
Leanne Chukoskie, Ph.D.
Leanne is investigating LIP neuronal activity during an eye movement
search task (Chukoskie, et al., Soc. Neurosci. Abs. 2005) in Tom Albright's
lab. Collaborating with Odelia Schwartz and Terry Sejnowski, she is
modelling the behavior observed during eye movement search. She is
also testing subjects with early visual impairments to examine how
they integrate top-down and bottom-up information to guide looking
behavior.
Contact Information:
email: leanne@salk.edu


Krista Kornylo,
MPH
Krista decided to
move across the country again in July 2006 - this time to Atlanta,
Georgia to take a fellowship with the Council of State
and Territorial Epidemiologists at the CDC Division of Global Migration
and Quarantine. She will be working on surveillance activities for diseases
such as SARS and avian influenza, and developing plans, procedures, and
relationships with state and local health departments to respond to outbreaks
of these and similar diseases.
Contact Information:
email: kkornylo@gmail.com


Chris Carello,
Ph.D.
After
graduating from the lab in December 2005, Chris spent an additional
semester working
on
a project designed to examine which forms of visual
attention may be compromised in autistic subjects. Chris is now
a post-doctoral research fellow at Harvard Medical School's Brigham and Women's
Hospital division of sleep medicine in the lab of Charles Czeisler,
M.D., Ph.D. where he will apply techniques quite similar to those
he learned
in the Krauzlis lab toward studying human performance during various
states of wakefulness.


Dorion Liston,
Ph.D.
Dorion caught a wave surfing in July 2005 and ended up in Northern California,
where he decided to take a post-doctoral position in the laboratory of Dr.
Lee Stone at NASA.


Garth A.
Fowler, Ph.D.
Realizing
that if he moved to DC then he would have basically traveled a great
triangle about the country (from DC to Seattle, from Seattle to San
Diego and then San Diego back to DC), Garth took a job with the American
Association for the Advancement of Science. Now he travels non-stop,
visiting unviversities and institutions helping them establish career
development events for their budding young scientists. Keep an eye
open, you might catch him at a conference near you!
Contact Information:
Senior Program Associate
American Association for the Advancement of Science
1200 New York Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20005
email: gfowler@aaas.org


Laurent
Madelain, Ph.D.
Laurent was in the
lab from October 2000 to October 2002 and “enjoyed it very much”.
He used a combination of psychometric measurements and eye movement recordings
in humans to investigate the effects of non-visual signals on pursuit. In particular
he tested for the effects of learning on pursuit (Madelain & Krauzlis,
J Neurophysiol, 90, 972982, 2003). He also showed that pursuit can provide
a real-time readout for the state of motion-perception (Madelain & Krauzlis,
J of Vision, 3(11), 2003). With Josh Wallman (from College University New York)
they found that spatial scale of attention affects both pursuit and saccades
(Madelain, Krauzlis & Wallman, in preparation). He is now an assistant
professor at the Psychology department of the Ch. de Gaulle University in Lille,
France.
Contact Information:
email: madelain@univ-lille3.fr
Website: http://www.univ-lille3.fr/ureca/madelain


Jagdeep Kaur
Bala, Ph.D.
Left in September 2000 to take a post-doctoral position in the laboratory of
Dr. Paul Dassonville at the University of Oregon.
Contact Information:
326, Straub Hall
Department of Psychology
University of Oregon
Eugene, OR 97403, U.S.A.
email: jagdeep@darkwing.uoregon.edu


Scott A. Adler, Ph.D.
Left in August 2000 to take a position as an assistant professor at York
University in Toronto, Canada.
Contact Information:
Department of Psychology
Center for Early Cognition
Center for Vision Research
333 Behavioral Sciences Building
York University
4700 Keele St.
Toronto, Ontario M3J 1P3
Canada
email: adler@yorku.ca
Website: http://www.psych.yorku.ca/adler/