Shedding light on chemistry: Meet Laura Wimberger

By Inna Osmolovsky

Laura is a third year PhD student in the School of Chemistry. Her research focuses on photo-switches: molecules that reversibly change their structure when exposed light. These reversible structural changes can be used in the development of smart materials, to activate drug molecules or as energy storage alternatives. Laura’s research focuses on how exposure to light of certain molecules can alter the acidity (pH) level of chemical solutions. Many chemical processes are governed by acidity levels for example the functionality of enzymes in our body. Laura’s research offers a method to externally control such chemical processes with light.

Laura in the synthetic chemistry lab (left) and hiking in the Dolomites (right)

Because light is a renewable resource, understanding how to harness it interested Laura long before she started her PhD. Interestingly, her academic career started in engineering, but after a year Laura understood that this wasn’t a good match for her and despite a lot of self-doubts decided to switch to a degree in chemistry. This proved to be a much better fit for her, she enjoyed studying, met amazing friends, and later decided to pursue a master’s degree in chemistry.

When the time came to apply for a PhD, Laura decided to explore options outside of Germany, her home country. “I literally searched online for “photochemistry, Australia, PhD”, the web page of my current supervisor popped up and I contacted him”. Her, then future, supervisor was very enthusiastic, and this was how Laura came to Australia to pursue her PhD.

Laura presenting a research poster at a conference in Italy

Her day-to-day work varies with the different stages of her projects. New projects usually begin with reading and gathering information, providing Laura with an important background for the next stages. Then Laura starts off with synthesizing new molecules, analyzes how they react to light and develops models based on these measurements. Because Laura’s experiments are unique, involving irradiation while analyzing the reaction, she needs to creatively adapt existing instruments or measurement techniques, as they weren’t built to involve irradiation. She loves how variable her work is and how she gets to experience and learn new skills.

Laura is preparing samples for spectroscopic measurements (left), measuring the pH while irradiating with blue light (right).

One of the most exciting moments of Laura’s PhD was when she discovered that the light sensitive molecules she studied were able to cause a much greater change in pH than what was previously described. This experience was very validating for Laura, helping her to become more confident in her abilities as a scientist and researcher.

But Laura states that research can also be challenging – sometimes an experiment that seems very important and would determine the future of a project doesn’t work on the first go or needs some fine tuning. Laura says she learned to manage her expectations with such experiments – to approach them with patience and view them as a process rather than an end goal. Viewing these challenges as growth opportunities helps Laura to persevere.

Outside of her PhD Laura enjoys rock climbing, hiking, and spending time in nature. These activities help her both physically and mentally and are a great way to recharge from stressful weeks – climbing, especially, motivates her on bad days.

Rock climbing in the Blue Mountains

Laura joined the Women in Maths and Science Champions program to meet fellow scientists, to reconnect and establish a network, especially after two years of COVID. This experience taught her how to become a role model, how to own her voice as a scientist and how to break away from her comfort zone. In her role, she enjoyed finding creative ways to inspire girls to pursue careers in science, and to stay curious.

Follow Laura on Twitter!

The brain activities in goal-directed learning: Meet Sophia Liang

By Vina Putra

Sophia is a PhD candidate in the School of Psychology, UNSW. Her research looks into how the brain learns to perform specific actions in order to produce certain outcomes, otherwise known as goal-directed behaviour. In particular, she studies the activity of different parts of the brain to understand their role in the action-outcome learning process. Understanding the communication within the brain during this process could be the first step towards improving learning ability and addressing the learning challenges commonly seen in our aging population, especially those with dementia.

Sophia is a PhD candidate in the School of Psychology, where she studies the brain activities in learning

Throughout life, we continuously learn new things that help us achieve our goals or simply to just get things done. For example, learning to drive a car, opening a push/pull door, or operating a machine. These are known as goal-directed behaviour – when we perform action that results in desired outcome, the action-outcome relationship. While much is known about how our brain understands the action-outcome relationship after long periods of time (Matamales et al., 2020), Sophia’s work focuses on the very early stages of this learning and the areas of the brain that receives this action-outcome relationship way before it is retrieved by other regions of the brain. 

