Skip to main content
University of Wisconsin–Madison
UW Crest
Neuroscience Training Program
  • People Expand Collapse
    • Faculty Trainers
    • Faculty Affiliates
    • Students
    • Staff
    • Alumni
  • Research Expand Collapse
    • NTP Research Overview
    • Behavioral, Cognitive, and Affective Neuroscience
    • Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
    • Development, Plasticity, and Repair
    • Neurobiology of Disease
    • Systems and Circuits
  • Prospective Students Expand Collapse
    • Welcome
    • Admissions
    • Admissions Questions (FAQs)
    • UW & City of Madison
  • Current Students Expand Collapse
    • New Student Info
    • Program Overview
    • Program Requirements
    • Handbook & Forms
    • Electives & Stats
    • NTP 900 Seminar
    • NTP Committees
    • NTP Faculty Currently Recruiting
  • Resources Expand Collapse
    • NTP Resources
    • Campus Resources
    • Victim & Survivor Resources
    • Careers in Science
    • Undergraduates
  • Outreach Expand Collapse
    • NTP Outreach
    • Outreach For Teachers
    • Lending Library
  • NTP News Expand Collapse
    • NTP News
    • Yin Neuroscience Fellowship
  • N&PP
  • Contact Us
  • Make a Gift
  1. Home
  2. NTP News
  3. NTP Faculty members, Ned Kalin and Michael Koenigs, are using high-throughput computing, or HTC, to better understand various aspects of the brain

NTP Faculty members, Ned Kalin and Michael Koenigs, are using high-throughput computing, or HTC, to better understand various aspects of the brain

Posted on February 20, 2014
Read the full article at: https://wid.wisc.edu/featured-science/mining-the-mind-high-throughput-computing-and-the-future-of-brain-research/
Posted in NTP News

Post navigation

Previous post: Giulio Tononi and Chiara Cirelli discuss how their synaptic homeostasis hypothesis of sleep or “SHY” challenges the theory that sleep strengthens brain connections
Next post: Ed Chapman discusses his lab’s discovery about how stressed neurons recover and continue communicating

Site footer content

University logo that links to main university website Part of the Universities of Wisconsin

Quick Links

  • NTP Resources
  • Admissions
  • Faculty Trainers
  • Students

Contact Us

  • 9531 WIMR II
    1111 Highland Ave.
    Madison, WI 53705
  • Map map marker
  • Email: ntp@mailplus.wisc.edu
  • Phone: 608-262-4932
    • facebook
    • linkedin
    • x twitter
    • youtube
    • instagram

Website feedback, questions or accessibility issues: ntp@mailplus.wisc.edu | Learn more about accessibility at UW–Madison.

This site was built using the UW Theme | Privacy Notice | © 2025 Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System.