Frontiers of Imaging
Biological systems are extremely complex and have emergent properties that cannot be explained or even predicted by studying their individual parts alone. We must integrate across biological levels of investigation to gain a deeper mechanistic understanding of biological systems and build better theories and models of the factors that influence health and disease states, as well as design more effective therapies. We are driving the discovery of new imaging technologies through multiple grant programs that span the full range of molecular to organismal imaging, focusing on integrating between scales giving us unprecedented views of biological systems. Read more.
Showing 81 results
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 3
to develop differential dynamic light-field microscopy, a novel computational microscopy technique to quantify 3D dynamics applicable to scales spanning organism-wide to intracellular
Lei Tian, PhD
Boston University
Ryan McGorty, PhD
University of San Diego
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 2
This project will develop an imaging technology that can simultaneously probe 4D organelle dynamics in combination with a functional metabolic readout at high spatial and temporal resolutions.
Johannes Schoeneberg, PhD
University of California, San Diego
Alex Walsh, PhD
Texas A&M University
Cryo-CLEM Labels
to deliver all-in-one SNAP-tag labels containing a fluorophore and a gold nanoparticle to live cells to elucidate protein structures by cryo-CLEM and cryo-ET
Johannes Broichhagen
Leibniz-FMP Berlin
Daniel Roderer
Leibniz-FMP Berlin
Visual Proteomics Imaging
This project will develop a pulsed ponderomotive phase plate that allows in-focus phase contrast of cryo-EM specimens, resulting in a highly tunable contrast transfer function intent on revolutionizing our understanding of biology.
Anthony Fitzpatrick, PhD
Columbia University
Dynamic Imaging
to develop a highly multiplexed, quantitative, orthogonal, and automated fluorescence imaging technique for spatiotemporal RNA/protein profiling in single living cells
Mingxu You
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Tingyi Liu
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Sallie Schneider
University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Baystate
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 1
This project will achieve transformations in X-ray tomography technology by enabling cellular-level imaging anywhere in whole organisms, including human bodies, providing insight at multiple anatomical levels.
Peter Lee, DPhil (Oxon), FREng
University College London
Paul Tafforeau, PhD
European Synchrotron Radiation Facility
Rebecca Shipley, PhD
University College London
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 1
This project will develop genetically encodable biomolecular tools that will enable ultrasound to image specific cellular functions deep inside the body.
Mikhail Shapiro, PhD
California Institute of Technology
Dynamic Imaging
to develop a computational mid-infrared photothermal microscope, a deep-learning algorithm, and nitrile probes for 3D bond-selective imaging of live cells and multicellular organisms
Ji-Xin Cheng
Boston University
Lei Tian
Boston University
Bing Xu
Brandeis University
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 2
to exploit properties of coherent nonlinear light scattering to break the ballistic barrier for imaging in tissue at unprecedented depths
Randy Bartels
Morgridge Institute for Research and the University of Wisconsin, Madison
Hilton Barbosa de Aguiar
CNRS, Kastler-Brossel Laboratory
Anne Sentenac
Institut Fresnel, CNRS, Aix-Marseille University
Hervé Rigneault
Institut Fresnel, CNRS, Aix-Marseille University
Paul Campagnola
University of Wisconsin, Madison
Kevin Eliceiri
University of Wisconsin, Madison and the Morgridge Institute for Research
Visual Proteomics Imaging
This team will develop a general strategy for high-resolution, multiplexed imaging of dynamic protein interactions in live cells, using biocompatible (bioorthogonal) probes.
Jennifer Prescher, PhD
University of California, Irvine
Xiaoyu Shi, PhD
University of California, Irvine
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 1
This project will develop a chip that generates a light source suitable for light sheet microscopy in order to decrease the cost of this technology.
Aseema Mohanty, PhD
Tufts University
Srigokul Upadhyayula, PhD
University of California, Berkeley
Visual Proteomics Imaging
This project will develop a widely-adaptable, cloneable label to enable visualization of macromolecular complexes inside cells at near-atomic resolution.