Without realising, humans learn action-outcome relationships every day. This learning consists of three main stages: 1) acquisition when we first learn the information, 2) consolidation when we remember that learning, and 3) retrieval, when we retrieve that memory so that we can perform the learned behaviour. In her research, Sophia has shown that early in the acquisition stage, the prelimbic cortex is the region responsible for how we learn that action produces an outcome. Later on, she explores another region called the dorsal hippocampus which is important in acquiring contextual information – that is, the dorsal hippocampus helps us know where it is appropriate to perform or apply those relationships. While the two regions are responsible for similar functions, they are, however, not connected at all directly in the brain. Sophia’s work investigates the possible pathways or how communication occurs between the two regions in mediating learning.

Unfortunately, in the aging population, the ability to learn action-outcome relationships deteriorate. This can become very distressing, especially for people with dementia who begin to lose their ability to learn and retain new learning memories in every aspect of life. “Understanding how the two involved regions talk to each other means that we can then start to figure out what biological components are involved, which could be important targets in the development of therapeutic or pharmaceutical alternatives for dementia patients.”, Sophia shares the excitement for the future possibility of applying her research to clinics. This is how her research becomes the first step to improving learning in aging populations.

Sophia demonstrates how our brain might work during learning in certain situations, such as when we learn to push or pull a door. The cortex is highlighted in blue and the hippocampus is highlighted in green.

Working as an allied health professional to help others heal and improve their health has always been Sophia’s purpose. This led her into pursuing science in high school, although she admitted that she disliked biology and chemistry. For her high school exam, Sophia recalled that chemistry ended up being the subject that she performed the worst at and how it affected her overall score. The surprising twist was that among the range of allied health subjects that she wanted to do after high school such as physiotherapy, speech pathology, and occupational therapy, she also listed psychology without realising that it is a science subject. Soon in her psychology degree, she found herself enjoying the research work in behavioural neuroscience, studying various drugs’ effects on nervous systems, the modulation of pathways and behaviour – being immersed in more biology and chemistry than ever before.

In her second-year undergraduate study, Sophia received the UNSW Summer Science Vacation Scholarship which allowed her to experience research in social psychology early on. Under the mentorship of Professor Lisa Williams, Sophia worked on a collaborative project with the Red Cross Blood Donation Centre where she investigated how emotions shape the experience of first-time blood donors and influence their return rate for future donation (Williams et al., 2018).

Sophia’s journey to her current research started from her fascination with the possibility in manipulating the brain. When she joined Prof. Bernard Balleine’s lab as an honour’s student, Sophia learned the techniques of turning on/off specific regions in the brain. This process typically involves injecting a virus that causes the brain to express certain receptor proteins that can later be activated by a specific drug. When the virus is injected into specific brain regions, the virus makes receptors multiply, and the receptors will only be activated with a certain drug – clozapine (commonly used) – injected at a certain timepoint, resulting in brain regions turning on/off. This then translates to changes in behaviour that can be monitored to support the relevant hypothesis.

Sophia (second from left) and her team working with an animal model in the lab

Going back to her honour’s year, Sophia was looking to turning on the region called the orbitofrontal cortex, hypothesised to be involved in learning some actions that produce no outcome. The increased activity of this region is shown in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) where they compulsively perform actions even though they learn no outcomes would appear (Ursu & Carter, 2009). Sophia used animal models and train them on action-outcome relationships for a period of time before removing the outcome. She then observed whether animals with increased activity in the orbitofrontal cortex would still perform the actions, even if they get no reward. Sophia then continued working as a research assistant in Prof. Bailleine’s lab, working on a project that closely links to her now PhD research. Using the same virus-mediated brain manipulation technique in rats, she turned off the dorsal hippocampus region and trained those rats on action-outcome relationships to study the pathways in goal-directed learning.

Sophia (top row, second from left) enjoys playing OzTag with her team

Sophia enjoys many things that come with being a PhD candidate such as teaching undergraduate psychology courses, mentoring honours students, and seeing new findings emerge from her experiments. Apart from science, Sophia also loves history, and she always finds the chance to visit museums and historical sites wherever she travels, to learn about the different stories and the people of that area. She also enjoys watching movies and playing OzTag – her favourite ways to have a break and have fun.

As a champion, Sophia’s advice to young women who would like to pursue science is, “Don’t doubt yourself! Even if you don’t do well in science in school, it should not stop you from having career goals in science. The important thing is if you are passionate about something, go for it because you will adapt, learn, and grow.”

Follow Sophia on Twitter @SophiaLiang_