Undergraduate
research in the Gorman Lab
My lab owes a tremendous debt to the efforts of countless undergrads
over the past several years. Students may work in my lab with two
different levels of commitment.
In the first category are students who just want to
check things out or help out on various projects in return for credit
in Psych 199. They are generally only committing to work for a
given quarter, although they very often choose to continue. If
you are interested in this possibility, you
should contact me well in advance of when you might wish to start (like
1-2 quarters!) because we plan our experiments long in advance and line
up help accordingly. Often, I cannot take on as many students as
are interested.
I prefer to take undergrad students who will commit
for a longer period of time and/or who want to participate in our
psychology honors program. (Students have also received credit in
Biology). I work with these students to
develop their own projects which they see through to completion,
including publication (although in some cases this happens after
they've graduated from UCSD). On the research page, the papers by
Rosenthal et al. (2005), Evans and Gorman (2002), Piatowska et al.,
(2001) and Gorman and Steele (2005) are all examples of complete
student projects. I cannot guarantee a publication, but I can
make sure that you work on a project that SHOULD be significant enough
to warrant publication.
What can
undergrads do in my lab?
Learn about clocks and biological timing
Learn surgical skills
Learn really hard thinking skills (this may not be
pleasant!)
Find out about the research process, graduate school, the
wider scientific world
Hang out with a really good group of
people. The lab is a great place to interact in a friendly way
with people of different ages, backgrounds, and expertise working
towards common goals.
Graduate
research in the Gorman Lab
I am interested in taking on new, motivated graduate
students for Fall 2008. Please contact me by phone 858-822-2466
or by email (mgorman@ucsd.edu) to learn more about me, the lab, our
graduate programs and UCSD. UCSD has a wealth of expertise in
biological rhythms research at molecular, cellular, organismal,
behavioral and medical levels of analysis. Opportunities for
neuroscience research are essentially unlimited here. And did you
happen to notice that we are 5 minutes from the beach, have at least
330 days of sunshine each year, and the temperature rarely drops below
50°!
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