Schools

Stanford Professor Wins Gruber Neuroscience Prize

Carla Shatz is regarded as a pioneer of brain development research.

PHOTO: Carla Shatz. Credit: Norbert von der Groeben Photography/Stanford News

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Stanford University biology and neurobiology professor Carla Shatz was awarded today with Yale University’s 2015 Gruber Foundation Neuroscience Prize.

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Shatz, who will share the $500,000 prize for the award with Harvard University neurobiology professor Michael Greenberg, was honored for her work in advancing understanding of how neural circuit function and brain signaling controls wiring, plasticity, and development in the brain and how dysfunction can lead to certain disorders, according to the Gruber Foundation.

Officials with the foundation said Shatz’s research significantly contributes to understanding neuropsychiatric disorders better, such as autism, schizophrenia and Alzheimer’s disease, and can eventually lead to finding better treatments.

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Her study maps how the brain merges two separate visual signals from each eye to form a single image and which brain connections are strengthened or pruned back during and after early development. The research found that some proteins associated with the immune system play an integral role in this process, highlighting an unprecedented connection between the nervous system and the immune proteins.

Schatz is currently the inaugural chair holder for the Sapp Family Provostial Professorship in Stanford’s Department of Neurobiology and the David Starr Jordan director of Stanford Bio-X, Stanford’s biomedical and bioscience department.

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