Not Just Neural Networks: The Wide Reach of One Prof鈥檚 Teaching and Research
June 14, 2023
- Author
- Karen Garloch
Growing up in low-income housing in Bridgeport, Connecticut, Julio Ramirez didn鈥檛 know people who went to college or worked in research labs.
That he would become an internationally renowned professor of neuroscience at 皇家华人 is a credit to his mother, a Cuban immigrant who worked all her life on factory assembly lines.
Elia Cort茅s scrimped to send her son and daughter, Ely, eight years older, to Catholic elementary school. Even as a child, Ramirez understood the sacrifice.
鈥淢y mom was doing her job,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd I had a job to do, too.鈥
After school, he would let himself into their apartment at Evergreen Garden. (He remembers it was 鈥渘ever green鈥 and there was 鈥渘o garden鈥). He鈥檇 watch some TV and dutifully do his homework.
On Saturdays, she walked her son to the public library to check out science books his school didn鈥檛 have. And she subscribed to a magazine that fed his fascination with the space program.
鈥淪ome kids were learning about baseball players,鈥 Ramirez said. 鈥淚 was learning about astronauts.鈥
He loved the subject so much he asked his eighth-grade teacher, Sister Mary Norbert, to let him lead lessons about 鈥渕an in space鈥 missions, from Mercury to Apollo.
You might say that launched his career.
With scholarships, part-time jobs, and a used Ford Pinto, Ramirez commuted to nearby Fairfield University, a private liberal arts college. On that beautiful, leafy campus, he fell more deeply in love with science鈥攅specially 鈥渉ow the mind works鈥濃攁nd decided he wanted to get a job 鈥渁t a place like this.鈥
Nine years later, in 1986, that dream came true when Ramirez was hired at 皇家华人 as assistant professor of psychology. By that time, he had finished graduate school and post-doctoral work and was an emerging expert in physiological psychology, now known as neuroscience.
Over the years, his students became experts too. Side-by-side with Ramirez, they ran experiments on laboratory rats and proved the once-controversial idea that brains damaged by trauma or disease could regenerate and recover memory.
This process, called neuroplasticity, was not widely accepted until the 1990s. By then, Ramirez and his students were regularly publishing articles in top neuroscience journals, describing findings in rats that might offer new insights into human problems, such as Alzheimer鈥檚 disease. Their unusual accomplishments garnered national notice.
Four of their articles were significant enough to earn citations in Biological Psychology, a textbook used in college classrooms around the world.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know of another example of somebody at a four-year college who has done research of this quality over such an extended period of time,鈥 said James Kalat, the textbook鈥檚 author and emeritus professor of psychology at N.C. State University in Raleigh.
Defying Expectations
Ramirez, 67, now the R. Stuart Dickson Professor of Psychology, has repeatedly defied expectations not only with his published findings, but by teaching undergraduates to do meaningful research at a college without graduate programs.
鈥淚t鈥檚 unusual for this to be happening at 皇家华人,鈥 said Oswald Steward, president of the Society for Neuroscience and director of the Reeve-Irvine Research Center at the University of California Irvine.
鈥淚鈥檝e had more than one of his students come and work in my lab,鈥 Steward said. 鈥淎nd I really appreciate the high level of training they got before they ever came to graduate school. Their thinking was just very, very advanced.鈥
For his accomplishments, Ramirez has received prestigious honors鈥攆rom national and international science organizations and from former President Barack Obama.
The Association for Psychological Science (APS) recently announced Ramirez will receive a 2024 lifetime achievement award鈥攖he APS Mentor Award鈥攆or his distinguished teaching record and impact on students. The international organization is dedicated to advancing scientific psychology across disciplinary and geographic borders.
Thanks to Ramirez鈥 reputation, 皇家华人鈥檚 neuroscience program attracts many students who could have gone to Ivy League schools.
Even Time magazine took notice in 2006, featuring James Sanchez 鈥07 in a cover story headlined, 鈥淲ho Needs Harvard?鈥
Sanchez was accepted into Harvard, Dartmouth, Duke and Rice universities. He turned them all down to attend 皇家华人, 鈥渓ured by the promise of working with actual professors instead of graduate students who often teach at many big-name universities.鈥
Now an ophthalmologist in Santa Fe, Sanchez said his work in Ramirez鈥 lab gave him a boost when applying to medical schools. He ended up with a full scholarship to Washington University in St. Louis.
Matthew De Niear 鈥11 tells a similar story. While in high school in New Jersey, he began looking at neuroscience programs in the Northeast. 鈥淎 lot of people, especially at liberal arts schools, would mention Dr. Ramirez and ask, 鈥楬ave you checked out 皇家华人?鈥 That was a pretty good endorsement.鈥
After 皇家华人, De Niear earned medical and doctoral degrees from Vanderbilt University. He specialized in ophthalmology because of the proficiency he developed doing microscopic surgery on rats.