Daniela Nicastro, PhD
UT Southwestern Medical Center
Cryo-CLEM Labels
to evaluate a cloneable fluorescent zinc-selenide quantum dot in cellular light and electron microscopy, and to develop a cloneable bismuth quantum dot as a significantly smaller cloneable quantum dot
Christopher Ackerson
Colorado State University
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 1
This project will use a novel, multidisciplinary approach aimed at overcoming the current limitations of wavefront shaping microscopy to enable truly deep biological imaging.
Sylvain Gigan, PhD
Sorbonne Université
Robert Prevedel, PhD
European Molecular Biology Laboratory
Claire Deo, PhD
European Molecular Biology Laboratory
Dynamic Imaging
to develop a computational mesoscope combining miniature freeform optics, a metasurface diffuser, an event-based camera, and deep-learning algorithms to enable ultrafast multiscale 3D fluorescence imaging
Lei Tian
Boston University
Abdoulaye Ndao
Boston University
Sixian You
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 1
This team will apply new computational microscopy techniques to reconstruct a sample’s 3D light scattering potential and digitally correct scattering effects.
Laura Waller, PhD
University of California, Berkeley
Shwetadwip Chowdhury, PhD
University of Texas at Austin
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 2
to enhance multiphoton excitation efficiency by orders of magnitude by engineering both quantum and classical ultrafast photon correlations, thereby surpassing fundamental depth limits
Hui Cao
Yale University
Logan Wright
Yale University
Tianyu Wang
Boston University
Chris Xu
Cornell University
Visual Proteomics Imaging
This team will develop protocols and software to build a universal pipeline for solving protein and organelle structures.
Justin Taraska, PhD
National Institutes of Health
Jenny Hinshaw, PhD
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
Naoko Mizuno, PhD
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
Visual Proteomics Imaging
This team will build a cost-effective pipeline for visual proteomics to increase access to advanced imaging technologies.
Lucy Collinson, PhD
Francis Crick Institute
Paul French, PhD
Imperial College London
Ricardo Henriques, PhD
Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência and University College London
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 2
to create far-red/near-infrared luminescent probes by using AI-driven protein design to revolutionize molecular imaging in deep tissue and enable functional monitoring of cell-based therapeutics
Andy Yeh
University of California, Santa Cruz
Ming-Ru Wu
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School
Jennifer Prescher
University of California, Irvine
Michelle Digman
University of California, Irvine
Cryo-CLEM Labels
to provide a tagging system for unambiguously localizing proteins at endogenous levels by cryo-light microscopy and cryo-electron tomography with minimal impact on protein function and low background
Florian Fäßler
Institut de Génétique et de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire / Centre Europeen de Recherche en Biologie et en Medecine
Cryo-CLEM Labels
to optimize EMcapsulins, a set of multiplexable EM labels based on capsids engineered to enzymatically sequester electron-dense matter for high contrast-to-background, low invasiveness cryo-CLEM
Felix Sigmund
Technical University of Munich
Marion Jasnin
Helmholtz Munich
Visual Proteomics Imaging
This team will develop a novel cryo-superresolution microscope to improve the accuracy of contextualized protein locations with an emphasis on developing open-source tools to guide structure determination.
Johann Danzl, PhD, MD
Institute of Science and Technology Austria
Florian Schur, PhD
Institute of Science and Technology Austria
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 1
This team will develop semiconductor metal nanoparticles as infrared probes for photoacoustic imaging and apply the technology to observing vascular development of the placenta.
Allison Dennis, PhD
Boston University
Carolyn Bayer, PhD
Tulane University
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 1
This project will pioneer short-wave infrared multiphoton microscopy, transforming intravital microscopy into a non-invasive technology.
Oliver Bruns, Dr. rer. nat.
Helmholtz Zentrum München
Ellen Sletten, PhD
University of California, Los Angeles
Dr. Christopher Rowlands
Imperial College London
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 2
This team seeks to develop a modular, inexpensive, open-source, multi-modal in vivo imaging system to democratize access to bioimaging.
