Position:
NIH Oxford-Cambridge Fellow at National Institutes of Health
Location:
Oxford, United Kingdom
Work:
National Institutes of Health - Bethesda, Maryland since Apr 2012
NIH Oxford-Cambridge Fellow
Syracuse University - Syracuse, New York Area Jun 2011 - May 2012
Biomedical Research Intern
Syracuse University - Syracuse, New York Area Jun 2010 - Aug 2010
Biomedical Research Intern
WAM Systems - Plymouth Meeting, Pennsylvania Jun 2009 - Aug 2009
Software Quality Assurance
Education:
University of Oxford 2012 - 2016
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Biomedical Sciences, General
Syracuse University 2008 - 2012
Bachelor's degree, Bioengineering and Biomedical Engineering
Skills:
Microsoft Office
Matlab
LFP recordings
CANTAB
Spike2
Microscopy
Cell Culture
Fluorescence Microscopy
Scanning Electron Microscopy
Atomic Force Microscopy
ImageJ
Interests:
Rowing, mountain climbing, gliding, skiing, playing the trumpet and harmonica.
Awards:
2012 Syracuse Earl H. DeVoe Prize
Syracuse University College of Engineering and Computer Science
The DeVoe Prize is presented to an LCS student
who has made a significant scholarly research
contribution as an undergraduate
2012 Syracuse Bioengineering Founder's Award
Syracuse University College of Engineering and Computer Science
National Institutes of Health Oxford-Cambridge Scholar
National Institutes of Health
The National Institutes of Health Oxford-Cambridge Scholars Program is an accelerated, individualized doctoral training program for outstanding science students committed to biomedical research careers. The program is based on the British system in which students perform doctoral research without required formal courses other than those which students choose to take in relationship to their own interests. Students selected for admission to the program have already developed a sophisticated scientific background by having engaged in research as undergraduates.