Building a Climate Neuroscience Subfield | Transmitter

Note: In addition to the , including Joshua Rosenthal, the Kavli Foundation has funded at 麻花星空视频 who are working at the intersection of neurobiology and climate change, through a with the Grass Foundation.
On her first day as a science program fellow at the Kavli Foundation, Angie Michaiel had a tall task ahead of her: Identify a new focus for neuroscience that was understudied, undersupported and had the potential to benefit humanity.
So she dove into the literature. By the end of her first year, in 2021, she had come across a study that documented a link between rising ocean temperatures and an increase in the temperature required to 鈥渃rash,鈥 or stop the rhythmic firing of, a crab鈥檚 stomatogastric ganglion.
鈥淚 thought that was kind of groundbreaking, to connect those two areas together,鈥 says Michaiel, now associate program officer of neuroscience at the foundation. The more she read about the 鈥渧ast鈥 ways in which climate change affects nervous systems, the clearer it became 鈥渢hat we really don鈥檛 know that much at all,鈥 she says.
This exploration eventually evolved into the Neurobiology and Changing Ecosystems Initiative, which has funded seven research projects and held its first scientific meeting in April.
Michaiel spoke with The Transmitter about her hopes for this new subfield, what she learned about fostering scientific collaborations, and how she views the relationship between a program officer and the field they support. .