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Core Services

The primary objective of the Waisman Center Intellectual & Developmental Disabilities Research Center's Core Services is to provide core support and facilities for cohesive, interdisciplinary research and research training. Funds for the research projects using these core facilities come from independent sources including federal, state, and private organizations.

To view powerpoint presentations on our scientific Core Services please click here.

To view an overview of all Core Services click here.

The Waisman Center cores include:

Administrative Core
The Administrative Core is the nucleus of the Waisman Center IDDRC. It provides the scientific, administrative, and fiscal leadership of the center, and supports core projects’ needs for communications expertise and computing security.
Learn more about the Administrative Core.
Research Participation
The RPC was created to assist IDDRC investigators, especially those studying human behavior, in recruiting research participants and performing behavioral assessments. Additionally, the RPC has recently expanded its services to include specialized computer programming applications and advanced statistical analysis consultation and support.
Visit the Research Participation Core web site.
Brain Imaging
The Brain Imaging Core is central to the integration of behavioral and biological research at the Waisman Center IDDRC. Intellectual and developmental disabilities, whether resulting from environmental factors or genetic factors, involve a pathological alteration of brain structure and/or function. Examination of such alterations is critical to our understanding of the causal pathways from environmental or genetic processes to behavioral outcome and for the development of preventive or ameliorative interventions.
Visit the Brain Imaging Core web site.
Rodent Models
The Rodent Models Core provides technical support for the generation and characterization of transgenic and knockout strains of mice, access to expensive behavioral equipment for mice and rats that can be shared among several investigators, and expertise in the behavioral phenotyping of mouse and rat models of MRDD and related disorders of the CNS. In addition, the core is responsible for the care, feeding, and record-keeping related to the use of mice and rats by IDDRC projects and the maintenance of specific rodent models of development, developmental disabilities, and neurodegenerative diseases.
Learn more about the Rodent Models Core.
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
This core responds to a growing demand for services and specialized equipment needed to conduct studies at the cellular and molecular levels on human and animal tissues. The services include training in use of advanced techniques and equipment including confocal and fluorescence imaging, stereology, FACS analysis, and gene chip and real-time PCR quantitation of mRNA levels. In addition, the core has implemented an iPSC (induced Pluripotent Stem Cell) sub-core that contains all necessary equipment for the derivation, culture and storage of pluripotent stem cells.
Visit the Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience Core web site.
 

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