Team:MIT/Team/Undergraduates
From 2011.igem.org
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coxswain. Charles is also an Eagle Scout and current Emerson scholar studying the | coxswain. Charles is also an Eagle Scout and current Emerson scholar studying the | ||
viola with Professor Marcus Thompson. | viola with Professor Marcus Thompson. | ||
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to students at Hebrew University in Israel as part of the Middle East | to students at Hebrew University in Israel as part of the Middle East | ||
Education through Technology (MEET) Program. | Education through Technology (MEET) Program. | ||
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a program dedicated to providing one-on-one instruction to | a program dedicated to providing one-on-one instruction to | ||
students in underserved urban schools. | students in underserved urban schools. | ||
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in Computing and the Colorado State Winner and National Finalist for | in Computing and the Colorado State Winner and National Finalist for | ||
the Daughters of the American Revolution Good Citizen Award. | the Daughters of the American Revolution Good Citizen Award. | ||
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Award and the Taiwan Ministry of Education International Intelligent | Award and the Taiwan Ministry of Education International Intelligent | ||
Creativity Contest, both in 2009. | Creativity Contest, both in 2009. | ||
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of his fraternity. After graduation, he hopes to work at a local | of his fraternity. After graduation, he hopes to work at a local | ||
biotechnology company. | biotechnology company. | ||
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student, potentially studying modularity, control, and design in the field | student, potentially studying modularity, control, and design in the field | ||
of biology. | of biology. | ||
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whether to pursue a PhD or medical school after graduation, and he | whether to pursue a PhD or medical school after graduation, and he | ||
hopes that iGEM can help him decide which career path to choose. | hopes that iGEM can help him decide which career path to choose. | ||
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studied abroad in both Italy and Poland. After graduation, she wishes to | studied abroad in both Italy and Poland. After graduation, she wishes to | ||
manufacture biological devices to help others and wants to pursue a PhD. | manufacture biological devices to help others and wants to pursue a PhD. | ||
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college is to do research in an industry setting or to start his own | college is to do research in an industry setting or to start his own | ||
biotechnology company. | biotechnology company. | ||
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Trip to Peru in July of 2010 where he assisted in the | Trip to Peru in July of 2010 where he assisted in the | ||
construction of a local school. | construction of a local school. | ||
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synthetic and systems biology as a graduate student, and then continue his work as a postdoc and | synthetic and systems biology as a graduate student, and then continue his work as a postdoc and | ||
secure a position at some academic institution. | secure a position at some academic institution. | ||
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teaching, having worked closely with high school students to teach a weekly three-hour Advanced | teaching, having worked closely with high school students to teach a weekly three-hour Advanced | ||
Placement Physics class. | Placement Physics class. | ||
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/9/93/Igem_logo.jpg" style="max-width:300px;"/> | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/9/93/Igem_logo.jpg" style="max-width:300px;"/> | ||
joined the BE and EECS faculties as dual associate professor (with tenure) starting in July 2009, having moved from Princeton University where he held comparable rank in their department of electrical engineering and with a joint appointment in their department of molecular biology. His degrees are double BA in Computer Science and Economics from Brandeis University (1992), followed by SM and PhD in EECS at MIT (1994, 2001). Professor Weiss is a prominent and widely respected figure in the emerging field known as ‘synthetic biology’, with emphasis on designing molecular circuits governing cell behavior using quantitative systems modeling approaches. He is expected to help lead MIT’s efforts in both synthetic biology and systems biology, and indeed to guide their integration. | joined the BE and EECS faculties as dual associate professor (with tenure) starting in July 2009, having moved from Princeton University where he held comparable rank in their department of electrical engineering and with a joint appointment in their department of molecular biology. His degrees are double BA in Computer Science and Economics from Brandeis University (1992), followed by SM and PhD in EECS at MIT (1994, 2001). Professor Weiss is a prominent and widely respected figure in the emerging field known as ‘synthetic biology’, with emphasis on designing molecular circuits governing cell behavior using quantitative systems modeling approaches. He is expected to help lead MIT’s efforts in both synthetic biology and systems biology, and indeed to guide their integration. | ||
