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Interdisciplinary Biomedical Research Program (IBRP)

 
   
 

A training grant funded by the National Institutes of General Medical Sciences (R25-GM62492)

Description
As biomedical research enters the post-genomics age, much of our understanding of complex, system-level interactions which control biological processes will arise from rigorous interdisciplinary interactions between the physical and biological sciences. Stony Brook seeks to cultivate this interaction through an innovative summer research program known as the Interdisciplinary Biomedical Research Program (IBRP). Funded by the National Institutes of Health, the IBRP will enable up to ten undergraduates who otherwise would study and work solely in the physical sciences or engineering to spend ten weeks working at the frontiers of biomedical research.  

The students will have the rare opportunity to:

  • Apply scientific, engineering and mathematical skills of their major discipline - software and hardware development, mathematical modeling, statics and dynamics, circuit theory and design, signal analysis, instrumentation, statistical analysis, and materials characterization - to a specific biological question being examined in an investigator's laboratory.
     
  • Participate directly in the research and contribute to the biological aspects of the study
     
  • Learn about hypotheses-driven biomedical research, methods in biology, and interpretation of results.
     
  • Participate in several enrichment activities, including a weekly journal club and seminar series which will enable them to learn about the work of the other IBRP labs, as well as other newly-emerging fields within the biomedical sciences.


Benefits of IBRP
Through the research and other activities students will:

  • Gain a broad exposure to biomedical research
     
  • Receive direct experience addressing one specific biological research problem
     
  • Develop an understanding of the essential role "non-biology" disciplines ultimately play in efforts to more fully understand biological systems
     
  • Obtain an appreciation of the interrelationships among
    disciplines
     
  • Discover the power of a multidisciplinary approach to research in biological systems
     
  • Realize the unique contribution that they, as physicists, chemists, engineers or mathematicians, can make.

Research supervisors will benefit from the computational and technological skills IBRP students, and these disciplines, bring to their laboratory — skills which are not common to the life science majors who typically gravitate to there. We anticipate that many of the student-faculty relationships formed through the IBRP will persist into the academic year and beyond.

Students in the IBRP will have several projects to choose from, including some at Brookhaven National Laboratory.
 

Program Dates
June 2nd to August 11th, 2004.
 

Eligibility
Students concentrating in the hards sciences such as Physics, Math, Chemistry and Engineering are eligible for the program. Students will recieve a $4000 stipend for the duration of their fellowship.
 

Faculty Participating in the Program

Clinton Rubin, Ph.D. (Principal Investigator)
Professor and Director, Center for Biotechnology; Chair, Department of Biomedical Engineering.

Carl Anderson, Ph.D.
Senior Scientist and Chair, Biology Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory. National Cancer Institute, U.S. Army, and the Department of Energy.

Helene Benveniste, M.D, Ph.D.
Scientist, Medical Department, and Acting Associate Director of Life Sciences, Brookhaven National Laboratory.

Danny Bluestein, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering

Weiliam Chen, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering

Ki H. Chon, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Physiology & Biophysics

Benjamin Chu, Ph.D.
Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and Materials Science & Engineering

Richard A.F. Clark, M.D.
Professor, Biomedical Engineering, Dermatology and Medicine; Director, Center for Tissue Engineering
Avraham Dilmanian, Ph.D.
Scientist, Medical Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL), Upton, New York; Associate Professor of Radiology and Biomedical Engineering, SUNY Stony Brook.
Emilia Entcheva , Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, Biomedical Engineering, Physiology and Biophysics
Molly (Mary D) Frame, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering and Physiology/Biophysics

Glenn R. Gaudette, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering and Surgery.

Gene Gindi, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Radiology and Electrical & Computer Engineering

Rita Goldstein, Ph.D.
Assistant Scientist, Brookhaven National Laboratory

Michael Hadjiargyrou, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Genetics and Orthopaedics

Bernadette Holdener, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Biochemistry

Stefan Judex, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering

Partap S. Khalsa, D.C., Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Neurobiology, and Orthopaedics; Graduate Program Director for BME

Caroline Kisker, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Pharmacological Sciences

Jerome Liang, Ph.D.
Professor of Radiology and Computer Science

Kenneth Marcu, Ph.D.
Professor of Biochemistry and Cell Biology

Lisa M. Miller, Ph.D.
Biophysicist, Brookhaven National Laboratory and Adjunct Assistant Professor, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Stony Brook University

Lilianne R. Mujica-Parodi, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering

Iwao Ojima, Ph.D.
Distinguished Professor and Chairman, Department of Chemistry

Yingtian Pan, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering
Kathlyn A. Parker, Ph.D.
Professor of Chemistry
Yi-Xian Qin, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Department of Biomedical Engineering

John Reinitz, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Applied Math and Statistics; Investigator Center for Developmental Genetics.

Hermann Schindelin, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Biochemistry and Cell Biology

Carlos Simmerling, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Chemistry.

Steven Smith, Ph.D.
Professor of Biochemistry and Director of the Interdisciplinary Program in Structural Biology

Helmut Strey, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering

Ilya Vakser, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics

Stanislaus S. Wong, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, Department of Chemistry, Stony Brook University; Assistant Scientist, Materials and Chemical Sciences Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory; Member of the Biomedical Engineering Program and the Biophysics Program at SUNY Stony Brook.


Click below to download application form:

Application deadline is March 15, 2004.

Applications must be submitted to:

Programs for Research and Creative Activity
IBRP Summer Research Fellowship,
N3005 Melville Library
Stony Brook University
Stony Brook, New York 11794-3357.

The completed application consists of the application form; a typed attachment which identifies the applicant's prior research experience and biomedical research interests (including reference to a participating IBRP faculty research mentor and laboratory of interest); a transcript; and a letter from a faculty member in the applicant's major field. The letter should comment on the student's research or engineering capabilities and potential (download application and guidelines above).

Please include 4 copies of the application form and essay with your application.

For more information, please contact:

Karen Kernan, Director
Programs for Research and Creative Activity
N3005 Melville Library
State University of New York at Stony Brook
Stony Brook, New York 11794-3357
tel: (631) 632-7114 / fax: (631) 632-4525
kkernan@notes.cc.sunysb.edu

 

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