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Lower
Division Courses
NUTRITION
10. Discoveries and Concepts in Nutrition
3 units. Lecture—3 hours. Nutrition as a science; historical development of nutrition concepts; properties of nutrients and foods. Not open for credit to students who have taken an upper division course in nutrition.GE credit: SciEng.—I, II, III. (I, II, III.) Applegate
NUTRITION
11. Current Topics and Controversies in Nutrition
2 units. Discussion—1.5 hours; term paper. Exploration of
current applications and controversies in nutrition.
Students read scientific journal articles and write
summaries, as well as give brief oral presentations.
Topics change to reflect current interests and issues.
GE credit: Wrt.—I, II, III. (I, II, III.) Applegate
NUTRITION 20.
Food and Culture: An Introduction to Culture, Diet, and Cuisine
4 units. Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: Anthropology
2, Geography 2, and course 10 recommended. Historical and contemporary
overview of culture, food habits, and diet; exploration of the major
themes in food habit research; minority food habits; origins and development
of dietary practices. GE credit: SciEng or SocSci.--II. (II.) Grivetti
NUTRITION
99.
Individual Study for Undergraduates (1-5) Prerequisite: consent of instructor. (P/NP grading only.)
Upper Division
Courses
Nutrition 104. Environmental & Nutritional Factors in Cellular Regulation and Nutritional Toxicants.
4 units.
Lecture—3 hours; discussion—1 hour. Prerequisite:
Biological Sciences 101; Biological Sciences 103 or
Animal Biology 103. Cellular regulation from nutritional/
toxicological perspective. Emphasis: role of
biofactors on modulation of signal transduction pathways,
role of specific organelles in organization/
regulation of metabolic transformations, major cofactor
functions, principles of pharmacology/toxicology
important to understanding nutrient/toxicant metabolism.
(Same course as Environmental Toxicology
104.)—III. (III.) Oteiza, Rucker
Nutrition 105. Nutrition and Aging
3 units Lecture—Online lecture—3 hours. Prerequisite: Chemistry 8B,
Neurobiology, Physiology, and Behavior 101 or the
equivalent. Introduction to metabolism of protein, fat
and carbohydrate; the biological role of vitamins
and minerals; nutrient requirements during the life
cycle; assessment of dietary intake and nutritional
status. Not open for credit to students who have completed
course 101.—III. (III.) McDonald
NUTRITION
111AV. Introduction to Nutrition & Metabolism
3 units. Online Course. Introduction to metabolism of protein, fat and
carbohydrate: the biological role of vitamins and minerals; nutrient
requirements during the life cycle; assessment of dietary intake and
nutritional status. --III, McDonald.
NUTRITION
111B. Recommendations & Standards for Human
Nutrition
Lecture—2 hours. Prerequisite: Chemistry 8B, Neurobiology, Physiology, and Behavior 101 or the equialent. Critical analysis of the development of nutritional recommendations for humans. Topics include history of modern recommendations, development of the Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) and other food guides; the Dietary Reference Intakes (DRI); administrative structure of regulatory agencies pertinent to nutrition recommendations; introduction to scientific methods used to determine the recommendations; food labeling laws; nutrition recommendations in other countries and cultures. Not open for credit to students who have completed course 111.—III. (III.) Dewey
NUTRITION
112. Nutritional Assessment
3 units. Lecture—2 hours; laboratory—3 hours. Prerequisite: Animal Biology 102 and 103 or course 101, course 111 (may be taken concurrently), Statistics 13. Methods of human nutritional assessment, including dietary, anthropometric, biochemical and hematological techniques, and physical examination. Principles of precision, accuracy, and interpretation of results for individuals and populations.—III. (III.) Brown,
NUTRITION 114.
Developmental Nutrition
4 units. Lecture--4 hours. Prerequisite: Animal Biology 102 and 103 or course 101; course 111. Role of nutritional factors in embryonic and postnatal development. GE credit: SciEng, Wrt.—II. (II.) Keen 115. Animal Feeds and Nutrition (4) Lecture—3 hours; laboratory—3 hours. Prerequisite: Chemistry 8B, Animal Science 41. Analyses and evaluation of feeds, influences of production, processing and storage methods on nutritive value of feeds. Animal nutrition. Diet formulation. GE credit: SciEng, Wrt.—II. (II.) DePeters
NUTRITION
115. Animal Feeds and Nutrition
4 units. Lecture--3 hours; laboratory--3 hours. Prerequisite: Chemistry
8B, Animal Science 41. Analyses and evaluation of feeds, influences
of production, processing and storage methods on nutritive value of
feeds. Animal nutrition. Diet formulation. GE credit: SciEng, Wrt.--II.
