Sentences with phrase «biological imaging center»

In 1990 he moved to Caltech as the Anna L. Rosen Professor of Biology and the Director of the Biological Imaging Center.

Not exact matches

The additional slots are probably intended for newer NIH units like the National Institute for Biological Imaging and Bioengineering and the Center for Minority Health and Health Disparities, Schaffer notes.
«The major advancement of this new tool is the ability to use a low - cost and accessible imaging method such as EEG to depict deeply located brain activity,» said both senior author Dr. Talma Hendler of Tel - Aviv University in Israel and The Sagol Brain Center at Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, and first author Jackob Keynan, a PhD student in Hendler's laboratory, in an email to Biological Psychiatry.
National Center for Microscopy and Imaging Research, Center for Research in Biological Systems, Department of Neurosciences, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA.
He is deeply committed to interdisciplinary training and translational research, having helped found the Caltech Brain Imaging Center and the Kavli Institute of Nanoscience, as well as serving as the Director of the Rosen Center for Biological Engineering.
The brain imaging center is a critical component of the overarching Chen Institute for Neuroscience at Caltech, providing facilities to faculty across not only humanities and social sciences but also biology and biological engineering as well as chemistry and chemical engineering.
Other collaborators include Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute scientists Zhi Sheng, an assistant professor; Rob Gourdie, a professor and director of the VTCRI Center for Heart and Regeneration Medicine; and Mark Yeager, the Andrew P. Somlyo Distinguished Professor of Molecular Physiology and Biological Physics and director of the High - Resolution Cryo - EM Imaging Facility at the University of Virginia School of Medicine.
Using enhanced equipment at the Nevada Center for Biological Imaging (NCBI), housed at UNLV, the researchers hope to make important contributions to the fields of medicine, veterinary science, and agriculture.
Doug Richardson is the Director of the Harvard Center for Biological Imaging and a Lecturer on Molecular and Cellular Biology at Harvard University.
Georgetown University Medical Center (Washington, DC) 05/2007 — 01/2010 Imaging Science and Information Systems Center — Insert Title • Train, supervise, and assure the work quality of a team of 3 - 6 regional analysts • Write analytical summaries of open source collections of biological threats and other national security threats • Develop and refine indication and warning methodologies and taxonomies for biological and radiological threats • Offer guidance and expertise on intelligence community interagency fusion cell for H1N1 «swine flu» • Assist in research and development work on plant health project • Conduct case studies on state and non-state actor biological weapons programs and orphan source radiological incidents • Participate in multi-agency tracking of nuclear proliferation activities in Eastern Europe, Central Asia, and the Middle East • Perform project lead duties, participate in the selection process of new employees, and assist with performance appraisals • Awarded the National Intelligence Medallion for organizational work on Project Argus
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