Draft:Christoph Schreiner

Christoph E. Schreiner
Born
Christoph Eberhard Heinrich Schreiner

(1950-02-18) February 18, 1950 (age 74)
Zernien, Germany
EducationUniversity of Göttingen (Masters, PhD, MD)
Max-Planck-Institute, Göttingen and University of California, San Francisco (post-doctoral)
Medical career
ProfessionAuditory Neuroscience
InstitutionsUniversity of California, San Francisco
ResearchBasic and clinical sciences of hearing
Awards2000 Thomas Alva Edison Patent Award[1], 2022 ARO Award of Merit[2]

Christoph E. Schreiner is a German-American neuroscientist and Professor of Otolaryngology at the University of California, San Francisco. He researches the functional organization of the central auditory system in the mammalian brain to understand the encoding of complex sounds, such as speech and communication signals, in normal and hearing impaired models. He described the response properties and topographical organization of neurons in the mammalian auditory cortex[3][4][5]. He received the 2022 Association for Research in Otolaryngology Award of Merit[2] for illuminating "many key aspects of auditory cortical information processing and their subcortical origins."

Early life and education

Schreiner grew up in Zernien, Germany. His father was the local doctor. Schreiner attended the same medical school, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen. He also obtained a Doctor of Philosophy in Physics, working under Prof. Manfred R. Schroeder, who was a faculty member at the Third Institute of Physics at the Georg-August-Universität Göttingen and studied real-world acoustics problems in speech, hearing, and concert hall acoustics. Schreiner combined his interests in human physiology and acoustics to research auditory psychophysics phenomena from the perspective of the biophysics and physiology of the sensory nervous system.

In 1977, Schreiner began training in auditory physiology during his first postdoctoral position in Göttingen at the Max Planck Institute lab of Prof. Otto Creutzfeldt. Schreiner published his first auditory cortex paper on the “Thalamocortical transformation of responses to complex auditory stimuli” in 1980[6].

Career in auditory neuroscience

After completing his training in 1980, Schreiner was sent by Creutzfeldt to do a short postdoc with Michael M. Merzenich in California to broaden his auditory neurophysiology experience before returning to lead an Auditory Group at Max Planck. What was initially just a one-year fellowship eventually became a 30 year collaboration studying the organization of sound feature representations in the cortex, as well as the mechanisms and therapeutic applications of cortical plasticity.

Schreiner spent his entire academic career in the UCSF Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery[7]. He started as an Assistant Research Physiologist in 1984 and rose through the University of California academic ranks[8] to reach Professor in Residence in 1996, and to Professor in 2007. He served as Vice-Chair of the Department from 2004-2019. He also held the position of Professor in Bioengineering & Therapeutic Sciences[9] from 2009-2024.

Schreiner has published over 140 articles[10].

Research

Functional cortical organization

A large part of Schreiner’s research focused on understanding how the auditory cortex in rodents, cats, and new world monkeys is organized. Electrophysiological mapping studies across various areas within the auditory cortex revealed a number of organizational principles and neuroanatomical correlates for temporal and spectral components of sounds[4][5][11][12][13] superimposed on or in addition to the well-known tonotopic organization.

Along with his long-time collaborator Dr. Jeff Winer[14], Schreiner published a reference on the Auditory Cortex in 2011[15].

Functional midbrain and thalamus organization

Schreiner's research demonstrated that spectral and temporal response properties and spatial organization in the inferior colliculus[16][17] and the medial geniculate nucleus[6][18][19] show distinct differences from cortical neurons, giving rise to a neural coding transformation as sound information ascends the auditory neuraxis.

Schreiner and Winer published a comprehensive reference on the Inferior Colliculus[20] in 2005.

Cortical plasticity

Another dimension of Schreiner's research has been to uncover the expressions and mechanisms of experience-induced representational plasticity in core auditory cortex, including for sound frequency, amplitude modulation, frequency modulation, and sound intensity[21][22][23][24][25]. Specific interactions between excitatory and inhibitory inputs, modulated by release of neurotransmitters such as acetylcholine underlie rapid plastic changes of receptive fields and result in behaviorally testable changes in psychophysical performance.

Complex auditory receptive fields

Schreiner's lab expanded the computational tool set for characterizing nonlinear properties of central auditory responses. Using information-theoretic approaches and variations on the spike-triggered receptive field approach, they demonstrated that central, especially cortical, receptive fields require a more complex, multi-dimensional description to capture their processing than most midbrain or thalamic neurons[26][27][28][29][30].

Hearing impairment effects in cortex

Schreiner and colleagues published several studies on the effect of electrical cochlear stimulation on the evoked activity in cortical neurons in animal models and on the expression of tinnitus in implant patients[31][32][33][34].