(II.) DePeters
NUTRITION
116A-116B. Clinical Nutrition
3-3 units. Lecture--3 hours. Prerequisite: courses 111, 112and Neurobiology, Physiology, and Behavior 101 or the equivalent. Biochemical and physiological bases for therapeutic diets. Problems in planning diets for normal and pathological conditions.—I-II. (I-II.) Steinberg, Stern, Clifford
NUTRITION
116AL. Clinical Nutrition Practicum 3 units. Lecture--1 hour; laboratory—3 hours; discussion—1 hour. Prerequisite: course 116A (may be taken concurrently). Fundamental principles of planning and evaluating therapeutic diets and patient education for pathological conditions covered in 116A.—I. (I.) Steinberg
NUTRITION
116BL. Clinical Nutrition Practicum
3 units. Lecture--1 hour; laboratory--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite:
courses 116AL, and 116B (may be taken concurrently). Fundamental principles
of planning and evaluating therapeutic diets and patient education for
pathological conditions covered in 116B. Continuation of course 116AL.--II.
(II.) Steinberg
NUTRITION
117. Experimental Nutrition
6 units. Lecture--3 hours; 6 hours; extensive writing. Prerequisite: courses 111, Biological Sciences 102 and 103, and a laboratory course in nutrition or biochemistry. Methods of assessing nutritional status. Application of chemical, microbiological, chromatographic and enzymatic techniques to current problems in nutrition. GE credit: Wrt.—I. (I.)Clifford
NUTRITION
118. Community Nutrition
4 units. Lecture--4 hours. Prerequisite: course 101 or 111, and 116A. Nutrition problems in contemporary communities and of selected target groups in the United States and in developing countries. Nutrition programs and policy, principles of nutrition education.— II. (II.) Dewey
NUTRITION
119A. International Community-Based Nutritional Assessment
1 unit. Lecture/discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: course 112 (may be taken concurrently) and consent of instructor. Issues and problems related to communitybased nutritional assessment in a low-income country, major nutritional problems in low-income countries; ethical issues in human investigation; survey design, data collection techniques, and data analysis; preparation for international travel; cross-cultural communication, health, and safety while living abroad.—Brown
NUTRITION
119B. International Community-Based Nutritional Assessment
6 units. Lecture—2 hours; fieldwork—12 hours. Prerequisite: course 119A and consent of instructor. A sixweek summer course in Peru. Implementation of a community-based nutritional assessment survey, including development of the survey instrument, selection of the study sample, collection and verification of data, and analysis and interpretation of the results; the project will be carried out by paired participation of students and faculty members of UC Davis and the collaborating foreign institution.— Brown
NUTRITION
120A. Nutritional Anthropology
4 units. Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite:course 2 or Geography 2 recommended. Nutritional anthropology from historical and contemporary perspectives; the anthropological approach to food and diet; field work methods; case histories that explore food patterns and their nutritional implications. GE Credit: Div, SciEng, SocSci.—IV. (IV.)
NUTRITION
120B. Nutritional Geography
4 units.Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite:
Geography 2 recommended. Nutritional geography
from historical and contemporary perspectives; the
geographical approach to food and diet; cultural
and environmental factors that influence dietary
practices; food-related landscapes and patterns. GE
Credit: Div, SciEng, SocSci.—IV. (IV.)
NUTRITION 122.
Ruminant Nutrition and Digestive Physiology
4 units. Lecture--3 hours; laboratory--3 hours. Prerequisite:
upper division standing; Animal Biology 103 or consent
of instructor; Neurobiology, Physiology, and
Behavior 101, Biological Sciences 1C, and Mathematics
16B recommended. Study of nutrient utilization
as influenced by the unique aspects of digestion
and fermentation in ruminants, both domestic and
wild. Laboratories include comparative anatomy,
feed evaluation, digestion kinetics using fistulated
cows, computer modeling, and microbial exercises.—
III. (III.) Fadel
NUTRITION 123.
