Difference between revisions of "Template:Columbia NYC Template"

 
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<h1> HUMAN PRACTICE </h1>
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<h1> TEAM MEMBERS </h1>
  
<h2> <b> Surveying the Land </b> </h2>
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<p> A team would be nothing without it's members. As such, we would like to introduce ourselves and our mentors! </p>
  
<p> The team wanted to get a preview of how our idea would be perceived by the general public. To this end, we created an online survey, the goal of which was to get a better understanding of what the general public knows about GMOs and probiotics. The survey was structured to gradually give more information about GMOs and probiotics, measure initial comfort levels with these concepts, and measure their williness to support them afterwards. The people who took the survey ranged from 18 to 50+ years old and had an education background ranging from high school to advanced profession degrees. The survey can be found <a href = "https://docs.google.com/a/columbia.edu/forms/d/1LRt45MPoeKxt540zvHK4xbwtq_E3vLZal4C_tVbCPPg/viewform"> here.</a>Please feel free to continue to contribute to it and expand our dataset! In addition, we acknowledge the fact that our sample size may be skewed towards people who are already interested in synthetic biology based on how we advertised it (through the team and personal forms of social media), but the information gleaned from the data we collected is still rather useful and allows us to be more insightful. </p>  
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<h2> Undergraduate Team Members </h2>
  