Joshua Brake, PhD
Harvey Mudd College
Kevin Cash, PhD
Colorado School of Mines
Cryo-CLEM Labels
to design and develop chemo-genetically controlled, self-assembling, asymmetric, readily recognizable, and alignable fiducial tags for cryo-ET and cryo-CLEM
Kliment A Verba
University of California, San Francisco
Tanja Kortemme
University of California, San Francisco
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 3
to develop multi-angle synthesized ultrasound tomography (MASUT) to synthesize speckle-free and large field-of-view volumetric ultrasound images from natural hand motion
Shwetadwip Chowdhury, PhD
University of Texas at Austin
Heather M. Whitney, PhD
University of Chicago
*supported by the Walder Foundation
Dynamic Imaging
to develop 4D space-time imaging methods to invert dynamic tissue scattering and reconstruct time-lapse volumetric videos of living tissue samples at kilohertz-scale frame-rates
Shwetadwip Chowdhury
University of Texas at Austin
Jonathan Tamir
University of Texas at Austin
Cryo-CLEM Labels
to develop the next generation of genetically encoded cryo-CLEM labels with AI-driven de novo protein design to achieve target-specific and conditionally self-assembling, asymmetric, fluorescent tags
Julia Mahamid
European Molecular Biology Laboratory
David Baker
University of Washington
Visual Proteomics Imaging
This project will explore the feasibility of delivering electron dose in short bursts as a proof-of-concept for rapid high-resolution 3D imaging of frozen-hydrated cells.
Grant Jensen, PhD
California Institute of Technology
Dynamic Imaging
to enable label-free spatiotemporal mapping of neural activity with sub-millisecond and subcellular resolution through developing a new method called dual-comb scattering-matrix tomography
Chia Wei Hsu
University of Southern California
Mengjie Yu
University of Southern California
Andrew Hires
University of Southern California
Dynamic Imaging
to develop a comprehensive set of probes allowing cell biologists to observe and monitor the morphological and functional dynamics of contact sites between organellar membranes in real time
Arnaud Gautier
Sorbonne University
Riccardo Filadi
National Research Council Neuroscience Institute, Padua
Dynamic Imaging
to develop a novel, high-definition and high-speed mid-infrared 3D and hyperspectral imaging technology for the real-time visualization of dynamical processes with chemical contrast
Dmitry Fishman
University of California, Irvine
Eric Potma
University of California, Irvine
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 2
to reach the optimal spectral range for deep tissue imaging by employing Raman contrast, boosted with electronic pre-resonance of SWIR chromophores, as a universal contrast mechanism
Ellen Sletten
University of California, Los Angeles
Oliver Bruns
National Center for Tumor Diseases
Christopher Rowlands
Imperial College London
Andriy Chmyrov
National Center for Tumor Diseases
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 1
This project will revolutionize the imaging depth with light at optical wavelength resolution by developing a new type of microscopy that uses nonlinear holography for ultradeep tissue imaging.
Randy Bartels, PhD
Colorado State University
Jeffrey Field, PhD
Colorado State University
Christian Puttlitz, PhD
Colorado State University
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 1
This team will use Raman imaging to detect lipids and to train MRI imaging on the same field of view, seeking to find if MRI has unrecognized signatures of cellular lipids.
Benjamin Bartelle, PhD
Arizona State University
Lu Wei, PhD
California Institute of Technology
Ulugbek Kamilov, PhD
Washington University in St. Louis
Visual Proteomics Imaging
This team will develop three experimental model systems for visual proteomics with a focus on high statistical confidence to disseminate high-quality proteomic and image data.
