Allison Ashley-Koch, Ph.D.
Assistant Research Professor, Center for Human Genetics.
Allison Ashley-Koch, PhD, is an Assistant Professor in the Section of Medical Genetics, Department of Medicine. Her research focuses on the genetic epidemiology of Mendelian and complex genetic disorders. Dr. Ashley-Koch's primary interest is the genetics of psychiatric disorders, including attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, autism, and trichotillomania. She is also performing studies to identify genes involved in and essential tremor, as well as genes that modify the clinical severity of sickle cell disease. Dr. Ashley-Koch served the Center for Human Genetics as a post-doctoral fellow and research associate from 1998 to 2000.
For more information, visit Dr. Ashley-Koch's webpage.
Richard Auten, M.D.
Dr. Auten is Associate Professor of Pediatrics at Duke University Medical Center, and Co-Director of the Southern Center for Environmentally Driven Disparities in Birth Outcomes. His research is focused on environmental inflammatory and oxidative mechanisms for disrupted pre- and postnatal human development.
For more information, visit Dr. Auten's webpage.
Lori Bennear
Assistant Professor of Environmental Economics and Policy
For more information, visit Lori Bennear's webpage.
Dennis Clements, M.D., MPH, Ph.D.
Dr. Dennis A. Clements is a professor of pediatrics, community and family medicine and medicine at Duke University Medical Center. He is also an adjunct professor of epidemiology at the University of North Carolina School of Public Health in Chapel Hill, NC.
For more information, visit Dr. Clements' bio page.
Richard T. Di Giulio, Ph.D.
Professor of Environmental Toxicology and Director, Superfund Basic Research Center; Director, Integrated Toxicology Program
For more information, visit Dr. Di Giulio's webpage.
Ken Dodge, Ph.D.
Dr. Ken Dodge is the William McDougall Professor of Public Policy Studies and Professor of Psychology - Social and Health Sciences. Additionally, Dr. Dodge is the first director of the Center for Child and Family Policy Center. In this role, he leads an effort to bridge basic scientific research in children's development with public policy affecting children and families. The Center provides an integrated system of research, debate and dissemination, public service, and teaching, addressing issues of child and family policy.
Dr. Dodge has published over 130 scientific articles and is the Principal Investigator for several large research grants. He is the recipient of a Research Scientist Award from the National Institute of Mental Health and has been honored with several awards from the American Psychological Association, including the Distinguished Scientific Award for Early Career Contribution to Psychopathology.
For more information, visit Dr. Dodge's bio page.
Jonathan Freedman, Ph.D.
Dr. Jonathan Freedman is Associate Professor of Environmental Toxicology at the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences at Duke University. Dr. Freedman's expertise lies in molecular biology, cell biology and molecular toxicology. C. elegans, tissue culture cells, zebrafish, toxicogenomics, and the relation between toxicant exposure and gene expression.
For more information, visit Dr. Freedman's bio page.
Michael Foster, Ph.D.
Research Professor, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine Director, Inhalation Toxicology CCBVP Facility Core
Dr. Foster's area of research interest and expertise is in the study of environmental air pollutants and their influence on the respiratory system. His laboratory evaluates injury and repair of respiratory tissues in both laboratory animal models and human subjects. Present awards support investigations of the relationship between host (genetic) factors and tissue susceptibility to responsiveness and injury.
For more information, visit Dr. Foster's webpage.
Alan Gelfand, Ph.D.
Dr. Alan Gelfand is the J.B. Duke Professor of Statistics and Decision Sciences and Director of Graduate Studies at the Institute of Statistics and Decision Sciences at Duke University. Dr. Gelfand's current research interests include spatial statistics, modeling and model determination, Bayesian computation, and Bayes and empirical Bayes inference.
For more information, visit Dr. Gelfand's bio page.
Christina Gibson-Davis, Ph.D.
Dr. Christina Gibson-Davis is the Assistant Professor of Public Policy Studies in the Center for Child and Family Policy at the Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy at Duke University. Her research focuses on the evaluation of effects of anti-poverty programs and the effects of poverty and welfare on the well-being of children and families.
For more information, visit Dr. Gibson-Davis' bio page.
Jonathan Goodall, Ph.D.
Dr. Jon Goodall is an Assistant Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of South Carolina. Dr. Goodall's primary research interest is in the management of water resources at the river basin scale, in particular the
design of new computational and informatics tools needed to integrate spatiotemporal hydrologic data and models. His work has a broad range of applications from flooding to water quality to environmental health.
For more information, visit Dr. Goodall's webpage.
Edward C. Halperin, M.D.
