Requirements for Ph.D. in Physiology
The Biomedical Sciences (BIMS) Graduate Training Program at the University of Virginia is integrated across departments and schools but students select a field of study in which they receive their degrees, which includes Physiology. All students apply to the BIMS umbrella program and spend the first year acquiring a broad background in Physiology, Biochemistry, Cell Biology, Molecular Biology and related disciplines, and carry out laboratory rotations of their choice
- Students are encouraged to arrive in July for first laboratory rotation during the summer prior to the first semester of study.
- At the end of the first year, identify a mentor and begin an independent research project.
- Qualifying exam and thesis proposal are at the end of the second year to enter candidacy for the Ph.D.
- Upon completion of all requirements and the successful oral defense of the dissertation, the Ph.D. degree is awarded in Physiology.
Advanced courses may be selected in a wide variety of disciplines including Physiology, Biophysics, Biochemistry, Bioengineering, Cell Biology, Mathematics, Molecular Biology, Physical Chemistry, Physics, Pharmacology and Structural Biology. Students and faculty participate in regularly scheduled departmental research seminars presented by distinguished visiting scientists and participate in all of the specialized activities. The collegiality that characterizes the University of Virginia is a special strength of our training programs, lending them a strong interdisciplinary character and close working relationships between students and research advisors. We want our students to receive the training, sense of purpose and enthusiasm that will carry them throughout their careers.
Required Courses
All BIMS students must complete a minimum of 72 hours of graduate credit. A minimum of 24 out of the 72 credit hours must be graded coursework, and no more than 48 of the 72 credit hours can be comprised of Non-Topical Research. Requirements for graduation include the following courses:
BIMS 6000 - Core Course in Integrative Biosciences Credits: 10
BIMS 7100 - Research Ethics Credits: 1
PHY 8040 - Physiology A Credits: 2
PHY 8041 - Physiology B Credits: 2
PHAR 9001 - Survey of Pharmacology, Part 1 Credits: 2
PHAR 9002 - Survey of Pharmacology, Part 2 Credits: 2
Additional courses:
One of the 3 courses below:
PHY 8100 - Extreme Physiology Credits: 2
PHY 8201 - Biophysical Principles I
PHY 8301 - Biophysical Principles II
Electives
At least two more graduate level modules (6 week modules) offered within the Department of Physiology is required - usually this is PHY 8052 - Vascular Biology A Credits: 2 and PHY 8053 - Vascular Biology B Credits: 2 but any Graduate course in an allied science can be substituted, or from the possible additional courses listed above. Allied science courses must be taken for a grade (not S/U or audit)
Journal Club
A regular program journal club is required, e.g., Physiology and Biophysics or Pharmacology. However, this may change depending on the research project. DGS will help the student determine the correct journal club and monitor attendance.
Milestone: DEPPART
Laboratory Rotations
Students entering BIMS perform 3 rotations (under special circumstances the DGS of Physiology can waive this requirement, e.g., the accelerated PhD in Physiology program for MDs).
Associated Courses:
BIMS 8998 - Non-Topical Research: Research in Biomedical Sciences Credits: 1 to 12 Summer
BIMS 8995 - Topical Research: Research in Biomedical Sciences Credits: 1 to 12 Spring/Fall
First Author Publication
At least one first author publication (non-review article) is required for consideration of the Ph.D. degree. The publication must be of high quality, and determined whether it is an important contribution to science by the thesis committee.
Milestone: PAPER1
Thesis
Qualifier:
The qualifier committee will have at least 2 members from the Department of Molecular Physiology, with a minimum of 3 tenure-track faculty. The Director of Graduate Studies (DGS) in Physiology will choose the committee members.
The student is required to write and defend, an extensive review of a topic that is not directly associated with their anticipated research. The review should be given to members of the committee 2 weeks before the oral defense.
Qualifiers will occur within 3 months of May of the second year into graduate studies at UVA.
Milestone: PHDCAND
Committee:
A member of the Department of Physiology is required to be mentor for the student—this can be adjunct or by special permission. A co-mentor is also permitted with approval from the DGS. Another member of the department of Physiology is also required. A minimum of 4 thesis committee members are required, all tenure-track faculty.
The first thesis committee will occur within 9 months of completing the qualifiers, with regular meetings scheduled every 6 months.
Defense:
The dissertation represents the summation of the student’s independent research. Therefore, adequate time must be set aside for preparation of the dissertation and for the Dissertation Committee members to evaluate the work.
The dissertation is to be prepared in consultation with the mentor. When the document is complete to the satisfaction of both the student and mentor it should be submitted to the first reader/chairperson. The first reader must have at least two weeks to evaluate and comment on the dissertation.
Any changes to the dissertation deemed necessary by the first reader must be incorporated into the document and approved by the first reader and the student’s mentor before it can be submitted to the rest of the committee.
The dissertation must be submitted to the full committee a minimum of one week prior to the Defense date. All Dissertation Committee members must agree to the Defense date and must be present for the Defense.
Milestone: PHDDEFENSE
Summation of Thesis to UVA Library
Doctoral students must upload the final, approved version of the dissertation to the University Library’s digital repository, also known as LIBRA, by the same due dates as for the Final Exam form.
Information regarding the repository, the submission process and copyright law is available through the LIBRA web site. Please note the following:
- The title page of the dissertation should be formatted according to the approved template. Signatures of the dissertation committee members should appear only on the final examination form. These signatures should not appear on the title page of the document that is uploaded to LIBRA.
- Students are responsible for ensuring that they upload the final, approved version of their thesis. Documents submitted to LIBRA cannot be deleted or corrected.
- The thesis title submitted to the department in step three above will appear in the LIBRA upload interface. If the title listed in LIBRA does not match the final title of the thesis, the student must stop the upload process and inform his or her departmental graduate administrator of the correct title. The thesis title listed in SIS, LIBRA and the student’s transcript should be identical.
LIBRA will accept the thesis as a single PDF document up to 100MB. Students also have the option to upload supplemental files.
Formatting Requirements
There are no formatting requirements or restrictions; however, students should adhere to traditional physical standards if they wish to purchase bound copies from UVA Printing and Copying Services.
Milestone: LIBRA
Survey of Earned Doctorates
All students are required to complete the National Science Foundation’s Survey of Earned Doctorates
Milestone: SURVEY