Martin Beck, PhD
Max Planck Institute of Biophysics
Gerhard Hummer, PhD
Max Planck Institute of Biophysics
Beata Turoňová, PhD
Max Planck Institute of Biophysics
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 3
to capitalize on the mechanical motion of motile cilia, label-free metabolic imaging, and structural-mechanical imaging to generate a mechano-metabolic map of a ciliary array
Yi-Chih Lin, PhD
University of Texas at Austin
Domenico Galati, PhD
Western Washington University
Lingyan Shi, PhD
University of California, San Diego
Cryo-CLEM Labels
to develop genetically encoded RNA-protein assemblies that serve as high-contrast, low-background labels for cryo-CLEM and that can be directly visualized in unaveraged tomograms
Alexander Dunn
Stanford University
Peter Dahlberg
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Dynamic Imaging
to develop molecular, optical, and algorithmic tools to map high-speed bioelectrical dynamics in three dimensions in intact tissue and in live specimens
Adam Cohen
Harvard University
Ahmed Abdelfattah
Brown University
Liam Paninski
Columbia University
Visual Proteomics Imaging
This team will develop technology to advance in-cell structural biology with machine learning and super-resolution light microscopy.
Julia Mahamid, PhD
European Molecular Biology Laboratory
Anna Kreshuk, PhD
European Molecular Biology Laboratory
Jonas Ries, PhD
European Molecular Biology Laboratory
Visual Proteomics Imaging
This team will develop the roadmap to engineer a high-resolution, high-throughput cryo-electron tomography camera that will improve sensitivity, speed, and detector size.
Peter Denes, PhD
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
David Agard, PhD
University of California, San Francisco
Paul Mooney, M.S.
Gatan, Inc.
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 2
This project seeks to increase the detection limit of MRI by orders of magnitude, enabling researchers to monitor genetic activity in double-digit numbers of cells per voxel, potentially even approaching single-cell sensitivity.
Arnab Mukherjee, PhD
University of California, Santa Barbara
Mark Sellmyer, MD, PhD
University of Pennsylvania
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 2
to deliver in-vivo, cellular-level, non-invasive, dynamic microstructural diffusion cardiac magnetic resonance imaging of the beating human heart (100x100x100um3, ~16 cardiomyocytes/voxel)
Sonia Nielles-Vallespin
Imperial College London
Steven Niederer
Imperial College London
Daniel Rueckert
Imperial College London
Andrew Scott
Imperial College London
Ranil de Silva
Imperial College London
Simon Schultz
Imperial College London
Dynamic Imaging
to generate a technique able to analyze living biological samples, over hours and days, at super-resolution, followed by an analysis of important cellular events at sub-molecular scale resolution
Ilaria Testa
KTH, SciLifeLab
Silvio Rizzoli
University of Göttingen
Dynamic Imaging
to integrate single-cell multi-omics data with live cell imaging-based lineage tracing, using spatial transcriptomics as a bridge
Samantha Morris
Washington University in St. Louis
Visual Proteomics Imaging
This project will integrate laser phase plates into the most modern Krios electron microscope to enable the ultimate phase contrast microscope in cryo-tomography.
Holger Müller, PhD
University of California, Berkeley
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 2
to translate a multi-modal imaging approach towards in-vivo applicability, exploiting the combination of wavefront shaping, photoacoustic microscopy and switchable photoacoustic probes
Sylvain Gigan
Sorbonne University, Kastler-Brossel Laboratory
Robert Prevedel
EMBL Heidelberg
Claire Deo
EMBL Heidelberg
Hilton Barbosa de Aguiar
CNRS, Kastler-Brossel Laboratory
Andre C. Stiel
Helmholtz Munich
Visual Proteomics Imaging
This team will develop computational methods and data collection protocols to achieve target detection with the best possible precision and sensitivity, enabling the creation of pseudo-atomic maps of localized targets within cells.
Nikolaus Grigorieff, MSc, PhD
University of Massachusetts Medical School
Timothy Grant, PhD
Morgridge Institute for Research
Bronwyn Ayla Lucas, PhD
University of Massachusetts Medical School
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 1
This team will develop multimodal imaging and machine learning algorithms to identify soft tissue molecular characteristics indicative of pelvic organ prolapse.