Companion and Captive Animal Nutrition
4 units. Lecture--3 hours. Prerequisite: Animal Biology 103.
Restricted to upper division or graduate students.
Comparative nutrition of animals; including laboratory,
companion, zoo, and wild animals. Digestion
and metabolic adaptations required for animal species
to consume diverse diets ranging from grasses
and leaves to nectar to insects and meat. Relation of
nutrition to metabolic adaptations and physiological
states, including growth, reproduction, and diseases.—
III. (III.) Klasing
NUTRITION 123L. Comparative Animal Nutrition
Laboratory
Laboratory—3 hours. Prerequisite: Animal Biology
103, course 123 (may be taken concurrently). Laboratory
exercises leading to written reports on establishment
of nutritional requirements and formulation
of complete diets for laboratory, companion, zoo
and wild animals.—III. (III.) Klasing
NUTRITION
124. Nutrition and Feeding of Finfishes
3 units. Lecture--3 hours. Prerequisite: Biological Sciences
103 and Wildlife, Fish, and Conservation Biology
121. Principles of nutrition and feeding of fishes
under commercial situations; implication of fish nutrition
to the environment and conservation of endangered
species.—I. (I.) Hung
NUTRITION 127. Environmental Stress and
Development in Marine Organisms 10 units.
Lecture—4 hours; laboratory—12 hours; discussion—
2 hours. Prerequisite: Environmental Toxicology
101 or Biological Sciences 102 or 104 or the
equivalent; Environmental Toxicology 114A or
course 114 recommended. Course taught at Bodega
Marine Laboratory. Effects of environmental and
nutritional stress, including pollutants, on development
and function in embryos and larvae of marine
organisms. Emphasis on advanced experimental
methods. (Same course as Environmental Toxicology
127.) GE credit: SciEng.—IV. (IV.) Cherr
NUTRITION
129. Journalistic Practicum in Nutrition
3 units. Lecture--2 hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite:
course 111; a course in written or oral expression or
consent of instructor. Critical analysis and discussion
of current, controversial issues in nutrition; the use of
journalistic techniques to interpret scientific findings
for the lay public. Students will be required to write
several articles for campus media. Course may be
repeated once for credit.—III. (III.) Stern
NUTRITION
130. Experiments in Nutrition: Design and Execution
2 units. Laboratory--6 hours. Prerequisite: consent of instructor;
course 101, 110, 111, or 114 recommended.
Experiments in current nutritional problems. Experimental
design: students choose project and, independently
or in groups of two-three, design a
protocol, complete the project, and report findings.
May be repeated for credit up to six times (three
times per instructor) with consent of instructor.—I, II,
III, IV. (I, II, III, IV.)
NUTRITION
190. Proseminar in Nutrition
1 unit.Seminar--1 hour. Prerequisite: senior standing;
course 111. Discussion of human nutrition problems.
Each term will involve a different emphasis among
experimental, clinical, and dietetic problems of community,
national and international scope. May be
repeated twice for credit with consent of instructor.—
I, II, III. (I, II, III.) Zidenberg-Cherr
NUTRITION
190C. Nutrition Research Conference
1 unit. Discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: upper division
standing in Nutrition or related biological science;
consent of instructor. Introduction to research findings
and methods in nutrition. Presentation and discussion
of research by faculty and students. May be
repeated for credit. (P/NP grading only.)—I, II, III. (I,
II, III.)
NUTRITION 192.
Internship
1-12 unit(s). Internship--3-36 hours. Prerequisite: one upper division
course in nutrition and consent of instructor.
Work experience on or off campus in practical application
of nutrition, supervised by a faculty member.
(P/NP grading only.)
NUTRITION 197T.
Tutoring in Nutrition
1-2 unit(s).Discussion/laboratory--3 or 6 hours. Prerequisite:
Nutrition Science, Clinical Nutrition or related
major. Completion of course 101. Tutoring of students
in nutrition courses, assistance with discussion
groups or laboratory sections, weekly conference
with instructor in charge of course: written evaluations.
May be repeated if tutoring a different course.
(P/NP grading only.)
NUTRITION
198. Directed Group Study
1-5 units. (P/NP grading only.)
NUTRITION 199.
Special Study for Advanced Undergraduates
1-5 units. (P/NP grading only.)