Dr. Edward C. Halperin, M.D., is the L.R. Prosnitz Professor and Chairman, Department of Radiation and Oncology and Professor, Department of Pediatrics, Duke University Medical Center. Dr. Halperin studies pediatric oncology through the development and conduct of clinical trials for childhood tumors and by participation in the Pediatric Oncology Group and the Duke Pediatric Brain Tumor Clinic. He is the principal author of three editions of Pediatric Radiation Oncology. Dr. Halperin also studies adult neuro-oncology through the development and conduct of clinical trials for the treatment of brain tumors.
Dr. Halperin's basic science research examines total lymphoid irradiation as an immunosuppressive for heart, lung, and renal transplantation in a pig to baboon xenograft model and cytogenetic predictors of second malignant neoplasms following therapy for pediatric tumors (in collaboration with the U.S. environmental Protection Agency).
Dr. Halperin maintains an interest in racial and relgious discrimination in twentieth century medicine.
David E. Hinton, Ph.D.
Nicholas Professor of Environmental Quality, Environmental Sciences & Policy, Marine Science & Conservation
For more information, visit Dr. Hinton's webpage.
Sherman A. James, Ph.D.
Sherman A. James is the Susan B. King Professor of Public Policy Studies in the Terry Sanford Institute for Public Policy, Duke University. Prior to joining Duke University, he taught in the Epidemiology departments at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill (1973-89) and at the University of Michigan (1989-03). At Michigan, he was the John P. Kirscht Collegiate Professor of Public Health, the Founding Director (1998-2003) of the Center for Research on Ethnicity, Culture and Health (CRECH), Chairman (1999-2003) of the Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, and a Senior Research Scientist in the Survey Research Center at the Institute for Social Research. As a Social Epidemiologist, Dr. James' research focuses on racial and ethnic inequalities in health status, and health care, and community-based and public policy interventions designed to minimize, and ultimately eliminate, these inequalities.
Dr. James was elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences in 2000. In 2001, he received the Abraham Lilienfeld Award from the Epidemiology section of the American Public Health Association for career excellence in the teaching of epidemiology. He is a fellow of the American Epidemiological Society, the American College of Epidemiology, the American Heart Association, and the Academy of Behavioral Medicine Research. Dr. James is a former Associate Editor of Ethnicity and Disease, and the American Journal of Public Health. He is the 2007-2008 president of the Society for Epidemiologic Research. Dr. James received his PhD (Social Psychology) from Washington University, in St. Louis (1973).
For more information, visit Dr. James' bio page.
Edward Levin, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Department of Phsychology and Behavioral Sciences
Dr. Levin is Chief of the Neurobehavioral Research Lab in the Psychiatry Department of Duke University Medical Center. His primary academic appointment is as Professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. He also has secondary appointments in the Department Pharmacology and Cancer Biology, the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences and the Nicholas School of the Environment at Duke. His primary research effort is to understand basic neural interactions underlying cognitive function and addiction and to apply this knowledge to better understand cognitive dysfunction and addiction disorders and to develop novel therapeutic treatments.
For more information, visit Dr. Levin's faculty webpage.
Elwood Linney, Ph.D.
Professor, Depts. of Microbiology and Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences
For more information, visit Dr. Linney's webpage.
David R. McClay, Ph.D.
Professor, Department of Biology
For more information, visit Dr. McClay's webpage.
Phil Morgan, Ph. D.
Dr. Phil Morgan is Professor of Sociology at Duke University. His research focuses on human fertility. More specifically he asks: what factors explain variation in fertility across populations? A mainstream sociological perspective guides his research. This perspective focuses attention on group-specific structural and cultural factors, such as differences in the nature of patriarchy, or variation in educational and economic institutions. Statistical and demographic techniques, new or unusual data, and particular research opportunities frequently provide leverage, that is, the power to answer key questions convincingly. Leverage plays a key role in his choice of particular research questions and projects.
For more information, visit Dr. Morgan's bio page.
Joseph R. Nevins, Ph.D.
Barbara Levine Professor of Breast Cancer Genomics and Director of IGSP's Center for Applied Genomics and Technology
Dr. Joseph Nevins is Barbara Levine Professor of Breast Cancer Genomics and Director of the IGSP's Center for Applied Genomics & Technology. His research focuses on the gene regulatory events associated with the control of cellular proliferation and cell fate, including the dysregulation that contributes to oncogenesis. This work has specifically focused on the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor (Rb) and the role of this protein in controlling the E2F transcription factor activities. Additionally, work in the Nevins lab has focused on the interplay of cellular signaling pathways that in combination control cell proliferation including the role of Ras, Myc, and other activities. Finally, a major component of the effort in the lab focuses on the use of genome-scale measures of gene expression, employing DNA microarrays, to identify expression profiles that characterize oncogenic pathways and that define tumor phenotypes of importance in determining clinical outcomes.