Carolyn Bayer, PhD
Tulane University
Paris Perdikaris, PhD
University of Pennsylvania
Sapun Parekh, PhD
University of Texas at Austin
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 1
This project will use high-speed camera and laser technology to create contactless ultrasound arrays, able to image centimeters into tissue and at cellular resolution.
Mengxing Tang, PhD
Imperial College London
Dr. Christopher Rowlands
Imperial College London
Simon Schultz, DPhil
Imperial College London
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 1
This project will use endoscopy and combine photoacoustic and multi-photon microscopies to investigate early-stage ovarian cancer as it develops in the fallopian tube.
Barbara Smith, PhD
Arizona State University
Bryan Spring, PhD
Northeastern University
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 2
to develop molecular-scale emitters for deep-tissue imaging of biomolecular targets in the NIR-II tissue transparency window, with direct applications in cancer research and therapeutics development
Stacy Copp
University of California, Irvine
Nathan Gianneschi
Northwestern University
Petko Bogdanov
University at Albany - State University of New York
Dynamic Imaging
to develop a multi-color, wide-field, single molecule tracking with fluorescence lifetime imaging platform that will provide direct access to the dynamics and interactions of biomolecules in living cells
Sabrina Simoncelli
University College London
Sergi Padilla Parra
King's College London
Giorgio Volpe
University College London
Visual Proteomics Imaging
This project will design computational tools to accurately detect molecules in cellular tomograms and determine their high-resolution structures.
Alberto Bartesaghi, PhD
Duke University
Dynamic Imaging
to design a new Raman imaging platform for multiplexed and dynamic profiling of activities from live neuronal co-cultures and brain slices to probe their precise subcellular coordination and regulation
Lu Wei
California Institute of Technology
Dynamic Imaging
to enable direct imaging of viruses in their native environments at very high resolution, and revolutionize the study of viruses, human health, and vaccines
Piran Kidambi
Vanderbilt University
Dynamic Imaging
to create an optical microscope that can image and infer biological details at subcellular spatial, sub-millisecond temporal and sub-10 nm spectral resolutions, and make this technology widely available to scientists
Rajesh Menon
University of Utah
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 1
This project will develop new ultrasound techniques for deep tissue imaging of cell types, cellular interactions, and cancers.
Steven Chu, PhD
Stanford University
James Brooks, MD
Stanford University
Jeremy Dahl, PhD
Stanford University
Dynamic Imaging
to develop a new microscope that can observe single molecule dynamics while simultaneously providing ultrastructural context about the local microenvironment in live cells and tissues
Wesley Legant
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Joerg Bewersdorf
Yale University
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 1
This team will develop magnetic resonance microscopy that combines novel data acquisition approaches, image reconstructions, gradient and cryogenic radiofrequency coil technologies, and ultra-high field strength to obtain unique cellular information in disease models.
John Gore, PhD
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Adam Anderson, PhD
Vanderbilt University
Mark Does, PhD
Vanderbilt University
Dynamic Imaging
to develop hardware and software to implement inpainting algorithms and produce high-resolution movies of dynamic biological specimens under their near-native liquid environment
German Sciaini
University of Waterloo
Cryo-CLEM Labels
to develop a multiplexed, protein origami-based labeling system to identify and localize proteins directly in cryo-electron tomograms
Philipp S Erdmann
Human Technopole
Roman Jerala
National Institute of Chemistry/Kemijski Institut, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 1
This project will develop a comprehensive toolbox of genetic near-infrared photochromic photoacoustic probes, acoustic-tunnel enhanced light delivery, and stochastic localization of photoacoustic probes in order to push the resolution limit of photoacoustic imaging.
Vladislav Verkhusha, PhD
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Junjie Yao, PhD
Duke University
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 1
This project will develop quantum multi-photon excitation microscopy for centimeter-scale deep tissue imaging in complex organisms.