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/9/93/Igem_logo.jpg" style="max-width:300px;"/> | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/9/93/Igem_logo.jpg" style="max-width:300px;"/> | ||
is currently performing research to extend the life of silicon technology as well as to create the next generation of carbon-based computing platforms in the emergent fields of synthetic biology and BioCAD. Formerly, Jonathan was a lecturer at Princeton University and founder and CEO of a logic emulation startup. Dr. Babb earned a BS in electrical engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology and an SM and PhD in electrical engineering and computer science from MIT. He is a member of the IEEE. | is currently performing research to extend the life of silicon technology as well as to create the next generation of carbon-based computing platforms in the emergent fields of synthetic biology and BioCAD. Formerly, Jonathan was a lecturer at Princeton University and founder and CEO of a logic emulation startup. Dr. Babb earned a BS in electrical engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology and an SM and PhD in electrical engineering and computer science from MIT. He is a member of the IEEE. | ||
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/9/93/Igem_logo.jpg" style="max-width:300px;"/> | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/9/93/Igem_logo.jpg" style="max-width:300px;"/> | ||
is a NSF Graduate Fellow in MIT Biological Engineering and a student in Ron Weiss' Synthetic Biology Group. He is interested in synthetic protein phosphorylation networks and the emergence of multicellularity from single celed organisms. Deepak is a returning instructor and been instrumental in our success thus far. | is a NSF Graduate Fellow in MIT Biological Engineering and a student in Ron Weiss' Synthetic Biology Group. He is interested in synthetic protein phosphorylation networks and the emergence of multicellularity from single celed organisms. Deepak is a returning instructor and been instrumental in our success thus far. | ||
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<h1>Linda Griffith</h1> | <h1>Linda Griffith</h1> | ||
heads the Griffith Lab at MIT. She was an Area Head for the Bioengineering and Mechanical Engineering Department. She is also the director of the MIT Biotechnology Process Engineering Center as well as a professor of Mechanical and Biological Engineering at MIT. | heads the Griffith Lab at MIT. She was an Area Head for the Bioengineering and Mechanical Engineering Department. She is also the director of the MIT Biotechnology Process Engineering Center as well as a professor of Mechanical and Biological Engineering at MIT. | ||
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<h1>Timothy Lu</h1> | <h1>Timothy Lu</h1> | ||
has a PhD in Electrical and Biomedical Engineering from MIT in 2008. He is currently completing his MD degree in the Harvard/MIT HST program. In addition to other awards, Dr. Lu is the Lemelson-MIT student prize winner in 2008. In his PhD work with James Collins at BU/HHMI, Tim built and modeled artificial memory systems and counters in bacteria, and developed methods for delivering synthetically engineered bacteriophage to infection sites. His research focus is the development of synthetic-biology based solutions for pressing medical and industrial problems, using concepts from electronic circuits and systems design. His current focus is inventing effective treatments for infectious diseases and cancer using synthetic biology. | has a PhD in Electrical and Biomedical Engineering from MIT in 2008. He is currently completing his MD degree in the Harvard/MIT HST program. In addition to other awards, Dr. Lu is the Lemelson-MIT student prize winner in 2008. In his PhD work with James Collins at BU/HHMI, Tim built and modeled artificial memory systems and counters in bacteria, and developed methods for delivering synthetically engineered bacteriophage to infection sites. His research focus is the development of synthetic-biology based solutions for pressing medical and industrial problems, using concepts from electronic circuits and systems design. His current focus is inventing effective treatments for infectious diseases and cancer using synthetic biology. | ||
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<h1>Tom Knight</h1> | <h1>Tom Knight</h1> | ||
is a senior research scientist in the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, part of the MIT School of Engineering. Inspired in part by the work of Harold Morowitz, a Yale physicist and biologist, Knight studied biochemistry, genetics, and cellular biology, and set up a biology lab within MIT's Laboratory for Computer Science. In this lab he created the concept of the BioBrick and began creating a library of BioBricks that could be used to build biological computation structures. Today, BioBricks form the basis of the iGEM (International Genetically Engineered Machine) competition. Knight continues to focus on Synthetic Biology at the Knight Laboratory. | is a senior research scientist in the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, part of the MIT School of Engineering. Inspired in part by the work of Harold Morowitz, a Yale physicist and biologist, Knight studied biochemistry, genetics, and cellular biology, and set up a biology lab within MIT's Laboratory for Computer Science. In this lab he created the concept of the BioBrick and began creating a library of BioBricks that could be used to build biological computation structures. Today, BioBricks form the basis of the iGEM (International Genetically Engineered Machine) competition. Knight continues to focus on Synthetic Biology at the Knight Laboratory. | ||
