Our collaboration with Dr. Susan McCouch where we are studying the genomics of rice was profiled in the Cornell magazine Ezra.
Our paper published in collaboration with Dr. Ronald Crystal on a cocaine vaccine (Molecular Therapy, 2010) has been covered in the population press (see our Publications link). Check out the following articles Bloomberg Businessweek, Time, and at CNN.
Our paper published in collaboration with Dr. Ronald Crystal on detecting the lung gene expression consequences of low exposure to smoking (American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2010) has been covered in the popular press (see our Publications link). Check out the following articles in the LA Times, Time, and at CNN.
We have been awarded both a seed grant and an infrastructure grant from the Cornell Center for Comparative Population Genomics (3CPG) to provide bioinformatics and analysis infrastructure for Cornell users of the Drosophila Genetic Reference Panel (DGRP).
Congratulations to Ben Logsdon who has been selected as a Cornell Center for Comparative Population Genomics (3CPG) scholar for 2010!
With Dr. Susan McCouch, we have been awarded a grant from the National Science Foundation to study the genomics of complex agricultural traits in rice (see our Grants and Publications pages).
With Marjory Brooks, we have been awarded a grant from the Cornell Center for Vertebrate Genomics (CVG) to fine-map the locus for canine Scott syndrome!
Check out the podcast [episode 51] describing our recent Molecular Medicine paper (Hubner et al. 2009), a result of our ongoing collaboration with Dr. Ronald G. Crystal's group at Weill Medical College.
Congratulations to Larsson Omberg has been selected as a Cornell Center for Comparative Population Genomics (3CPG) postdoctoral scholar for 2009-1010!
Congratulations to Ben Logsdon who has been selected as a Center for Vertebrate Genomics (CVG) Scholar for 2009!
Check out the article describing the Cornell Veterinary Archive (see our Grants and Publications pages). Our involvement with the archive currently includes several ongoing collaborations aimed at identifying genetic loci responsible for genetic diseases in dogs.