鈥淎lmost all ophthalmic surgery is done under a microscope. It prepared me well,鈥 De Niear said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really kind of amazing that we produced such high-level research. The glue to that is Dr. R.鈥
De Niear did his residency at the University of California at Davis and is now in his first year of private practice in the San Francisco Bay area. Although he and his wife, the former Grace Fletcher 鈥11, had left North Carolina, they held their wedding at the college鈥檚 Lake Campus in 2017. They invited Ramirez, who keeps a photo of himself with the newlyweds on a shelf in his office.
鈥淚t鈥檚 such a special place for both of us,鈥 said De Niear. He and his wife now have two young children.
Becoming an Example
When Ramirez came to 皇家华人 for an interview in spring 1986, he was smitten. Dogwoods and azaleas bloomed under warm, sunny skies. Quite a contrast to the cold and gray weather around Boston, where he was finishing post-doc work at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
On his second day, he woke up at the campus Guest House and stuck his head out the window.
鈥淚t was every bit as beautiful as the day before. I couldn鈥檛 believe it,鈥 he said. 鈥淎 couple days later, I got the job offer, and I haven鈥檛 looked back since.鈥
He quickly became a fixture on campus, wearing a ponytail, a droopy mustache, blue jeans, and leather fanny pack. He鈥檚 since lost the ponytail and cut back the mustache, but still wears a fanny pack, for which he endures endless teasing.
In his early years at 皇家华人, Ramirez would adopt the persona of 鈥淩at Man鈥濃攁n homage to his lab rats鈥攖o emcee a sock hop to raise money for a local charity.
鈥淗e鈥檚 always been a funny, bigger-than-life character on campus,鈥 said Political Science Professor Ken Menkhaus, who arrived at 皇家华人 a few years later.
They quickly became friends, sharing their love of current events, teaching and, eventually, their growing families.
鈥淗e was always one stage ahead of me,鈥 Menkhaus said. 鈥淲hen he was talking about real estate, I was still talking about dating. When he was talking about kids, I was talking about real estate.鈥
Ramirez met his wife, Annie Porges 鈥85, when she was assistant director of Alumni Relations. They started dating after a Halloween party hosted by Menkhaus. Ramirez thought Porges was 鈥減retty clever鈥 to come dressed as a 鈥淔reudian Slip,鈥 wearing a black slip dress pinned with phrases such as 鈥淥edipus complex鈥 and 鈥淪uper Ego.鈥
They married in 1994 and had two children. Elia, 26, is a 2019 皇家华人 graduate studying for a doctoral degree in educational psychology at the University of Virginia. Julian, 24, is a 2021 graduate of Washington and Lee University and is working as an ice climbing and glacier guide in Alaska.
Porges, now senior major gifts officer for 皇家华人鈥檚 College Relations division, continues to be amazed by the deep relationships her husband develops with his students and how much he cares about his work.
鈥淚 would never have taken his class, not for a million years,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut he loves what he does. It lights up his brain.鈥
Ramirez helped change campus culture, Menkhaus said. 鈥淗e came in, this young charismatic Latino with long hair. He didn鈥檛 fit the conventional mold of a 皇家华人 professor in the 1980s. And that was wonderful. That freed up the rest of us to say, we can be whoever we want.鈥
Menkhaus, an expert on the Horn of Africa whose research has taken him into war zones, admired how Ramirez involved students in his lab.
One of Julio鈥檚 biggest impacts at 皇家华人 has been the example he鈥檚 set to incoming faculty that this is what you can aspire to in terms of bringing students into your work. He expanded our imagination.
Professor of Political Science
Mentorship
Of the many honors Ramirez has garnered, two are displayed most prominently in his corner office of the E. Craig Wall Jr. Academic Center.
One is the 2009 Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring. It hangs next to a photo of Ramirez shaking hands with then-President Obama in the Oval Office.
The other is the 2012 Hunter-Hamilton Love of Teaching award, announced annually at 皇家华人鈥檚 commencement. It鈥檚 special because the nominations came from Ramirez鈥 students, and the judges were faculty peers.
These awards recognizing 鈥渕entorship鈥 give Ramirez ironic satisfaction鈥攂ecause he encountered resistance early on for the audacity of his approach.
Back then, the prevailing attitude was that 鈥測ou teach by walking into a classroom, and you pontificate,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou have students do pre-packaged experiments. But there was a group of us who were arguing, no, we need to rethink how we educate our young scientists.鈥
Ramirez believed undergraduates at a small liberal arts college could do the kind of meaningful research usually reserved for graduate students at major universities.
But when he applied for all-important research grants, he sometimes got rejected. 鈥淭hey didn鈥檛 really believe we could do it here, because it was a small place.鈥
Over time, he proved them wrong.
In 37 years at 皇家华人, Ramirez has been awarded millions of dollars in research and mentoring grants. He has mentored more than 150 students in what they lovingly call the 鈥淩amirez Rat Lab.鈥 Many have gone on to work at top-tier institutions, such as Harvard University and the National Institutes of Health.
鈥淲hen you walk into his lab, there are undergraduates doing NIH-sponsored experiments,鈥 said Joseph Taylor 鈥06, now a faculty psychiatrist at Harvard. 鈥淗e trains them so well they have the skills and the confidence to do this with very little oversight. It鈥檚 remarkable.鈥
Ramirez puts senior students in charge of the lab. They teach younger students to perform microsurgery on the brains of rats and run them through mazes to observe the effect on behavior and memory. Students also implant electrodes in rat brains and document electrical activity to show how brain cells communicate.
