Team:Stanford/TeamPage
From 2009.igem.org
Home | Project | Modeling | Parts | Notebook | Team | SBOL-V |
<center>
The Stanford iGEM team consist of 10 undergraduate students, and also include graduate student mentors and faculty advisors. Students are working full time throughout the summer of 2009 to engineer a synthetic biological system, and will present their project in the form of posters and a 20 minute presentation at the Jamboree. This is the first time that our team is competing.
Contents |
Undergraduates
- Suzie BartramClass of 2012, Undeclared. Her research experiences include an internship at the McLaughlin Research Institute in the lab of John R. Bermingham, Jr., Ph.D. where she performed in situ hybridization on mouse embryos to study genes related to Schwann cell differentiation and peripheral myelination.
- Mark FangProject Director, Class of 2011, Biomedical Computation and Biochemistry. With the Stanford iGEM team Mark is responsible for the protein engineering and overall system design aspects. Outside of iGEM, Mark has been a part of the Helms Lab in the Stanford Department of Regenerative Medicine for just shy of two years, and has completed internships in Bioinformatics at Iowa State University and in Particle Physics at Drake University. Mark enjoys taking a multidisciplinary approach to thinking about the life sciences and finds all of the natural science fields equally fascinating.
- Joseph Lau Class of 2011, Undeclared. Joseph comes from industry with a mechanical engineering background. He has spent the last two summers at Hewlett-Packard as a mechanical engineering intern. He is also very interested in the design process and sees synthetic biology as an engineering concept that can revolutionize biology.
- Leon LinSecretary, Class of 2011, Computer Science and Biology. Leon has primarily conducted research in chemistry, having researched cyanogels at Princeton University and Superplasticizers at Elotex in Switzerland. He is responsible for the modeling on the Stanford iGEM team and his interests these days revolve around computer science theory.
- Ariana PeckClass of 2012, Molecular and Cellular Biology. Ariana's research experience involved a summer internship in Betsy Mellins' lab where she studied monocytic phenotype in patients with systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis.
- Robert OvadiaLab Manager, Class of 2011, Bioengineering. Attending the City College of San Francisco, Robert has worked with the 2007 UCSF iGEM team on phosphinositide "barcodes" and the 2008 Caltech team on a probiotic bacteria.
- Anusuya RamasubramanianTreasurer, Class of 2011, Biomechanical Engineering. Anusuya is interested in exploring the role of human-engineered nanomaterials in biological systems. For the past three years, she has been working in Jeffrey T. Glass' lab at Duke University's Pratt School.
- Bobby WeiClass of 2011, Biomedical Computation. Currently split between attending medical school and working for the biotechnology industry, Bobby is also interested in microfinancing and social entrepreneurship, especially in China. He enjoys playing the piano, as well as volleyball.
- Ming YanClass of 2011, Biomechanical Engineering. Fascinated by the science of genetics, She has spent the past summer doing research in the field of plant genetics. Outside of the lab, she is involved in Society of Women Engineers and Stanford Student Biodesign, among other groups.
- Mary YangClass of 2010, a summer exchange student from Tsinghua University, is now responsible of modeling and graphical design for the Stanford iGEM team. Mary has previously worked with the 2008 THU team on Bacteria Chemotaxis. Majoring in Biomedical Engineering, she is also interested in medical graphics and surgery navigation. Outside lab, Mary works as president of the Student Science and Technology Association of Tsinghua Medical School.
Directors
- Nghi Nguyen
- Ariane Tom
- Thinh Nguyen Duc
Graduates
- Andy Chang
- Deepa Galaiya
- Annie Hazelhurst
- Hiren Mulchandani
- Virginia Teijeiro
- Isis Trenchard
- Chris VanLang
- Rayka Yokoo
- Feng Zhang
- Bo Zhou
Faculty Advisors
- Christina Smolke
- Drew Endy