Not sure what about this post makes you ask that. I did read the sticky, and I realize that I am a strong applicant.
As far as I can tell, my undergrad and lack of publications might hold me back.
"
3) Do I need to publish to get into a program or into a top program?
NO. For the one millionth time.
NO. It may help, but it is certainly not required."
"
6) Does my undergrad institution, major, or course load matter?
For undergrad institution, this is a hard thing to judge. In general, if at all it doesn't matter much."
Also, in point 8 I discuss the question about "to which schools should I apply" broadly, though I will do it again later in this post.
if there are some that I shouldn't apply to due to OOS
MSTPs don't care about state of residency. Fully funded MD/PhD programs don't typically either. You shouldn't be considering outside of these.
You should already know that you have high stats. You have a chance anywhere. You still apply broadly because that's how this game works.
Fencer's info is excellent, as always. Pretty much any MSTP has a strong neuro program. It's just a question of what specific area you want. You've posted a pretty broad range of interests.
We haven't heard any rumors along these lines.
I try not to provide advice about what schools you should or should not apply to. Nobody on this forum knows all of these schools very well. The last thing SDN needs to do is start skewing applicants towards or away from specific programs unless there's some objective reason.
( My thoughts on this in the past as well:
http://forums.studentdoctor.net/threads/best-md-phd-programs-for-heart-research.609192/#post-7840418 )
At some point you have to just pick somewhere on the order of a dozen to twenty places based on your limited information. This includes info gathered from websites, funding rankings/info, advice from faculty you work with now, where you want to live, etc.