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PSY 357 Stress and the Development of Aggressive Behavior

UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH PROJECT

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Faculty:

Yvon Delville, Ph.D. 

Contact:

Yvon Delville, delville@psy.utexas.edu

Description:

Studies testing the role and effect of environmental factors (such as social stress) on the development and neurobiology of aggressive behavior in an animal model. The effects of stress exposure are studied at different developmental periods, such as early postnatal and puberty. Supporting studies also include in vitro with cultures of neural progenitors (neural stem cells). These experiments are used to develop hypotheses that can be tested with human subjects originating from the Psy 301 pool.

Qualifications:

Previous exposure to biology or biopsychology is preferred. Being interested to conduct laboratory experiments and capable of devoting 8-10 hours/week. Being interested to better understand the biological bases of behavior.

Duties:

Conducting experiments, animal handling, managing data from Psy 301 subject pools, behavioral observations, running cultures of neural progenitors, running hormone assays, as well as preparation, labeling and analysis of brain sections and cultivated neural progenitors.

PSY 357 Undergraduate Research Projects (FALL 2004)
PSY 357 Course Requirements

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Updated 31 August 2004
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