Jung-Tsung Shen, PhD, Professor
Washington University in St. Louis
Junichiro Kono, Professor
Rice University
Lihong Wang, PhD
California Institute of Technology
Dynamic Imaging
to develop a new quantum enhanced, structured illumination, localization microscopy to increase speed, volume, and resolution and to break labeling density barriers in super-resolution microscopy
Randy Bartels
Colorado State University
Ali Pezeshki
Colorado State University
Jeff Squier
Colorado School of Mines
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 2
to develop and validate quantum-enhanced, near-infrared capabilities for accessible imaging in bone and bone marrow, advancing medicine and improving lives
Jennifer Stow
The University of Queensland
Warwick Bowen
The University of Queensland
JiaJia Zhou
University of Technology Sydney
Dayong Jin
University of Technology Sydney
Allison Pettit
The University of Queensland
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 3
to integrate an entangled photon approach to time-resolved fluorescence imaging microscopy enabling multiplexed and background-free fluorescence imaging
Scott Cushing, PhD
California Institute of Technology
Jing Liu, PhD
Purdue University
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 2
The team seeks to develop an efficient computational platform on an array and convert the digitized data to an image where the system learns the spatio-temporal pattern of the image and enables the classification of data from the signal in real-time as anomalous or expected.
Shiva Abbaszadeh, PhD
University of California, Santa Cruz
Heather Whitney, PhD
University of Chicago
Visual Proteomics Imaging
This team will incorporate an advanced fluorescent microscope within a commercial Cryo-FIB to improve localization and identification accuracy of subcellular features.
Wah Chiu, PhD
Stanford University
William E. (W.E.) Moerner, PhD
Stanford University
John Pauly, PhD
Stanford University
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 1
This project will develop new near-infrared emitters and dual infrared 2-photon imaging technologies for deep tissue subcellular-scale imaging in brain and plant tissues.
Markita Landry, PhD
University of California, Berkeley
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 1
This project will develop and validate a super-resolution photoacoustic imaging technology using a revolutionary ultrasensitive nanophotonic sensor that enables single-cell resolution molecular imaging at centimeter depth in vivo.
Song Hu, PhD
Washington University in St. Louis
Lan Yang, PhD
Washington University in St. Louis
Adam Kepecs, PhD
Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 3
to develop sketch-based retrieval algorithms for classifying biologically relevant features in large 3D image datasets
Dylan McCreedy, PhD
Texas A&M University
Meghan Driscoll, PhD
University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Dynamic Imaging
to develop widely accessible, fast 3D sound sheet imaging of acoustic reporters to study cellular activity, at the whole organ scale, in intact living opaque organisms to better understand health and disease
David Maresca
Delft University of Technology
Dynamic Imaging
to develop a novel optical microscopy technology that offers a combination of high sensitivity, massive multiplexing, probe generality, and compatibility with dynamic imaging
Wei Min
Columbia University
Daniela Buccella
New York University
Cryo-CLEM Labels
to develop a robust cryo-CLEM label using nucleic acids, visible as one event by advanced cryo super-resolution fluorescence microscopy, detectable in unaveraged cryo-electron tomograms
Rainer Kaufmann
University of Hamburg
Lindsay Baker
University of Oxford
Dynamic Imaging
to advance single-molecule tracking of proteins in live cells by developing accessible tools for automation, detection of protein-protein interactions, and molecular characterization of cell fate transitions
Xavier Darzacq
University of California, Berkeley
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 2
This project seeks to develop a new approach to multiphoton imaging that will transform image collection in the brain by creating a flexible sensor.
Larry Cheng, PhD
The Pennsylvania State University
Luke Mortensen, PhD
University of Georgia
Deep Tissue Imaging Phase 2
to develop the first whole-body human ultrasound and thermoacoustic tomography along with needle-based photoacoustic microscopy to image organs and cells deep in the body
Lihong Wang
California Institute of Technology
Scialog: Advancing BioImaging Cycle 1
This team aims to develop an aberration and scatter-resistant microscopy method to collect both scattered and unscattered fluorescence.
Douglas Shepherd, PhD
Arizona State University
Lisa Poulikakos, PhD
University of California, San Diego
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