
How does brain biochemistry affect what we do everyday? How do biochemical networks fit with the current idea of what makes a brain operate as a mind? What makes a brain work efficiently? How do we keep ourselves sane from a biochemical point of view? These and other questions drive work in this group. Research is largely interdisciplinary, and includes neurochemistry, neurology, physiology, pharmacology, psychology, physics, magnetic resonance and the odd equation or gene here and there.
Caroline Rae is a biochemist with a background in magnetic resonance and interdisciplinary brain research. She is a graduate of The University of Sydney, from where she has a PhD in metabolic biochemistry and magnetic resonance. She then held an Oxford Nuffield Medical Fellowship at the MRC Biochemical and Clinical Magnetic Resonance Unit in Oxford, UK where she conducted her first foray into interdisciplinary brain research in disorders as diverse as dyslexia, Duchenne muscular dystrophy and Williams syndrome. She continued in brain research on her 1997 return to Australia.
In 2005 she was appointed to UNSW as NewSouth Global Professor of Brain Sciences; a cross-faculty position which reflects her interests in combining different research approaches to study the brain.
Neurobiological aspects of obstructive sleep apnea and sleepinessNeurobiological aspects of obstructive sleep apnea and sleepiness website:www.sleepsydney.org/Research |
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