Graduate Courses
NUTRITION 201.
Vitamin and Cofactor Metabolism
3 units. Lecture--2 hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite:
one upper division nutritional biochemistry and physiology
course. Review of studies and relationships
involving the metabolic functions of vitamins. Comparative
nutritional aspects and the metabolism and
chemistry of vitamins and vitamin-like compounds.—
III. (III.) Rucker, Steinberg
NUTRITION
202. Advanced Nutritional Energetics
2 units. Lecture--2 hours. Prerequisite: Animal Biology 102,
103, Neurobiology, Physiology, and Behavior 101
or the equivalent. History of nutritional energetics.
Evaluation of energy transformations associated with
food utilization. Energy expenditures at cellular, tissue,
and animal levels as affected by diet and physiological
state. Current and future feeding systems.—
III. (III.) Sainz
NUTRITION 203.
Advanced Protein and Amino Acid Nutrition
3 units. Lecture--2 hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite:
one upper division nutritional biochemistry and physiology
course. Nutritional significance of protein and
amino acids, including studies of the influence of
dietary protein on digestion, absorption, metabolism,
resistance to disease, and food intake. Study of
dietary requirements and interrelationships among
amino acids.—III. (III.) Calvert
NUTRITION 204.
Mineral Metabolism
2 units. Lecture--2 hours. Prerequisite: upper division nutrition
or biochemistry course. Studies of metabolic
functions and nutritional interrelationships involving
minerals.—II. (II.) Lönnerdal, Keen
NUTRITION 219A.
International Nutrition
3 units. Lecture/discussion--3 hours. Prerequisite: graduate standing;
undergraduates only admitted with consent of
instructor after completion of course 111AV. Epidemiology,
etiology, and consequences of undernutrition,
with particular focus on the nutritional problems
of children and women in low income populations.
Offered in alternate years.—II. Brown, Dewey
NUTRITION
219B. International Nutrition
3 units. Lecture/discussion--3 hours. Prerequisite: course 219A. Intervention
programs to prevent or ameliorate nutritional
problems in low-income populations. Planning,
implementing, and evaluating nutrition intervention
programs. Offered in alternate years.—III. Brown,
Dewey
NUTRITION
230. Experiments in Nutrition: Design and Execution
2 units. Laboratory--6 hours. Prerequisite: consent of instructor;
courses 201, 202, 203, 204, or the equivalent
recommended. Student selected projects to enhance
laboratory skills. Independently, or in groups of twothree
students, design a protocol, carry out the
project, analyze the results and report the findings.
May be repeated for credit up to six times (limit of
three times per instructor) with consent of instructor.—
I, II, III. (I, II, III.)
NUTRITION
250. Metabolic Homeostasis
3 units. Lecture--2 hours; discussion—1.5 hours. Prerequisite:
passing the Nutrition Graduate Group Preliminary
Examination or consent of instructor. Preference
given to students with advanced standing in the
Nutrition Graduate Group. Regulatory mechanisms
of carbohydrate, lipid, and protein homeostasis;
mechanisms of metabolic enzyme regulation and of
the metabolic hormones; homeostatic mechanisms
and interactions; fuel-fuel interactions; nutrition
energy balance.—I. (I.) Walsh
NUTRITION
251. Nutrition and Immunity
2 units. Lecture/discussion--2 hours. Prerequisite: Pathology,
Microbiology, and Immunology 126, Medical
Microbiology 107 or the equivalent, Animal Biology
102. Cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying
interactions of nutrition and immune function, including
modulation of immunocompetence by diet and effects of immune responses on nutritional needs.
Lectures and discussion explore implications for
resistance to infection, autoimmunity and cancer.
Offered in alternate years.—(II.) Klasing, Erickson,
Stephensen
NUTRITION 252.
Nutrition and Development
3 units. Lecture--3 hours. Prerequisite: courses 201, 202,
203, 204. Relationship of nutrition to prenatal and
early postnatal development.—II. (II.) Keen
253. Control of Food Intake (3)
Lecture—2 hours; discussion—1 hour; 2 or 3 laboratory
demonstrations per quarter. Prerequisite: course
201 or 202 or consent of instructor. Comprehensive
study of the biochemical, nutritional, behavioral,
and physiological mechanisms controlling food
intake. Subject matter will be approached through
lectures, laboratory demonstration and discussions
where students and staff will critically evaluate the literature.