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<h1>Linda Griffith</h1> | <h1>Linda Griffith</h1> | ||
heads the Griffith Lab at MIT. She was an Area Head for the Bioengineering and Mechanical Engineering Department. She is also the director of the MIT Biotechnology Process Engineering Center as well as a professor of Mechanical and Biological Engineering at MIT. | heads the Griffith Lab at MIT. She was an Area Head for the Bioengineering and Mechanical Engineering Department. She is also the director of the MIT Biotechnology Process Engineering Center as well as a professor of Mechanical and Biological Engineering at MIT. | ||
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<h1>Roger Kamm</h1> | <h1>Roger Kamm</h1> | ||
is the Germeshausen Professor of Mechanical and Biological Engineering and Associate Head of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at MIT. A primary objective of Kamm’s research group has been the application of fundamental concepts in fluid and solid mechanics to better understand essential biological and physiological phenomena. Studies over the past thirty years have addressed issues in the respiratory, ocular and cardiovascular systems. More recently, his attention has focused on two new areas, the molecular mechanisms of cellular force sensation, and the development of new scaffold materials and microfluidic technologies for vascularized engineered tissues. Kamm is a Fellow of the American Institute for Biomedical Engineering and the American Society for Mechanical Engineering. He is the current chair of the US National Committee on Biomechanics and the World Council on Biomechanics, and Director of the Global Enterprise for Micro Mechanics and Molecular Medicine. | is the Germeshausen Professor of Mechanical and Biological Engineering and Associate Head of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at MIT. A primary objective of Kamm’s research group has been the application of fundamental concepts in fluid and solid mechanics to better understand essential biological and physiological phenomena. Studies over the past thirty years have addressed issues in the respiratory, ocular and cardiovascular systems. More recently, his attention has focused on two new areas, the molecular mechanisms of cellular force sensation, and the development of new scaffold materials and microfluidic technologies for vascularized engineered tissues. Kamm is a Fellow of the American Institute for Biomedical Engineering and the American Society for Mechanical Engineering. He is the current chair of the US National Committee on Biomechanics and the World Council on Biomechanics, and Director of the Global Enterprise for Micro Mechanics and Molecular Medicine. | ||
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<h1>Natalie Kuldell</h1> | <h1>Natalie Kuldell</h1> | ||
did her doctoral and post-doctoral work at Harvard Medical School. She develops discovery-based curricula drawn from the current literature to engage undergraduate students in structured, reasonably authentic laboratory experiences. She has also written educational materials to improve scientific communication as it occurs across disciplinary boundaries and as it's taught in undergraduate subjects. Her research examines gene expression in eukaryotic cells, focusing most recently on synthetic biology and redesign of the yeast mitochondria. She serves as Associate Education Director for SynBERC, an NSF-funded research center for Synthetic Biology, and Councilor at Large for the Institute of Biological Engineering. | did her doctoral and post-doctoral work at Harvard Medical School. She develops discovery-based curricula drawn from the current literature to engage undergraduate students in structured, reasonably authentic laboratory experiences. She has also written educational materials to improve scientific communication as it occurs across disciplinary boundaries and as it's taught in undergraduate subjects. Her research examines gene expression in eukaryotic cells, focusing most recently on synthetic biology and redesign of the yeast mitochondria. She serves as Associate Education Director for SynBERC, an NSF-funded research center for Synthetic Biology, and Councilor at Large for the Institute of Biological Engineering. | ||
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<h1>Mark Bathe</h1> | <h1>Mark Bathe</h1> | ||
