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CUNEL - Connectomes for Undergraduate Neuroscience Education and Learning (RCN-UBE Introduction)

Author(s): Andrew Bellemer1, Divya Sitaraman2, Kenneth Colodner3

1. Appalachian State University 2. California State University, East Bay 3. Mount Holyoke College

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Summary:
The Connectomes for Undergraduate Neuroscience Education and Learning (CUNEL) project seeks to bring cutting-edge neuroscience methods into undergraduate classrooms and laboratories in order to provide authentic research experiences.

Licensed under CC Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International according to these terms

Version 1.0 - published on 15 Jun 2023 doi:10.25334/ZFBZ-BY66 - cite this

Description

The Connectomes for Neuroscience Education and Learning (CUNEL) project seeks to provide students with access to course-based research experiences in connectomics, the burgeoning subfield of neurobiology that seeks to systematically annotate and analyze all the neurons and synaptic connections in a nervous system. While it is well understood that students benefit from the incorporation of authentic research experiences into undergraduate curricula, the availability of these experiences may be limited by infrastructure, resources, and difficulty of implementation. The CUNEL project addresses these barriers by leveraging the publicly available Female Adult Fly Brain (FAFB) dataset and Collaborative Annotation Toolkit for Massive Amounts of Image Data (CATMAID) software platform, which is accessible through a web browser with minimal computing hardware requirements.

We are currently developing and refining lab protocols, curriculum, instructor support tools, and assessment tools that make use of FAFB/CUNEL. These tools have already been implemented and assessed at five institutions, which include R1, public comprehensive, and private undergraduate institutions. We are currently seeking additional network members to implement and provide feedback on our existing instructional materials and to collaborate on development of additional materials.

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