Offered in alternate years.—III. Ramsey
NUTRITION 253.
Control of Food Intake
3 units. Lecture--2 hours; discussion--1 hour; 2 or 3 laboratory demonstrations
per quarter. Prerequisite: course 201 or 202 or consent of instructor.
Comprehensive study of the biochemical, nutritional, behavioral, and
physiological mechanisms controlling food intake. Subject matter will
be approached through lectures, laboratory demonstration and discussions
where students and staff will critically evaluate the literature. Offered
in alternate years.--(III.) Stern, Geitzen
NUTRITION
254. Applications of Systems Analysis in Nutrition
3 units. Lecture--2 hours; discussion—1 hour. Prerequisite:
course 202, Physiological Sciences 205A-205B or
the equivalent. Quantitative aspects of digestion and
metabolism; principles of systems analysis. Evolution
of models of energy metabolism as applied in current
feeding systems. Critical evaluations of mechanistic
models used analytically in support of
nutritional research. Offered in alternate years. –II.
Fadel
NUTRITION
257. Selected Topics in Nutritional and Hormonal Control of Nitrogen
Metabolism
2 units. Lecture--2 hours. Prerequisite: courses 201 through
204; Physiological Sciences 205A-205B or the
equivalent. Quantitative and qualitative aspects of
nitrogen metabolism; critical evaluation of dietary
intake, hormones and diet-hormone interactions
which affect nitrogen metabolism, including protein
synthesis-degradation, amino acid synthesis-catabolism,
nitrogen transport-excretion, depending on current
literature. Offered in alternate years.—(I.)
Klasing, Calvert
NUTRITION
258. Field Research Methods in International Nutrition
3 units. Lecture/discussion--3 hours. Prerequisite: graduate
standing or consent of instructor. Issues and problems
related to implementation of nutrition field
research in less-developed countries, including ethics;
relationships with local governments, communities,
and scientists; data collection techniques and
quality assurance; field logistics; research budgets;
and other administrative and personal issues.
Offered in alternate years.—(II.) Brown, Dewey,
NUTRITION
259. Nutrition and Aging
2 units. Lecture--2 hours. Prerequisite: three of courses 201,
202, 203 and 204. Interaction between nutrition
and aging. Topics include physiological/biochemical
basis of aging, age-related changes affecting
nutritional requirements, nutrition and mortality rate,
assessment of nutritional status in the elderly, and
relationship between developmental nutrition and
the rate of aging. Offered in alternate years.—
McDonald
NUTRITION 260. Nutrition During Pregnancy 6 units.
Lecture—5 hours; term paper. Prerequisite: acceptance
into the Master’s Degree program of
Advanced Studies in Maternal and Child Nutrition.
Overview of the anatomical, physiological and biochemical
changes that occur during pregnancy and
early development. Discussion and evaluation of
nutritional/lifestyle factors associated with pregnancy
outcomes and nutrition programs/interventions
for pregnant women.—I. (I.) Heinig
NUTRITION 261. Lactation and Infant Nutrition 6 units.
Lecture—5 hours; discussion—1 hour. Prerequisite:
course 260. Overview of the physiological and biochemical
processes underlying human lactation and
nutritional needs of both mother and infant. Development
of skills in assessment, nutrition counseling,
education and support of new mothers and their
families.—II. (II.) Heinig
NUTRITION 262. Child and Adolescent Nutrition 6 units.
Lecture—5 hours; discussion—1 hour. Prerequisite:
course 261. Relationships among nutrition, growth,
and development during childhood and adolescence.
Nutritional assessment for normal and high
risk groups; psychological, social, and economic
factors contributing to nutritional status. Nutritional
needs and interventions for special groups, including
obese children/adolescents, athletes, and eating disordered.—
III. (III.) Heinig
NUTRITION 270: Scientific Ethics in Biomedical Studies:
Emphasis on Nutrition
3 units. Lecture—1 hour; discussion—1 hour; term paper.
Scientific ethics in biomedical studies, especially
nutrition. Discussion and case study presentations on
scientific integrity, fraud, misconduct, conflict of interest,
human and animal research protections. Not
open for credit to students who have completed
course 492B.—III. (III.) Steinberg
NUTRITION 290.
