Dr. Matthew C. Keller, IBG Director

Matt Keller portraitThe Institute for Behavioral Genetics is a center of excellence and outstanding accomplishment in graduate education, research training, and the creation of new research knowledge about genetic and environmental influences on human individual differences. Each year, IBG faculty fellows, researchers, and students publish upwards of one hundredÌýrefereed papers and book chapters that contribute critical new knowledge on theÌýgenetic and environmental influences on behavior. This research productivity is supported by external grants that are awarded through a highly competitive national peer review process. IBG researchers typically holdÌýmultiple individual research grants totaling around $10 million dollars per year. As much of our funding derives from the National Institutes of Health, whose budget is facing tight constraints, we may anticipate that the competition for these awards will only intensify. However, we have set ourselves a continuing goal to expand our research through interdisciplinary collaborations with academic units on the Boulder campus, across campuses, and nationally.

The Institute holds two separate training grants awarded by the National Institute on Mental Health and the National Institute on Drug Abuse. Together these awards allow the Institute to fully support 9Ìýgraduate students and 3Ìýpostdoctoral trainees in behavior genetics.ÌýIBG also hosts anÌýannual training workshops in statistical methods in human genomics research supported by the National Institute of Mental Health.

Our excellence in research and training is a consequence of the efforts of all of our faculty, staff, and students. They consistently demonstrate superbÌýscientific performance and integrity as well as the collegialityÌýthat remains a distinguishingÌýcharacteristic of IBG.

Matthew C. Keller
Director, IBG