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  1. jeremy.kay@duke.edu. Associate Professor of Neurobiology. 2351 Erwin Rd, Aeri 5004, Durham, NC 27705.

  2. www.neuro.duke.edu › research › faculty-labsKay Lab | Duke Neurobiology

    We study how the developing nervous system builds neural circuits. We seek to identify cellular and molecular mechanisms that generate different types of neurons, that endow them with specific identities, and that wire them together into circuits with a coherent function.

  3. Associate Professor in Ophthalmology. Associate Professor in Cell Biology. Affiliate of the Duke Regeneration Center. Associate of the Duke Initiative for Science & Society. Vitreoretinal Disease. 2351 Erwin Rd, Aeri 5004, Durham, NC 27705. Box 3802, Duec, Durham, NC 27710. jeremy.kay@duke.edu.

  4. jeremy.kay@duke.edu. Associate Professor of Neurobiology. 2351 Erwin Rd, Aeri 5004, Durham, NC 27705.

  5. Jeremy Kay lab at Duke University Wiring the retina and visual system – from development to circuit function We study how circuits devoted to specific visual processing tasks arise during development of the retina, and the consequences for visual function when development goes wrong.

  6. Articles 1–20. ‪Dept. of Neurobiology, Duke University‬ - ‪‪Cited by 3,445‬‬ - ‪Neurobiology - visual system development‬.

  7. Feb 26, 2021 · In a recent paper, published by Nature Communications, Jeremy Kay, PhD, associate professor of neurobiology and associate professor in ophthalmology, detailed a new method for identifying the mRNA isoforms produced by individual genes.

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