<img src = "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/2/23/Columbia_NYC_SurveyInitial.png" alt = "Survey Initial" align = "right" style = "width: 300px; margin-left: 20px;">  
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<img src = "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/8/83/Columbia_NYC_Jacky.jpg" alt = "Jacky" align = "left" style = "height: 300px; margin-right: 20px;">
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<h3> Jacky Cheung </h3>
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<p> Named after Hong Kong pop sensation Jacky Cheung, Jacky is currently a sophomore at Columbia College studying computer science with his mind set on going into medicine. However, Jacky's web design skills are rather lackluster. Nonetheless, he makes a fantastic last-minute logo designer in his humble opinion and did his best to organize and take care of soft-, dry-, and wet- lab responsibilties. Outside of iGEM, Jacky enjoys playing handball, table tennis, and basketball if he's not buried under a pile of work that has to be done or sleeping.
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<p> So, what exactly did we find out from our survey? Well for one, as the graph to the right shows, on a scale from 1-5 with 5 being the most comfortable, 58.3% of people has a comfort level less than or equal to 3. This confirms our suspicion that most people are not all too comfortable with the ideas of GMOs. From here, we tell the survey taker that genetically modified bacteria are used to produce insulin and a range of antibiotics to demonstrate a useful function.  
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<img src = "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/d/d1/Columbia_NYC_Sam.png" alt = "Sam" align = "right" style = "height: 300px; margin-left: 20px;">
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<h3> Samuel (Sam) Magaziner </h3>
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<p> Descended from the noble Magaziner clan of Humenne, Hungary (then the Austro-Hungarian Empire), makers and managers of an exploding powder magazine factory, Sam has turned his interests to more peaceful and less explosive pursuits. A 4th year undergraduate Biochemistry major, Sam enjoys microbiomes, gut peptides, and long walks on the beach.  Some say his beard whispers secrets of arcane and scientific portents whilst he transforms cells.  Others say it makes him look Amish. Regardless, Sam played a major role in construct and experimental design. </p>
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With this, as the pie chart to the left reveals, 14.5% of people stated that they are more supportive of GMOS, but for the most part (79% of the sample size), <img src = "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/7/75/Columbia_NYC_OpinionChange.PNG" alt = "Opinion Change" align = "left" style = "width: 300px; margin-right: 20px;"> people's opinion remained the same and 6% of the people were more opposed to it afterwards. This tells us that it is going to take much more than the fact that GMOs already have some useful functions in society to have them support new applications of synthetic biology. Thus, it is important in the future to consider what synthetic biologists should do to garner more support for their cause and to assess what the public fears and support about GMO. </p>
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<img src = "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/6/6a/Columbia_NYC_Hudson.jpg" alt = "Hudson" align = "left" style = "height: 300px; margin-right: 20px;">
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<h3> Hudson Lee </h3>
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<p> Surprisingly not named after the Hudson River, much to the disbelief of his other New York City natives, Hudson is currently a 2nd year undergraduate Biology major. Outside of the classroom, his interests include gymnastics, Korean Barbecue, breakdancing, and long walks on the beach.  Apart from iGEM, he splits his time among Ballroom, Hip-Hop, and Capoeira dance teams.  Even with these other commitments, Hudson headed up logo and banner designs as well as wetwork. </p>
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<img src = "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/4/48/Columbia_NYC_Kong.jpg" alt = "Kong" align = "right" style = "height: 300px; margin-left: 20px;">
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<h3> Suppawat (Kong) Kongthong </h3>
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<p> Kong hails from Bangkok, Thailand and is a sophomore studying Biology. When not pipetting, he’s usually cooking, learning Spanish from Kenya, who he is in turn teaching Thai, and watching Netflix (mainly Gossip Girl). Though he has never been to the beach, he enjoys long walks on the beach. </p>
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<img src = "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/d/dd/Columbia_NYC_Kenya.jpg" alt = "Kenya" align = "left" style = "height: 300px; margin-right: 20px;">
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<h3> Kenya Velez </h3>
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<p> Kenya is currently a junior at Pace University majoring in biochemistry. The opportunity to be a part of the SPURS program, a biomedical research internship, has given me the opportunity to do research on the iGEM team. Currently my lab works consist in Columbia’s labs doing synthetic biology research and anti-microbial properties lab work at Pace University. </p>
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<h2> Junior Mentors </h2>
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<img src = "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/a/a8/Columbia_NYC_Sway.jpg" alt = "Sway" align = "right" style = "height: 300px; margin-left: 20px;">
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<h3> Sway Chen </h3>
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<img src = "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/4/40/Columbia_NYC_Nathan.jpg" alt = "Nathan" align = "left" style = "height: 300px; margin-right: 20px;">
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<h3> Nathan Johns </h3>
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<p> Nathan is a PhD student in Harris Wang's Lab working on developing technologies for engineering diverse species and communities of microorganisms in order to study their evolution and to endow them with new capabilities. He is particularly interested in trying to engineer the many species of bacteria that make up the human microbiome with the goal of using them as novel therapeutics. </p>
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<img src = "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/1/1a/Columbia_NYC_Sonja.jpg" alt = "Sonja" align = "right" style = "height: 300px; margin-left: 20px;">
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<h3> Sonja Billerbeck </h3>
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<p> Sonja is a postdoctoral fellow in the Cornish Laboratory. She received her PhD in 2013 at the Swiss Institute of Technology (ETH Zürich) in the interdisciplinary Department for Biosystems Science and Engineering (D-BSSE). During her doctoral studies, Dr. Billerbeck developed a novel strategy for the rational design of switchable proteins for application in cell-free biotechnology. Her current research interest revolves around the field of synthetic biology, with special emphasis on protein engineering strategies applied to understand and functionalize bacterial microcompartments. </p>
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<h2> Senior Mentors / Principal Investigators </h2>
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<img src = "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/0/07/Columbia_NYC_Harris.jpg" alt = "Harris" align = "left" style = "height: 300px; margin-right: 20px;">
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<h3> Harris Wang </h3>
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<p> Harris Wang has joined Columbia University Medical Center as an Assistant Professor in the Columbia Initiative in Systems Biology and the Department of Pathology and Cell Biology. His research focuses on understanding the evolution of the ecosystems that develop within heterogeneous microbial communities. Using approaches from genome engineering, DNA synthesis, and next-generation sequencing, he studies how genomes in microbial populations form, maintain themselves, and change over time, both within and across microbial communities. His goal is to use synthetic biology approaches to engineer ecologies of microbial populations, such as those found in the gut and elsewhere in the human body, in ways that could improve human health. </p>
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<img src = "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/e/e9/Columbia_NYC_Virginia.jpg" alt = "Virginia" align = "right" style = "height: 300px; margin-left: 20px;">
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<h3> Virginia Cornish </h3>
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<p> Virginia joined the faculty of the Chemistry Department at Columbia in 1999, where she carries out research at the interface of chemistry and biology, and was promoted to Associate Professor with tenure in 2004 and then Professor in 2007. Her laboratory brings together modern methods in synthetic chemistry and DNA technology to expand the synthetic capabilities of living cells.  </p>
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<img src = "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/9/9b/Columbia_NYC_Ken.jpg" alt = "Ken" align = "left" style = "height: 300px; margin-right: 20px;">
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<h3> Ken Shepard </h3>
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<p> Ken joined Columbia University in 1997, where he is now Professor of Electrical Engineering. At the same time, he co-founded CadMOS Design Technology, an EDA start-up which pioneered PacifIC and CeltIC, the first tools for large-scale signal integrity analysis of digital integrated circuits. The success of these tools led Cadence to acquire CadMOS in 2001.Current research interests interests focus on circuits for VLSI integrated circuits in deeply-scaled CMOS technologies, new technologies for electronics applications, and the application of integrated circuits for biology-related applications. </p>
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<img src = "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/1/17/Columbia_NYC_Dana.jpg" alt = "Dana" align = "right" style = "height: 300px; margin-left: 20px;">
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<h3> Dana Pe'er </h3>
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<p> Dana Pe'er is an Associate Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at Columbia University and regarded as one of the leading researchers in computational systems biology. Her lab endeavors to understand the organization, function and evolution of molecular networks. </p>
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<p> When asked about probiotics, the results show that 27.4% of the population do not know what it is. To help inform our survey takers, we explain that probiotics are live bacteria that are shown to be good for one's digestive health by supporting the beneficial bacteria in the gut and can be found in food such as yougurt, kefir, and miso. <img src = "https://2015.igem.org/File:Columbia_NYC_Probiotic.PNG" alt = "Probiotic Comfort Level" align = "right" style = "width: 300px; margin-left: 20px;"> Given this information, 85.7% felt as if they have a better understanding of what probiotics are. When asked how comfortable they were with consuming probiotic from a scale from 1-5, 71.4% reported a comfort level greater than or equal to 4 as shown on the right. </p>
 
  
 
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Latest revision as of 21:54, 18 September 2015

TEAM MEMBERS

A team would be nothing without it's members. As such, we would like to introduce ourselves and our mentors!

