Kalyani Narasimhan obtained her PhD with David Linden (Johns Hopkins University), and began her postdoctoral training with Steve Siegelbaum (Columbia University) in 1997. She was a member of the Nature Neuroscience editorial team from the journal's launch in 1998 until 2001, when she went to work for the Lasker Foundation as their web editor. In 2003, she returned to Nature Neuroscience. Her research interests include signal transduction, synaptic plasticity and the cellular basis of learning and memory.Contact: k.narasimhan#natureny.com*
Hannah Bayer, Associate Editor
Hannah Bayer received her PhD from New York University, where she studied the role of the basal ganglia in reinforcement learning with Paul Glimcher. She then moved to a postdoctoral fellowship at Columbia University where she investigated neural representations of risk perception and risky choice with Elke Weber. Her research interests include decision making, sensory systems and motor control.Contact: h.bayer#natureny.com*
Noah Gray, Associate Editor
Noah Gray received his PhD from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, where he investigated vesicle trafficking and endocytosis with Mark McNiven. He then joined Karel Svoboda at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, and later moved to Janelia Farm Research Campus, as a postdoctoral fellow from 2004 to 2007. During this time, he examined postsynaptic protein turnover using in vivo two-photon imaging. His research interests include cell biology, synaptic plasticity, and fluorescence imaging techniques.Contact: n.gray#natureny.com*
Annette Markus, Associate Editor
Annette Markus received her doctoral degree from Ruhr University in Bochum, Germany, where she studied neuronal survival signaling in the group of Rolf Heumann. She then moved to William Snider's laboratory at Washington University, St. Louis, and the University of North Carolina to investigate the mechanisms of axon growth. Her research interests include cell signaling, and molecular and developmental neuroscience.Contact: a.markus#natureny.com*
Charvy Narain, Associate Editor
Charvy Narain received her D.Phil from the University of Oxford, where she studied neural substrates for speech perception under the supervision of Susan Iversen. She continued this work as a postdoctoral researcher with Sophie Scott from University College London, and also worked as a science researcher for the BBC. Her research interests include cognitive neuroscience, especially language, as well as diseases of the nervous system, such as schizophrenia.Contact: c.narain#nature.com*
Min Cho, Assistant Editor
Min Cho received his PhD from Princeton University, where he studied the molecular mechanisms underlying mammalian learning and memory under the guidance of Joe Tsien. Using genetic engineering techniques in mice, he continued this work at Boston University before joining the Nature Neuroscience team. His research interests include cell signaling pathways, molecular neurobiology and behavior.Contact: m.cho#natureny.com*
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