People

Cristopher Niell


Professor, Department of Biology and Institute of Neuroscience
I have spent most of my research career studying the development and function of neural circuits in the visual system. As a graduate student in Dr. Stephen Smith’s lab at Stanford University, I used two-photon imaging in the zebrafish optic tectum to study both functional receptive field properties and the developmental processes of growth and synapse formation. I then began work on the mouse visual cortex, in the lab of Dr. Michael Stryker at UC San Francisco, utilizing the mouse as genetic model system to investigate aspects of cortical organization and development. In my lab at University of Oregon, we are focused on understanding visual processing from the level of individual neurons up to brain-wide pathways, particularly in the context of behavior and different brain states.
Curriculum Vitae
Contact: cniell (at) uoregon (dot) edu

Angelique Allen

Angelique Allen
Graduate Student
The camera-like eye found in humans and octopuses presents a classic example of convergent evolution. Despite this similarity, there are dramatic differences in the brain structures that process visual information. My research currently focuses on how the functional organization of the octopus brain processes polarized light, with a future goal of investigating how their perception and neural circuity gives rise to complex behaviors such as camouflage. Additionally, I aim to share my passion for making discoveries through being curious by bringing octopuses into classrooms and introducing students to the growing world of cephalopod neurobiology.
contact: vallen (at) uoregon (dot) edu

Denise Piscopo


Research scientist
My background is in molecular biology and genetics, and I was introduced to neuroscience studying spine plasticity and addiction in Dr. Linda Wilbrecht’s lab. As a long-term research scientist in the Niell lab, my goal is to implement and apply novel techniques to enable studies of visual system function and plasticity. I previously generated a GCaMP6 mouse line that is now in wide use and performed a large-scale characterization of visual responses in mouse dLGN.  I am currently studying the role of cortex in ethological behavior in mice, and the impact of environmental experience on natural visual processing.
Contact: dpiscopo (at) uoregon (dot) edu

Judit Pungor


Postdoctoral Researcher
My research focuses on exploring the functional organization of the visual system of the octopus. Octopuses rely on their keen sense of sight for most everything in their lives, from prey capture and predator evasion, to camouflaging and finding mates. They have a camera-like eye as vertebrates do, which emerged in a stunning case of convergent evolution. While we know a bit about the structural organization of their visual systems, little is known about its functional organization. Using a combination of calcium imaging and tract tracing techniques, I aim to identify what features of the visual world octopuses extract and utilize, and how this visual information is disseminated to higher order processing centers in their central brain.
Contact: jpungor (at) uoregon (dot) edu

Issac Rhim

Issac Rhim
Postdoctoral Researcher
Our brains are remarkable at making continuous decisions based on sensory input, often seamlessly. Even in a simple task, such as walking on a trail, we are able to instantaneously decode the visual space before us and move our feet to propel ourselves forward. However, how the brain effectively translates sensory evidence into actionable outcomes is not well understood. Using vision as the sensory model for information processing, I’m interested in the (1) involvement of the visual cortex in encoding and decoding behavior-relevant features and (2) the neural mechanisms that underlie sensory-to-action translation downstream. To this end, I employ a combination of behavioral assays, electrophysiology, 2-photon microscopy, wide-field calcium imaging, intrinsic signal imaging, genetic tools, and computational methods.
contact: irhim (at) uoregon (dot) edu

Shelby Sharp


Graduate Student
My research focuses on a central interest of Niell Lab: the relationship between movement and visual processing. Studying vision in head-fixed conditions greatly constrains the animal’s ability to interact with the visual environment, and may thereby limit our understanding of the visual system. My work focuses on comparing head-fixed visual responses to those during natural locomotion in visual cortex and superior colliculus in mice. Additionally, I am interested in functional cell types in both V1 and SC and how they are modulated by natural locomotion; specifically suppressed-by-contrast cells in V1, and wide-field and narrow-field cells in SC.  I’m using electrophysiological recordings as well as eye and body movement tracking during head-fixation and free movement to explore these questions. This work will improve our understanding of the computations that occur during natural vision.
Contact: ssharp3@uoregon.edu