Undergraduate Team Members

Jacky

Jacky Cheung

Named after Hong Kong pop sensation Jacky Cheung, Jacky is currently a sophomore at Columbia College studying computer science with his mind set on going into medicine. However, Jacky's web design skills are rather lackluster. Nonetheless, he makes a fantastic last-minute logo designer in his humble opinion and did his best to organize and take care of soft-, dry-, and wet- lab responsibilties. Outside of iGEM, Jacky enjoys playing handball, table tennis, and basketball if he's not buried under a pile of work that has to be done or sleeping.

Sam

Samuel (Sam) Magaziner

Descended from the noble Magaziner clan of Humenne, Hungary (then the Austro-Hungarian Empire), makers and managers of an exploding powder magazine factory, Sam has turned his interests to more peaceful and less explosive pursuits. A 4th year undergraduate Biochemistry major, Sam enjoys microbiomes, gut peptides, and long walks on the beach. Some say his beard whispers secrets of arcane and scientific portents whilst he transforms cells. Others say it makes him look Amish. Regardless, Sam played a major role in construct and experimental design.

Hudson

Hudson Lee

Surprisingly not named after the Hudson River, much to the disbelief of his other New York City natives, Hudson is currently a 2nd year undergraduate Biology major. Outside of the classroom, his interests include gymnastics, Korean Barbecue, breakdancing, and long walks on the beach. Apart from iGEM, he splits his time among Ballroom, Hip-Hop, and Capoeira dance teams. Even with these other commitments, Hudson headed up logo and banner designs as well as wetwork.

Kong

Suppawat (Kong) Kongthong

Kong hails from Bangkok, Thailand and is a sophomore studying Biology. When not pipetting, he’s usually cooking, learning Spanish from Kenya, who he is in turn teaching Thai, and watching Netflix (mainly Gossip Girl). Though he has never been to the beach, he enjoys long walks on the beach.

Kenya

Kenya Velez

Kenya is currently a junior at Pace University majoring in biochemistry. The opportunity to be a part of the SPURS program, a biomedical research internship, has given me the opportunity to do research on the iGEM team. Currently my lab works consist in Columbia’s labs doing synthetic biology research and anti-microbial properties lab work at Pace University.

Junior Mentors

Sway

Sway Chen

Nathan

Nathan Johns

Nathan is a PhD student in Harris Wang's Lab working on developing technologies for engineering diverse species and communities of microorganisms in order to study their evolution and to endow them with new capabilities. He is particularly interested in trying to engineer the many species of bacteria that make up the human microbiome with the goal of using them as novel therapeutics.

Sonja

Sonja Billerbeck

Sonja is a postdoctoral fellow in the Cornish Laboratory. She received her PhD in 2013 at the Swiss Institute of Technology (ETH Zürich) in the interdisciplinary Department for Biosystems Science and Engineering (D-BSSE). During her doctoral studies, Dr. Billerbeck developed a novel strategy for the rational design of switchable proteins for application in cell-free biotechnology. Her current research interest revolves around the field of synthetic biology, with special emphasis on protein engineering strategies applied to understand and functionalize bacterial microcompartments.

Senior Mentors / Principal Investigators

Harris

Harris Wang

Harris Wang has joined Columbia University Medical Center as an Assistant Professor in the Columbia Initiative in Systems Biology and the Department of Pathology and Cell Biology. His research focuses on understanding the evolution of the ecosystems that develop within heterogeneous microbial communities. Using approaches from genome engineering, DNA synthesis, and next-generation sequencing, he studies how genomes in microbial populations form, maintain themselves, and change over time, both within and across microbial communities. His goal is to use synthetic biology approaches to engineer ecologies of microbial populations, such as those found in the gut and elsewhere in the human body, in ways that could improve human health.

Virginia

Virginia Cornish

Virginia joined the faculty of the Chemistry Department at Columbia in 1999, where she carries out research at the interface of chemistry and biology, and was promoted to Associate Professor with tenure in 2004 and then Professor in 2007. Her laboratory brings together modern methods in synthetic chemistry and DNA technology to expand the synthetic capabilities of living cells.

Ken

Ken Shepard

Ken joined Columbia University in 1997, where he is now Professor of Electrical Engineering. At the same time, he co-founded CadMOS Design Technology, an EDA start-up which pioneered PacifIC and CeltIC, the first tools for large-scale signal integrity analysis of digital integrated circuits. The success of these tools led Cadence to acquire CadMOS in 2001.Current research interests interests focus on circuits for VLSI integrated circuits in deeply-scaled CMOS technologies, new technologies for electronics applications, and the application of integrated circuits for biology-related applications.

Dana

Dana Pe'er

Dana Pe'er is an Associate Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at Columbia University and regarded as one of the leading researchers in computational systems biology. Her lab endeavors to understand the organization, function and evolution of molecular networks.