BULLETIN
Appointments to Full and Named Professorships
Below are faculty who were appointed to full and endowed professorships
in December.
Emery Brown
Massachusetts General Hospital
Professor of Anesthesia
Massachusetts General Hospital
In his statistical research, Brown develops signal processing algorithms
and statistical methods to study how the brain and nervous system represent
and transmit information. His experimental research uses combined functional
magnetic resonance imaging and electroencephalogram recordings to study
how anesthetic drugs induce the state of general anesthesia in the brain.
Tal Geva
Professor of Pediatrics
Children’s Hospital Boston
Geva’s major clinical interest is diagnostic imaging of congenital
heart disease, including anatomic and functional assessment of complex malformations
using echocardiography and magnetic resonance imaging. He established and
developed the cardiac MRI program and is currently chief of the Noninvasive
Cardiac Imaging Division at Children’s. His research focuses on the
use of echocardiography and cardiac MRI to define quantitative functional
and morphometric predictors of course and outcome in either native or postoperative
congenital cardiac lesions.
Andrew Herzog
Professor of Neurology
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Herzog’s academic activities have focused on the clinical practice
and scientific investigation of brain–hormone relationships as
they interface within the specialties of neurology, psychiatry, endocrinology,
and gynecology–andrology. In 1980, he formed a multidisciplinary neuroendocrine
unit that provides clinical care and has NIH and pharmaceutical support
to investigate the effects of epilepsy on reproductive endocrine function
and the resulting consequences on seizures and emotional state, the role
of hormones in the pathophysiology of epilepsy and hormonally related patterns
of seizure occurrence, and the development of hormonally derived treatments
for neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders. Clinical findings are complemented
by the development of experimental animal models that have demonstrated
lateralized asymmetries in the reproductive
neuroendocrine system.
Harald Jüppner
Professor of Pediatrics
Massachusetts General Hospital
Jüppner’s research focuses on the regulation of mineral ion homeostasis
and bone metabolism. His primary interest is the PTH/PTHrP receptor and
understanding its role in bone, kidney, and cartilage biology. He is also
interested in parathyroid hormone (PTH) and fibroblast growth factor 23
(FGF23), particularly their role in patients with phosphate-wasting disorders
and chronic kidney disease. In recent years, molecular genetic studies have
been the main focus of his research. His laboratory identified the molecular
defect of several inherited disorders, including pseudohypoparathyroidism
type Ib, infantile cortical hyperostosis, and some hypophosphatemic disorders.
Faust Named Harvard’s Next President
Drew Gilpin Faust has been named the 28th president of Harvard University.
Dean of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study and the Lincoln professor
of history at Harvard, Faust takes over the position from interim president
Derek Bok on July 1. She will be Harvard’s first female president.
“I love universities, and I love this one in particular,” Faust
said to the press after the announcement. “I can imagine no higher
calling, no more exciting adventure than to serve as the president of Harvard.” For
more information, visit www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2007/02.15/99-president.html.
HMS Joins Effort on Addictions
HMS will be a part of one of four Centers of Excellence for Physician Information
being established by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) at academic
medical institutions around the country. The centers will serve as national
models for the advancement of addiction awareness, treatment, and prevention
and will focus on a variety of addiction specialties, including prescription
drug abuse, methamphetamine abuse, and substance abuse with mental illness.
HMS and Cambridge Health Alliance will join the NIDA center called the Massachusetts
Consortium of Medical Schools, which will also include the University of
Massachusetts, Tufts University, and Boston University. Elizabeth Gaufberg,
HMS assistant professor of psychiatry at Cambridge Hospital, will lead HMS’s
participation in the center.
Rosalind Franklin Society Seeks Advancement of Women Scientists
Five scientists from HMS and HSPH will be among the founding board
members of the Rosalind Franklin Society, an organization that seeks to advance
women in science. Rosalind Franklin, the group’s namesake, played a key
role in the discovery of the structure of DNA, but has historically not been
credited for her achievement. Board members from the HMS and HSPH community
are Nancy Andrews, HMS dean for basic sciences and graduate studies; Joan Brugge,
HMS professor of cell biology and chair of the Department of Cell Biology;
Laurie Glimcher, the Irene Heinz Given professor of immunology at HSPH; Carla
Shatz, the Nathan Marsh Pusey professor of neurobiology and head of the Department
of Neurobiology at HMS; and Junying Yuan, HMS professor of cell biology. The
board will have its first meeting in April.
Invitational Awards Announced
Each year, several foundations invite a limited number of HMS junior faculty
and postdocs to apply to their fellowship programs. Potential candidates
must
first apply through the HMS Faculty Fellowship Program. The Fellowship Committee
then chooses the HMS applicants to apply to the foundations. Updated
information on the fellowships is available online
at http://medapps.med.harvard.edu/fellowships.
The internal application deadline is April 9 in the Office of the Dean for
Academic and Clinical Programs, Gordon
Hall, Rm. 101. An informational town meeting will be held on March 5, 12–1:30
p.m.
in the Waterhouse Room on the first floor of Gordon Hall.
Honors and Advances
Alfred Goldberg, HMS professor of cell biology, will give the Ernst Knobil
Distinguished Lecture at the University of Texas Health Science Center in
Houston in October. The lecture series is the university’s premier
scientific presentation and attracts an audience with diverse research interests.
The honor is given each year to an internationally recognized researcher
and includes a $10,000 award.
News Brief
The HMS Center for Evaluation has received a grant from the Harvard University
President’s Office for a project titled “Assessing the Extent
to which Medical School Adds Value to the Critical Thinking Skills of Medical
Students.” Ron Arky, the Charles S. Davidson distinguished professor
of medicine and master of the Peabody Society, and Ed Krupat, associate
professor of psychology in the Department of Psychiatry at Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center and director of the center, are the lead investigators. The
study is expected to clarify the manner in which the medical curriculum
fosters critical thinking and to inform future innovations.
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