joined MIT BE as an assistant professor in January 2009. Mark received his SB (1998), MS (2001), and Ph.D. (2004) in Mechanical Engineering from MIT, with his Ph.D. thesis supervised by Professor Bruce Tidor on computational analysis of proteoglycan and glycosaminoglycan structure and mechanics. During the period 2005-2008 he undertook postdoctoral work as an Alexander von Humboldt Research Fellow, first with Professor Erwin Frey at Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich Germany on theoretical modeling of cytoskeletal dynamics and then with Professor Marie France Carlier at CNRS in Paris France pursuing related cellular biophysics experiments. He has focused his efforts on multi-scale modeling from protein sequence to structure to spatio-temporal dynamics informed by microscopic imaging experimentation, as part of the highly collaborative Laboratory for Integrative Computational Cell Biology & Biophysics. | joined MIT BE as an assistant professor in January 2009. Mark received his SB (1998), MS (2001), and Ph.D. (2004) in Mechanical Engineering from MIT, with his Ph.D. thesis supervised by Professor Bruce Tidor on computational analysis of proteoglycan and glycosaminoglycan structure and mechanics. During the period 2005-2008 he undertook postdoctoral work as an Alexander von Humboldt Research Fellow, first with Professor Erwin Frey at Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich Germany on theoretical modeling of cytoskeletal dynamics and then with Professor Marie France Carlier at CNRS in Paris France pursuing related cellular biophysics experiments. He has focused his efforts on multi-scale modeling from protein sequence to structure to spatio-temporal dynamics informed by microscopic imaging experimentation, as part of the highly collaborative Laboratory for Integrative Computational Cell Biology & Biophysics. | ||
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<h1>Peter Andrew Carr</h1> | <h1>Peter Andrew Carr</h1> | ||
leads the GeneFab research team at the Center for Bits and Atoms at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The goal of this work is to expand the limits of genetic engineering, from single genes to the engineering of complete genomes. He holds a Bachelors degree in Biochemistry from Harvard College and a Ph.D. in Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics from Columbia University. Prior to his current position he was a post- doctoral research fellow in the lab of Peter S. Kim at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research. | leads the GeneFab research team at the Center for Bits and Atoms at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The goal of this work is to expand the limits of genetic engineering, from single genes to the engineering of complete genomes. He holds a Bachelors degree in Biochemistry from Harvard College and a Ph.D. in Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics from Columbia University. Prior to his current position he was a post- doctoral research fellow in the lab of Peter S. Kim at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research. | ||
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<h1>Narendra Maheshri</h1> | <h1>Narendra Maheshri</h1> | ||
is an Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He has bachelor’s degrees in both Chemical Engineering and Biology from MIT, and a PhD in Chemical Engineering from the University of California (UC) Berkeley, where he focused on engineering viral vectors for gene therapy. In his post-doctoral studies at UC San Francisco and Harvard, he became interested in systems’ biology and gene regulation. His current research interests are in understanding the dynamics of gene regulation and gene regulatory networks in single cells using a combined experimental and theoretical approach. | is an Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He has bachelor’s degrees in both Chemical Engineering and Biology from MIT, and a PhD in Chemical Engineering from the University of California (UC) Berkeley, where he focused on engineering viral vectors for gene therapy. In his post-doctoral studies at UC San Francisco and Harvard, he became interested in systems’ biology and gene regulation. His current research interests are in understanding the dynamics of gene regulation and gene regulatory networks in single cells using a combined experimental and theoretical approach. | ||
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<h1>Jacob Rubens</h1> | <h1>Jacob Rubens</h1> | ||
is a Ph.D. student in the MIT Microbiology program and a student of Tim Lu in the RLE Synthetic Biology Group. He is interested in developing synthetic biology tools to investigate and exploit the human microbiome for therapeutic purposes as well as optimizing biological circuit engineering methods. Jacob is an alum of the Washington University iGEM team. | is a Ph.D. student in the MIT Microbiology program and a student of Tim Lu in the RLE Synthetic Biology Group. He is interested in developing synthetic biology tools to investigate and exploit the human microbiome for therapeutic purposes as well as optimizing biological circuit engineering methods. Jacob is an alum of the Washington University iGEM team. | ||
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<h1>Jordan Whisler</h1> | <h1>Jordan Whisler</h1> | ||
is a second year graduate student in the MIT Mechanical Engineering department. He is a research assistant for Roger Kamm and specializes in using microfluidic techniques to control tissue formation and patterning, specifically with respect to the microvasculature. | is a second year graduate student in the MIT Mechanical Engineering department. He is a research assistant for Roger Kamm and specializes in using microfluidic techniques to control tissue formation and patterning, specifically with respect to the microvasculature. | ||
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Revision as of 04:53, 17 August 2011