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The Institute for Behavioral Genetics (IBG) is an organized research unit of the University of Colorado Boulder Graduate School dedicated to conducting and facilitating research on the genetic and environmental bases of individual differences in behavior.

Founded in 1967, IBG was the first institute in the world dedicated to research in behavioral genetics, and remains one of the top research facilities for research in behavioral genetics, psychiatric genetics, statistical genetics, and animal genetics. It is home to one of the nation's largest DNA repositories for research on human behavior, as well as housing a wide array of behaviorally and genetically defined lines of selected, recombinant inbred, transgenic, and knockout-gene mice. The human research currently conducted at IBG includes large-scale family, twin, and adoption studies of drug-related behaviors, cognitive abilities, personality, learning disabilities and psychopathology. The detection, localization, and identification of individual quantitative trait loci via association methods on whole-genome SNP and whole genome sequencing data is also a high priority. Laboratory animals are used to study behaviors associated with psychopathology and with alcohol abuse and nicotine dependance. For these studies, a large number of different strains and genetically selected stocks of mice are maintained in the IBG specific-pathogen-free mouse laboratory.

IBG provides training opportunities for graduate students in affiliated programs at the University of Colorado Boulder and University of Colorado at Denver. IBG receives funding from several federal agencies, principally through the National Institutes of Health, as well as a broad spectrum of Associations, Foundations and Programs. In total, 32 faculty fellows, 32 postdoctoral fellows, 21 graduate students, 58 research personnel, and 13 administrative and animal laboratory staff members work at IBG. Notable past and current faculty fellows of IBG include John DeFries, David Fulker, Lon Cardon, John Hewitt, and Steven Vandenberg.

Data collection and analysis is ongoing for several internationally renowned studies including:
 * The Colorado Adoption Project
 * The Colorado Twin Registry
 * The Colorado Learning Disabilities Research Center

Research Institutes
CU Boulder's research mission is supported by multiple research institutes within the University system. Each research institute supports faculty from multiple academic departments, allowing institutes to conduct truly multidisciplinary research. CU-Boulder's 11 research institutes account for more than half of all sponsored research dollars at the university. With more than 900 researchers, students and supporting staff, the institutes make a major contribution to the university's research and education missions as well as the local and area economy.


 * The Institute for Behavioral Genetics (IBG) is a research institute within the Graduate School dedicated to conducting and facilitating research on the genetic and environmental bases of individual differences in behavior . After its founding in 1967 IBG led the resurging interest in genetic influences on behavior. IBG was the first post-world war II research institute dedicated to research in behavioral genetics. IBG remains one of the top research facilities for research in behavioral genetics, including human behavioral genetics, psychiatric genetics, quantitative genetics, statistical genetics, and animal behavioral genetics.


 * The BioFrontiers Institute is organized around four interdisciplinary research areas: large datasets and genomics; bioimaging; new therapeutic paradigms, and regenerative biology. Scientists and engineers to work across disciplines on projects that might be outside the realm of traditional research in their area. Since its inception, research at BioFrontiers has spanned a wide range of subject areas, but the common element is taking their discoveries and extending them into real-world applications that improve human health and well-being.


 * The Institute of Behavioral Science (IBS) is a research institute within the Graduate School of the University of Colorado Boulder. Since its establishment in 1957, it has provided a setting for interdisciplinary collaborative research on problems of societal concern. IBS encourages work that transcends disciplinary boundaries, that illuminates the complexity of social behavior and social life, and that has important implications for social policy.


 * The Institute of Cognitive Science (ICS) at CU-Boulder promotes interdisciplinary research and training in cognitive science. The Institute is known for theory development and the application of those theories to real-world problems. Research within the institute can be classified into three interdisciplinary areas: a) Training and Education; b) Language Processing; c) Higher Level Cognition.


 * The Institute for Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR) is the University of Colorado's oldest research institute. It has a long history of responding to pressing environmental issues. Traditional focus has been on polar and alpine regions, where effects of global change are especially pronounced. In recent decades, its research has broadened to include environmental challenges that span local, regional, and global scales. Research topics vary widely and include Quaternary and modern environments, human and ecosystem ecology, biogeochemistry, landscape evolution, hydrology, oceanography, and climate.


 * The Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) began in 1948. It is the world’s only research institute to have sent instruments to all eight planets and Pluto. LASP combines all aspects of space exploration through our expertise in science, engineering, mission operations, and scientific data analysis. As part of CU, LASP also works to educate and train the next generation of space scientists, engineers and mission operators by integrating undergraduate and graduate students into working teams. LASP is an affiliate of CU-Boulder AeroSpace Ventures, a collaboration among aerospace-related departments, institutes, centers, government labs, and industry partners.


 * The ATLAS Institute is a center of interdisciplinary research, learning, and collaboration in engineering, creative technologies and design. Attracting researchers and students whose interests bridge the artistic and technical, the building houses the Interactive Robotics and Novel Technologies Lab, the BTU Lab hackerspace, the Laboratory for Playful Computation, the Black Box Experimental Studio and the National Center for Women and Information Technology.


 * The JILA Physics Frontier Center was founded in 1962 as a joint institute of CU Boulder and NIST. JILA one of the nation's leading research institutes in the physical sciences. Its scientists explore fundamental scientific questions about quantum physics, the design of precision optical and X-ray lasers], the principles underlying the interaction of light and matter, and processes that have governed the evolution of the Universe for nearly 14 billion years. JILA's faculty includes two Nobel laureates, Eric Cornell and John Hall, as well as three John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Fellows, Margaret Murnane, Deborah Jin, and Ana Maria Rey.


 * The Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) is dedicated to fundamental and interdisciplinary research targeted at all aspects of Earth system science and to communicating these findings to the global scientific community, to decision makers, and to the public. CIRES is a partnership of NOAA and the University of Colorado Boulder, and areas of expertise include weather and climate, changes at Earth’s poles, air quality and atmospheric chemistry, water resources, and solid Earth sciences.