T32 Programs

NIH T32-supported training programs in the Neurosciences

Training Program in Substance Use Disorders

Funding for the Nash Family Department of Neuroscience’s Training Program in Substance Use Disorders at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai is supported by grant number T32DA053558 from the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

Training Program in Neuroscience

This T32 training grant supports early-stage Neuroscience students in their first and/or second year of the PhD program.
 

Research Training in the Neuroscience of Aging

The Neuroscience of Aging T32 Program for the Nash Family Department of Neuroscience is a selective training grant designed to train the next generation of researchers in the field of aging and age-related neurodegenerative disorders. Directed by Joseph Castellano, PhD, Associate Professor of Neuroscience, and Patrick Hof, MD, Professor of Neuroscience, this program exclusively appoints PhD students who have completed their 1st year of graduate training and have a dedicated interest in the neuroscience of aging.

Training Program in Social Neuroscience Research

This T32 training grant supports an integrated pre/postdoctoral program of Training in Social Neuroscience Research for late-stage graduate students and early-stage postdoctoral fellows interested in pursuing careers in the neurobiology of social processing. The overarching goal of our unified and integrated Training Program is to provide rigorous, broad-based, individualized, and multidisciplinary training with enhanced opportunities for mentoring, collaboration, and career development for predoctoral students and postdoctoral fellows  in social neuroscience research relevant to neuropsychiatric disorders.
 

T32 Research Training Program in Systems Skin Biology

The T32 Research Training Program in Systems Skin Biology is designed to educate physicians and clinically trained PhDs in constructing original research surrounding skin biology and skin diseases. Situated within The Kimberly and Eric J. Waldman Department of Dermatology at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, this T32 grant will help launch an intersectional science training program for both predocs and postdocs in Systems Skin Biology, effectively initiating 2+2 and 2+1 residency track programs.