Evan Eichler | |
---|---|
Alma mater |
University of Saskatchewan (B.Sc.) Baylor College of Medicine (Ph.D.) |
Awards |
Newcomb Cleveland Prize Curt Stern Award (2008) Member of the National Academy of Sciences |
Scientific career | |
Fields |
Genomics Segmental duplication Copy-number variation Autism spectrum disorder Developmental delay Gene duplication [1] |
Institutions |
University of Washington Howard Hughes Medical Institute University of Saskatchewan Baylor College of Medicine Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich University of Saskatchewan [2] |
Doctoral advisor | David Nelson[ citation needed] |
Website |
eichlerlab www |
Evan E. Eichler is an investigator at Howard Hughes Medical Institute studying human genome evolution, genome variation and their role in diseases. He is also a Professor of Genome Sciences at the University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle. [1] [3] [4] [5] [6]
Eichler was educated at the University of Saskatchewan and Baylor College of Medicine where he was awarded his PhD in 1995 [2] for work on the FMR1 gene. [7]
Eichler is considered one of the experts in genome instability studies, [8] segmental duplication and structural variation. [1] [9]
Evan Eichler | |
---|---|
Alma mater |
University of Saskatchewan (B.Sc.) Baylor College of Medicine (Ph.D.) |
Awards |
Newcomb Cleveland Prize Curt Stern Award (2008) Member of the National Academy of Sciences |
Scientific career | |
Fields |
Genomics Segmental duplication Copy-number variation Autism spectrum disorder Developmental delay Gene duplication [1] |
Institutions |
University of Washington Howard Hughes Medical Institute University of Saskatchewan Baylor College of Medicine Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich University of Saskatchewan [2] |
Doctoral advisor | David Nelson[ citation needed] |
Website |
eichlerlab www |
Evan E. Eichler is an investigator at Howard Hughes Medical Institute studying human genome evolution, genome variation and their role in diseases. He is also a Professor of Genome Sciences at the University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle. [1] [3] [4] [5] [6]
Eichler was educated at the University of Saskatchewan and Baylor College of Medicine where he was awarded his PhD in 1995 [2] for work on the FMR1 gene. [7]
Eichler is considered one of the experts in genome instability studies, [8] segmental duplication and structural variation. [1] [9]