For more information, visit Dr. Nevins' webpage.
Jerry Reiter, Ph.D.
Jerry Reiter is assistant professor in the Department of Statistical Science. His main research interests include methods for protecting data subjects' confidentiality when sharing their data with the public, methods for handling missing data, analysis of complex surveys, and causal inference.
For more information, visit Jerry Reiter's webpage.
Theodore Slotkin, Ph.D.
Professor, Department of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology
For more information, visit Dr. Slotkin's webpage.
Geeta Swamy, M.D.
Dr. Geeta Swamy is a physician in the Department of Maternal and Fetal Medicine at the Duke University Medical Center. Her clinical interests include preterm birth, fetal growth, and maternal complications of pregnancy.
For more information, visit Dr. Swamy's bio page.
Wayne R. Thomann, Ph.D.
Dr. Wayne R. Thomann, Assistant Clinical Professor, Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, provides technical expertise in the areas of bioaerosols, allergens, and indoor air quality. Dr. Thomann has applied his background in microbiology to the assessment and control of biological agents in the indoor environment. He has been the lead investigator on many hundreds of assessments of the biological component of indoor air quality complaints or concerns. In the area of childhood allergen exposures, Dr. Thomann has conducted exposure assessments in the Ronald McDonald House of Durham, NC, alternative housing facilities for pediatric patients at Duke Hospital, and numerous public schools throughout North Carolina. Many of his recent investigations have involved the characterization and remediation of hurricane damaged (flooded) buildings in North Carolina and Florida.
Dr. Thomann also serves as the Director of Occupational and Environmental Safety at Duke University. Dr. Thomann is an active member of multiple international committees involved with defining protocols for the identification and management of environmental contaminants. In particular, he has applied his expertise in the control of bioaerosols to the revision of the American Society of Heating, Refrigeration, and Air Conditioning Engineers' Standard on Ventilation for Indoor Air Quality, the development of a new Bioaerosol Assessment Guide for the American Society of Testing and Materials, and the definition of maintenance and cleaning protocols for the International Society of Indoor Air Quality and Climate.
For more information, visit Dr. Thomann's bio page.
David Walmer, M.D., Ph.D.
Dr. David Walmer is a physician in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Duke University Medical Center. His clinical interests include assisted reproductive technologies (oocyte donation, IVF, ovulation induction, etc.), general infertility, DES exposure, infertility microsurgery (reversal of tubal ligation), genital tract anomalies, uterine fibroids, repetitive 1st trimester pregnancy loss, polycystic ovarian syndrome, and endometriosis.
For more information, visit Dr. Walmer's bio page.
Redford Williams, M.D.
Dr. Redford Williams is currently Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Professor of Medicine, and Director of the Behavioral Medicine Research Center at Duke University Medical Center. He is also Professor of Psychology in the Graduate School at Duke and Adjunct Professor of Epidemiology in the School of Public Health at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. He is cofounder, with Virginia Williams, Ph.D., of Williams LifeSkills, Inc., a firm whose mission is the development, evaluation, and delivery or training products to enhance emotional competencies.
Since joining the Duke faculty in 1972, following a fellowship at NIH, Redford has conducted research aimed at identifying psychosocial factors that increase the risk of medical disorders, the biobehavioral mechanisms whereby such factors contribute to pathogenesis, and the development of behavioral interventions aimed at ameliorating the health-damaging effects of psychosocial risk factors. He is the author or coauthor of ten books, including Anger Kills and LifeSkills, and over 150 articles in peer reviewed journals, he is probably best known for his research documenting the role of hostility and anger as a risk factor for coronary heart disease and other life-threatening illnesses. Most recently, he has begun to evaluate the role genetic factors, particularly polymorphisms of genes involved in regulating functions of the neurotransmitter serotonin, as they affect the impact of psychosocial risk factors on health and disease.
In addition to service on numerous review committees and task forces for the National Institutes of Health, Redford has also been a consultant to government agencies and corporations. He is past president of the Society of Behavioral Medicine, the American Psychosomatic Society, and the Academy of Behavioral Medicine Research. He is a frequent commentator regarding matters of stress and disease for national print and electronic media in the U.S. and abroad.
For more information, visit Dr. Williams's bio page.
Not pictured:
Phil Bradley
Margaret Casey
Michele Casper, Ph.D.
Roseanne Farris
Jan Jernigan
Claude A. Piantadosi, M.D.
Elizabeth Pratson
Avner Vengosh
Erika Weinthal
Mark Wiesner