Mark Stanton, professor of psychological and brain sciences
at the University of Delaware, has been named the 2015 Neuroscientist
of the Year by the Delaware Chapter of the Society for Neuroscience.
The award was presented at the annual Delaware Neuroscience Research and Poster Symposium, held in December at the Delaware Biotechnology Institute.
Also at the symposium, sponsored by the Delaware Center for
Neuroscience Research, 38 graduate students, undergraduates and
postdoctoral researchers from UD and other institutions presented
posters.
Stanton leads the Universitys Behavioral Neuroscience Program. His
research, currently supported by two grants from the National Institutes
of Health, focuses on studying the brain mechanisms of learning in
normal development and in Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder.
He has authored more than 125 research reports or reviews, including 11 publications since 2014.
In another recent honor, Stanton was elected president of the
Pavlovian Society, which has a distinguished international membership.
Founded in 1955 by Horsley Gantt, Ivan Pavlovs first American student,
the society is dedicated to the study of behavior and learning as a
psychological and brain science.
In announcing Stantons selection for the Delaware neuroscience
honor, the Delaware Center for Neuroscience Research noted that he has
been an extremely active and valuable member of the center, sitting on
its internal advisory committee and serving as a scientific adviser and
mentor to most of the researchers the center supports.
Undergraduate students who won awards for poster presentations at the
symposium were Tyler McCann, UD, first place; Laurne Terasaki, UD,
second place; and Patricia Pa, UD, and Xenia Davis, Delaware State
University (DSU), tied for third place.
Graduate student winners were Jennifer Mantle, UD, first place; Karla
Sanchez, DSU, and John Ruano-Salguero, UD, tied for second place; and
Trisha Chakraborty UD, third place.