Lab members and collaborators
Lab members Spring 2008

Left to right: Yu Jin, Postdoctoral researcher; Elaina Bolinger, Undergraduate assistant; Anja Hayen, Undergraduate research student; Malte Köster, Undergraduate research student; Claus C. Hilgetag, Principal investigator
Former lab members
Marcus Kaiser, Graduate research student
Markus studied biology at the Ruhr-University Bochum (Lab of Prof. K.P. Hoffmann, thesis with Prof. Markus Lappe) and computer science at the FernUni-Hagen (distance university). He is interested in complex networks, particulary in development, error-tolerance, structure, and function of biological networks. Therefore, he studies brain connectivity networks of cat and macaque as well as metabolic pathways and protein-protein interaction networks. For more information, go to: http://www.biological-networks.org/

Stoyan Kurtev, Graduate research student
<stoyan kurtev home page>
<iub home page>

Matthias Görner, Undergraduate research student
Roxana Voitcu, Undergraduate research student
External collaborators

Prof. Helen Barbas, Boston University
<helen barbas home page>
quantitative neuroanatomy, structure and connectivity of the primate prefrontal cortex

Dr. Antoni Valero-Cabre, Boston University School of Medicine
<antoni valero cabre home page>
virtual lesions by Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation and Reversible Cooling

Prof. Dr. Manfred Fahle, Bremen University
<manfred fahle home page>
virtual lesions by Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
Dr. Simon Grant, City University London
<simon grant home page>
quantitative neuroanatomy, structure and connectivity of the cat visual cortex

Prof. Eytan Ruppin, Tel-Aviv University
<eytan ruppin home page>
Computational network lesion analysis

Dr. Jarrett Rushmore, Boston University School of Medicine
virtual lesions by Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation and Reversible Cooling
<jarrett rushmore home page>
Local collaborators

Prof. Bettina Olk
<bettina olk home page>
virtual lesions by Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, function of attentional networks
TMS is fun..

(after an experimental marathon, Dec 2006)


