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The ASCB Early Career Life Scientist Award is awarded by the American Society for Cell Biology to an outstanding scientist who earned his doctorate no more than 12 years earlier and who has served as an independent investigator for no more than seven years. The winner speaks at the ASCB Annual Meeting and receives a monetary prize.
NAS Award in Molecular Biology: National Academy of Sciences: Recent notable discovery in molecular biology by a young scientist who is a citizen of the United States [42] United States: Overton Prize: International Society for Computational Biology: Outstanding accomplishment by a scientist in the early to mid stage of his or her career [43 ...
Pages in category "Biology awards" The following 91 pages are in this category, out of 91 total. ... Early Career Life Scientist Award; Daniel Giraud Elliot Medal;
In 1994, Ebright was awarded the American Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Schering-Plough Award for his research on transcription activation. [18] In 1995, he received the Academic Press Walter J. Johnson Prize. [19] In 2013, he received a National Institutes of Health MERIT Award. [20]
Gordon Hisashi Sato (17 December 1927 – 31 March 2017) was an American cell biologist who first attained prominence for his discovery that polypeptide factors required for the culture of mammalian cells outside the body are also important regulators of differentiated cell functions and of utility in culture of new types of cells for use in research and biotechnology.
1 Early life and education. ... 2012 American Society for Cell Biology Women in Cell Biology Award [11] [12] 2014 EMBO Gold Medal [13] 2014 Friedrich Miescher Award [14]
He received a B.A. in biology in 1974 [1] and then entered the graduate programs in Botany and Oceanography and Limnology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison where he participated in the lab of Michael Adams to examine the role played by macrophytes in the phosphorus cycle of lake ecosystems. During his graduate years he met his wife, Susan ...
Margarita Salas Falgueras was born on 30 November 1938 in Canero, a parish of Valdés, Asturias, Spain. [2] [6] She was the daughter of José Salas Martínez (1905–1962), a psychiatric doctor who influenced her, encouraging her interest in science, and Margarita Falgueras Gatell (1912/1913-2014), a teacher.