Jhoseph Shin

Postdoctoral researcher
Sensory processing requires detecting and identifying relevant stimuli in a dynamic, complex environment. However, the neural bases of these computations are still unclear because sensory perception has been examined typically by presenting isolated features such as a grating visual bar. My goal is to understand how the brain extracts relevant information from the noisy world, particularly by studying the rodent’s primary visual cortex and superior colliculus in a natural behavior setting. Prior to joining Niell Lab as a post-doc, I did my Ph.D. in Dr. Inah Lee’s lab at Seoul National University, where I performed in vivo electrophysiology to study how the hippocampus updates representations based on visual changes in the environment.
Contact: jhosephs (at) uoregon (dot) edu

Michael Sidikpramana

Graduate student
A central aim of the Niell lab is to further our understanding of vision in the context of naturalistic behavior. My project in the Niell lab focuses on visually guided locomotion, specifically how skillful movement through cluttered environments emerges from the continuous interaction between an agent and its environment. This ability to avoid objects in one’s environment is a highly conserved cognitive process found across many species. The visual scene holds information critical for object avoidance and some of this information can only be accessed as the visual scene changes when one moves through the environment. By studying how freely moving mice navigate cluttered environments, I aim to elucidate what features of the visual scene aid object avoidance and how these features are represented in the brain. This work will provide a better understanding of how vision is used in the context of natural behavior.
Contact: msidikpr@uoregon.edu

Rolf Skyberg

Postdoctoral researcher
I am currently a postdoctoral fellow in the Niell lab, where I study the temporal structure of neural responses in the visual cortex of freely moving and naturally behaving mice. Throughout my research career I have focused on studying the development, maintenance and function of sensory circuits throughout the brain. As a graduate student, working under the direction of Dr. David Hill at UVA, I investigated the contributions of sensory experience in driving the anatomical and physiological development of subcortical gustatory circuits that are critical for regulating feeding and motivated behaviors (see 1 and 2). After graduate school I began my first postdoctoral position in the lab of Dr. Jianhua Cang at UVA, where I used electrophysiological approaches to study how visual neurons dynamically shift their spatial frequency preferences (i.e. coarse-to-fine processing) to enable more efficient representations of complex stimuli, like ethologically relevant natural scenes (see 3). Most recently, I have joined the Niell lab at UO to study how these temporally dynamic processes are engaged in naturally behaving, freely moving mice; as well as how they might be disrupted during altered perceptual and cognitive states, such as ones generated by hallucinogens.

Contact: rskyberg (at) uoregon (dot) edu

Jeremea Songco


Graduate student
Octopuses rely on vision for a range of behaviors—from navigating underwater to camouflaging with their surroundings. While these animals can be perceived as the “aliens” of marine life, they remarkably have camera-like eyes (like ours) with anatomically similar structures. This prime example of convergent evolution raises the question of whether the octopus and vertebrate visual systems are similar at the neural circuit and molecular level, or whether cephalopods evolved novel circuits for visual processing. To address this, my research combines single cell RNA-sequencing techniques with fluorescence in situ hybridization to determine cellular identities in the octopus visual system based on molecular signatures and spatial expression patterns. In addition to appreciating diversity in model organisms and cell identities, I am also actively involved in promoting equity and inclusion through graduate student organizations, such as A Community for Minorities in STEM and Womxn in Neuroscience  Through social events, scholarship opportunities, and science communication outlets, these organizations facilitate community integration and foster productive conversations on race and gender disparities in STEM.
Contact: jsongco (at) uoregon (dot) edu

Previous Members

Elliott Abe
Graduate Student
Current: Postdoc, Univ of Washington (Bing Brunton lab)

Philip Parker
Postdoctoral Fellow
Current: Assistant Professor, Rutgers University

Emmalyn Leonard
Undergraduate researcher
Current: Graduate student, Stanford

Dylan Martins
Undergraduate researcher
Current: Graduate student, UC Santa Barbara

Angie Michaiel
Graduate Student
Currently: Science Fellow, Kavli Foundation

Mandi Severson
Lab Manager
Currently: Graduate student, UT Austin

Ian Etherington
Research associate
Currently: Graduate student, Yale

Hannah Bishop
Postdoctoral Researcher
Currently : Teaching faculty, University of Oregon

Johanna Tomorsky
Graduate Student
Currently: Post-doc, Stanford (Shatz lab)

Jennifer Hoy
Postdoctoral Researcher
Currently : Associate Professor, University of Nevada – Reno

Joseph Wekselblatt
Graduate Student
Currently: Post-doc, Caltech (Doris Tsao lab)

Wayne Tschetter
Postdoctoral Researcher
Currently: Assistant Professor, Concordia University