The John B. Pierce Laboratory
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- The John B. Pierce Laboratory
A nonprofit, independent research institute that is formally affiliated with Yale University. Pioneers in medicine, science, and technology!
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290 Congress Avenue
New Haven, CT
06519
Opening Hours
Monday | 8:30am - 5pm |
Tuesday | 8:30am - 5pm |
Wednesday | 8:30am - 5pm |
Thursday | 8:30am - 5pm |
Friday | 8:30am - 5pm |
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About the John B. Pierce Lab
The John B. Pierce Laboratory is a nonprofit, independent research institute that is formally affiliated with Yale University. Founded in 1933 and housed in its own 3-story Georgian-style building directly across the street from the School of Medicine, the Pierce Laboratory affords a unique environment for interaction and collaboration among scientists within the Laboratory and in the surrounding Yale community.
The Laboratory has a long and distinguished history as a leading center for the study of physiological regulatory systems such as those that maintain body temperature, respiration, body fluids, and metabolism within healthy limits. The need to understand how these homeostatic mechanisms work is no less important now than it was at the time the Laboratory was founded, when inadequate heating, ventilation, and sanitation still loomed as serious environmental challenges to human health and comfort. Although advances in engineering and technology have greatly reduced the severity of those challenges, other aspects of the built environment that were intended to improve the quality of life have paradoxically created new stressors that impact public health in adverse ways. This is because the physiological systems that evolved to maintain homeostasis in the natural environment must now function under very different conditions in the built environment. For example, in the natural environment physical endurance, keen senses of taste and smell, and strong motivational states of hunger and thirst evolved to meet the necessity of finding and consuming adequate quantities of food and water. In today’s built environment, a sedentary lifestyle and an abundance of processed foods and beverages engineered to take maximum advantage of our sensory and motivational systems combine to distort the function of these systems and cause dysregulation. Indeed, physical inactivity and over-eating are major contributors to some of today’s most serious public health problems, including obesity, type II diabetes, and cardiovascular disease.
The study of homeostasic mechanisms and their complex interactions with the environment requires a variety of scientific approaches not typically found under the same roof. The Laboratory’s longstanding emphasis on multidisciplinary systems-level research is perfectly suited to this need. Collaborations that reach across such wide-ranging fields as regulatory physiology, sensory and behavioral neuroscience, brain imaging, molecular biology, and genetics place Pierce Laboratory scientists in a unique position to make breakthroughs in basic research that can be translated into improvements in human health and well-being. To learn about the current research programs here at Pierce, please visit the ‘Research’ page on our website http://jbpierce.org//Research.html.
The Pierce Laboratory has maintained close ties to Yale University since the Laboratory’s