Home Page

Keyword Search:

 

YSM Info. Library. Medical Center Index. YSM Home.
Educational Programs.

The Department

Faculty in our department conduct research in areas ranging from the molecular mechanisms of protein actions - involved in cell signaling, cell polarity, and ion transport - to the mechanisms by which information is transmitted and integrated between cells and organs, during processes such as learning and development. These projects utilize diverse experimental approaches, including the gene cloning, expression and mutagenesis, confocal and electron microscopy, patch-clamping, and single-cell optical recordings with voltage and pH sensitive dyes. The department is highly interactive, and has many collaborations between research groups, which are enhanced by the sharing of centralized facilities for tissue culture, biochemistry and molecular biology, and microscopy.

Departmental activities and functions which foster the exchange of scientific ideas include the annual Physiology Department Picnic (a true gourmet experience!); weekly seminar series in which distinguished speakers from outside Yale are invited to discuss their research; and departmental teatime three times per week for socializing over cookies, coffee and tea. There is also an annual weekend departmental at which members of the department present their work in talks and posters. Discussion is always lively and spirited at these events, where the friendly and relaxed atmosphere of the department encourages the open exchange of ideas and opinions. In addition to these departmental events, a wealth of seminars and symposia sponsored by other departments at Yale are also available.

The high degree of interaction between the Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology and the large biomedical research community at Yale reflects the reality that today's scientific questions are best answered by integrating multiple experimental approaches. To enable graduate students to gain a broad exposure to the research opportunities at Yale before selecting a laboratory in which to conduct their thesis research, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and the School of Medicine at Yale offer a combined interdepartmental graduate program in the Biological and Biomedical Sciences (BBS) which includes the Ph.D. programs in Cellular and Molecular Physiology, Molecular Cellular and Developmental Biology, Cell Biology, Experimental Pathology, Genetics, Immunobiology, Microbiology, Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Neurobiology, Neuroscience, and Pharmacology.

Graduate education at Yale is flexible and students are encouraged to carry out laboratory rotations and thesis research with any of the faculty associated with the BBS regardless of departmental affiliation. The faculty of the Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology participate in interest-based tracks within the BBS that serve to organize research and training interests. The Physiology and Integrative Medical Biology track is offered to incoming students designed to provide opportunities to explore areas of specialized interest taught by faculty from a variety of departments. By the end of their first year, the graduate students normally matriculate into the Graduate Program in Cellular and Molecular Physiology.

 
Department of
Cellular & Molecular
Physiology

Yale University
School of Medicine
333 Cedar Street,
Room B-147
P.O. Box 208026
New Haven, CT
06520-8026

(203) 785-2989 Tel.
(203) 785-4951 Fax
   
       
  Yale School of Medicine.   Top of page.Yale University Home.Yale Graduate School of Arts & Sciences.Combined Program in Biological & Biomedical Sciences.Yale-New Haven Hospital.
Copyright © 2001 Dept. of Cellular & Molecular Physiology.
All rights reserved. Comments or suggestions to the
site editor.

Home URL: http://info.med.yale.edu/cmphysiol/

Last modified: December 8, 2005 (cmb)