Beginning Nutrition Seminar
2 units. Lecture/discussion--1 hour; seminar—1 hour. Prerequisite:
first year graduate standing. Discussion
and critical evaluation of topics in nutrition with
emphasis on literature review and evaluation in this
field. Students give oral presentations on relevant
topics.—I. (I.) Schneeman, Dewey, Conklin
NUTRITION
290C. Research Conference
1 unit. Discussion-- hour. Prerequisite: graduate standing
and consent of instructor. Major professors lead
research discussions with their graduate students.
Research papers are reviewed and project proposals
presented and evaluated. Format will combine
seminar and discussion style. (S/U grading only.)—I,
II, III. (I, II, III.)
NUTRITION
291. Advanced Nutrition Seminar
1 unit. Seminar--1 hour. Prerequisite: second-year graduate
standing. Advanced topics in nutrition research.
Multiple sections may be taken concurrently for
credit. May be repeated for credit. (S/U grading
only.)—I, II, III. (I, II, III.)
NUTRITION
293A. Current Topics in Obesity, Food Intake and Energy Balance
3 units. Lecture--1 hour; seminar—1 hour; discussion—1
hour. Prerequisite: graduate standing or course 129.
Undergraduates with upper division standing with at
least one writing course may enroll with consent of
instructor. Current research and its evaluation. Principles
of experimental design and scientific background
for given article. Articles summarized for
posting on Internet for use by healthcare professionals.
May be repeated for credit with consent of
instructor.—I. (I.) Stern
NUTRITION
293B. Current Topics in Obesity, Food Intake, and Energy Balance with
Special Topics
3 units. Lecture--1 hour; seminar—1 hour; discussion—1
hour. Prerequisite: graduate standing or course 129.
Undergraduates with upper division standing with at
least one writing course may enroll with consent of
instructor. A continuation of course 293A, with additional
special topics. May be repeated for credit up
to 3 times with consent of instructor.—II. (II.) Stern
294A. Current Topics in Developmental
Nutrition (2)
Seminar—2 hours. Prerequisite: course 114 or 252
or consent of instructor. Effects of nutrition on embryology,
morphogenesis, and developmental mechanisms.
May be repeated for credit when topic
differs.—I. (I.) Lanoue
NUTRITION
294A. Current Topics in Developmental Nutrition
2 units. Seminar—2 hours. Prerequisite: course 114 or 252 or consent
of instructor. Effects of nutrition on embryology, morphogenesis, and
developmental mechanisms. May be repeated for credit when topic differs.—I,
II, III. (I, II, III.) Lanoue
NUTRITION
297T. Supervised Teaching in Nutrition
1-3 unit(s). Teaching under faculty supervision-- 3-9 hours. Prerequisite:
graduate standing in nutrition or consent of
instructor. Practical experience in teaching nutrition
at the university level; curriculum design and evaluation;
preparation and presentation of material. Assistance
in laboratories, discussion sections, and
evaluation of student work. (S/U grading only.)
NUTRITION
298. Group Study
1-5 unit(s).
NUTRITION 299.
Research
1-12 unit(s). S/U grading only.
Professional
Courses
NUTRITION 492A.
Professionalism: An Academic Perspective
2 units. Lecture/discussion--2 hours. Prerequisite: graduate
standing. For graduate students in their initial quarter
of residence. Professionalism topics are presented
and examples drawn from both the biological
and social sciences.—II. (II.) Grivetti
NUTRITION 492B.
Scientific Ethics in Biomedical Studies: Emphasis on Nutrition
3 units. Lecture--1 hour; seminar--1 hour; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite:
graduate standing in Nutrition or consent of instructor. Scientific
ethics in biomedical studies, especially nutrition. Students will present
case studies in areas such as fraud, scientific integrity, misconduct
and conflict of interest. Offered in alternate years.--(III.) Stern
NUTRITION 492C.
Grant Writing
3 units. Lecture--1.5 hours; discussion—1.5 hours. Prerequisite:
graduate standing in Nutrition or consent of
instructor. Preparation of grants for governmental
agencies (particularly NIH and USDA) and private
foundations. Students will write a research grant or
fellowship application. May be repeated once for
credit with consent of instructor. Offered in alternate
years.—III. Stern
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