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Notable program alum Amanda Randles models blood circulation — and is a role model for beginning scientists. Amanda Randles is the Alfred Winborne and Victoria Stover Mordecai associate professor of ...
In her doctoral research at Columbia University, Ganguly creates models of the neuronal connections in the fruit fly brain ...
ORNL’s Titan supercomputer is helping Brookhaven physicists understand the matter that formed microseconds after the Big Bang. At the dawn of the universe – just after the Big Bang – all matter was in ...
Environmental scientist Marianne Cowherd grew up in Michigan and loved snow. “My favorite thing was having school cancelled and going sledding,” she says. “But I never thought of snow as a water ...
Argonne’s Joe Insley combines art and computer science to build intricate images and animations from supercomputer simulations.
A computational sciences fellow models COVID-19 virus variants and examines how people weigh complex decisions.
A Brookhaven National Laboratory computer scientist is building software to help researchers interact with their data in new ways.
A CSGF fellow doggedly applies computational models to COVID-19 and cancer.
Pairing large-scale experiments with high-performance computing can reduce data processing time from several hours to minutes.
You could excuse Abigail Poteshman for taking a meandering path during her scientific career. While still in high school, she joined her first lab to conduct cancer cell experiments. Now, on the verge ...
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