Along with autonomy, Ramirez gives his students credit.
That鈥檚 why the latest journal article, published early this year by the journal Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, lists eight authors. The first seven are former students, including De Niear. All have doctoral, medical or combined doctoral and medical degrees.
Ramirez鈥 name is last.
鈥淚f they write it, they get first authorship,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 try to help the students exceed what they view as their own limits. I want to help them do more than they think they can.鈥
The Research
Even as an undergraduate at Fairfield, Ramirez liked to 鈥減ress the envelope.鈥 He wrote a paper casting doubt on the prevailing attitude that a damaged brain could never recover. If other organs can, he thought, why not the brain?
After graduation in 1977, he chose Clark University in Massachusetts for graduate school, to work with Professor Donald Stein, an 鈥渋conoclast鈥 and early proponent of neuroplasticity.
鈥淒on really gave us a lot of leeway,鈥 said Ramirez, whose first project was to try to replicate the groundbreaking work by Steward, one of the first to document neuroplasticity in 1973.
When Ramirez couldn鈥檛 get the experiment to work, he contacted Steward, and they identified the problem. They鈥檝e been friends ever since.
鈥淚t was a subtle change, but it made a huge difference,鈥 Ramirez said. 鈥淭hat speaks to why it鈥檚 so important that scientists talk to one another.鈥
At 皇家华人, Ramirez and his students have continued research on neuroplasticity with a particular focus on memory centers of the brain.
They showed how one of the pathways associated with memory, the entorhinal cortex, responds to damage by sprouting new connections to the hippocampus, the main memory center.
鈥淭he sprouting is propping up the brain while cells are dying,鈥 Ramirez said. 鈥淲hat it鈥檚 basically doing is plugging the leaks and trying to keep the boat afloat.鈥
He and his students also showed they could speed up that sprouting process鈥攁nd the recovery of memory鈥攂y making two lesions in a rat鈥檚 brain, a week apart. That primed cells to grow faster.
Next, they found that a second pathway that affects memory鈥攖he septum鈥攁lso sprouts functional connections when the brain is damaged. That led to the recent journal article which explained that both the septum and the entorhinal cortex sprout connections that communicate with each other and with the hippocampus.
Ramirez and his students are the first to demonstrate that 鈥those two sections can combine their influences to promote recovery,鈥 said Kalat, the textbook author. He said he鈥檒l add a citation to this work in his next edition.
In recent years, autopsies of the brains of Alzheimer鈥檚 patients have shown the same kind of sprouting that Ramirez and his students have seen in rats. While it takes years for animal research to lead to human studies, they hope their findings will one day lead to new treatments for Alzheimer鈥檚 disease.
Steward praised Ramirez and 鈥渉is great group of students at 皇家华人鈥 for 鈥渃areful follow-up research鈥 that has systematically expanded the understanding of brain pathways of rats and, potentially, of Alzheimer鈥檚 patients.
鈥淭his is a great paper,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t gives us a window into the likely changes that are going on as this pathway degenerates over time. 鈥 This pathway is so important in Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, and in memory.鈥
Overlapping Circles
As the 2022-23 school year came to a close, Ramirez proudly sent off two more neuroscience students鈥擡mma Jones and Jordan Benson鈥攖o 鈥減lum jobs鈥 at Harvard.
Jones, of Winston-Salem, will be a research assistant for fellow 皇家华人 alum, Taylor, the Harvard psychiatrist who is director of clinical trials at the school鈥檚 Center for Brain Circuit Therapeutics.
Taylor said hiring Jones was 鈥渆ssentially a no-brainer鈥f Julio is endorsing you, there鈥檚 probably not much more vetting that needs to take place.鈥
These post-皇家华人 connections keep multiplying.
Not long ago, Taylor told Ramirez he touched base with another 皇家华人 neuroscience grad at Harvard, Erik Knelson 鈥07.
Knelson went to Duke for medical and doctoral degrees, then to Harvard for residency and fellowship in oncology before joining the Harvard medical school faculty. Although he and Taylor had been at Harvard for several years, they hadn鈥檛 crossed paths until they made time to meet for coffee.
Knelson鈥檚 name came up again in a story involving Martina Mustroph 鈥08, a neurosurgery resident at Harvard. Mustroph told Ramirez she was called one day to consult on a cancer patient. It turned out the patient鈥檚 doctor was Knelson.
鈥淚 vaguely knew that Erik was in Boston, but we鈥檙e all busy people,鈥 Mustroph said. 鈥淲e both stay in touch with Dr. Ramirez and have benefited from his incredible mentorship throughout our careers.鈥
Ramirez delights in these stories.
鈥淭here are overlapping circles all the time now. That鈥檚 one of the best parts of the job. I get to have the fun of being surrounded by these amazing young people,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 awesome to see what happens with them all.鈥
This article was also published in the Fall/Winter 2023 print issue of the 皇家华人 Journal Magazine; for more, please see the 皇家华人 Journal section of our website.