Academic service

Schreiner was funded by the National Institutes of Health for over 30 years. As a U.S. government-funded principal investigator, he reviewed NIH grants as a member of the AUD study section of the Center for Scientific Review[35] and chaired it from 2005-2007. He served on the Advisory Council[36] for the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (2016-2019) and was a member of the Multi Council Workgroup[37] for the BRAIN Initiative.

Internationally, he has been the chair of the Scientific Advisory Board for the Cluster of Excellence "Hearing4All" program in Oldenburg, Germany[38] since 2011. He has also served on the editorial board for Hearing Research, Experimental Brain Research, and was an Associate Editor for the Journal of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology[39] and the journal Audiology & Neuro-Otology[40].

Trainees

Schreiner advised or co-advised 22 doctoral students, and 25 post-doctoral fellows.

List of Trainees
DatesNameProgram or SchoolRole
1979 - 1981Thomas LewienUniversity of GöttingenPhD advisor
1980 - 1983Helmut SpennerUniversity of MünsterPhD advisor
1987 - 1989Thomas ChimentoSpeech and Hearing Science doctoral programPhD advisor
1989 - 1990Gregg RecanzoneNeuroscience doctoral programPhD advisor
1987 - 1991Mitchell SutterBioengineering doctoral programPhD advisor
1989 - 1992David MorledgeSpeech and Hearing doctoral programPhD advisor
1990 - 1995Barbara CalhounBioengineering Doctoral ProgramPhD advisor
1990 - 1993Diane KeelingSpeech and Hearing doctoral programPhD advisor
1990 - 1992Marcia RaggioSpeech and Hearing Doctoral ProgramPhD co-advisor
1989 - 1991Tony SahleyBioengineering Doctoral ProgramPhD advisor
1992 - 1998Sarah WongSpeech and Hearing doctoral programPhD advisor
1995 - 2001Lee MillerBioengineering Doctoral ProgramPhD advisor
1997 - 2000Monty EscabiBioengineering Doctoral ProgramPhD advisor
2000 - 2006Andrew TanNeuroscience Doctoral ProgramPhD advisor
2001 - 2007Craig AtencioBioengineering Doctoral ProgramPhD advisor
2003 - 2008Marc HeiserNeuroscience Doctoral ProgramPhD advisor
2006 - 2012Jonathan ShihBioengineering Doctoral ProgramPhD advisor
2008 - 2014Patrick HullettBioengineering Doctoral ProgramPhD advisor
2010 - 2015Bryan SeyboldNeuroscience Doctoral ProgramPhD advisor
2010 - 2014Andrew SaxePsychology Doctoral Program - StanfordPhD co-advisor
2014 - 2020Jermyn SeeNeuroscience Doctoral ProgramPhD advisor
2019 - presentCongcong HuNeuroscience Doctoral ProgramPhD advisor
1980 - 1982John V. Urbas, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1988 - 1988William McKerrow, FRCSPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1989 - 1989Joseph Toner, FRCSPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1987 - 1988Julie Mendelson, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1987 - 1988Philip Joris, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1988 - 1989Aniruddha Das, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1989 - 1990Roland Gerlach, MDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1988 - 1990Keli Cao, MDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1992 - 1993Katharina Krüger, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1992 - 1993Ekkehard Schulze-Krüger, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1991 - 1995Xiaoqin Wang, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1993 - 1995Michael Brosch, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1995 - 1998Srikantan Nagarajan, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1995 - 2001Ben Bonham, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1996 - 2001Heather Read, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1996 - 2003Mark Kvale, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1996 - 1998Haggai Attias, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1997 - 1999Suman Kumar, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1997 - 2000Purvis Bedenbaugh, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision[
1998 - 1999Amir Akhavan, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
1999 - 2000Benoit Goddey, MD, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2000 - 2008Kazuo Imaizumi, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2001 - 2004Benedicte Philibert, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2001 - 2004Robert Liu, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2001 - 2004Jennifer Linden, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2002 - 2005Daniel Polley, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2003 - 2006Ching-Ling Teng, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2005 - 2010Robert Froemke, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2006 - 2012Kexin Yuan, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2007 - 2012Craig Atencio, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2008 - 2009Sandeep Manyam, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2014 - 2015Sungchil Yan, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2016 - presentNatsumi Homma, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2016 - 2020Kyunghee Kim, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2017 - 2022Joshua Downer, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2020 - 2021Reza Amanipour, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2020 - 2021Jermyn See, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision
2021 - presentMina Sagedhi Najafabadi, PhDPost-Doc researcherResearch Supervision

Personal life

While working in the Coleman Laboratory at UCSF with Michael M. Merzenich, he met cochlear implant team audiologist, Marcia Raggio. He and Raggio were married in San Francisco in 1988. He became stepfather to Marcia’s son, Noah, and their daughter Christina was born in 1991. Christina completed her clinical doctorate in psychology at the Wright Institute in Berkeley in 2023.

References