams working to find solutions to grand challenges in the areas of brain wellness, community well-being and disaster resilience.

The Brain Wellness Flagship Constellation includes an academically diverse team researching better understandings behind brain function as a result of injury, addiction and disease. The team is engaged in population-based research, clinical care, education and basic research to assist in the development of technologies and evidence-based practices that could bolster the prevention of and recovery from brain impairment.

The program’s stipends were supported by a $1 million donation to the Flagship Constellations initiative by Thomas and Jim Duff, who created the Ernest R. Duff Flagship Constellation Fund in honor of their father.

Joining Roman and Willett as team leaders of the constellation is James Rowlett, a professor and vice chair for research in the Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior at UMMC.

For additional information about the Brain Wellness Flagship Constellation, visit http://flagshipconstellations.olemiss.edu/brain-wellness/.