Abbreviation | SEBM |
---|---|
Formation | 1903 |
Type | Nonprofit organization |
Purpose | Research |
Headquarters | Washington, D.C. |
Location |
|
Membership (2004
[1]) | >1,600 [1] |
President | Stephania A. Cormier |
President-Elect | Michael Lehman |
Past President | Thomas Thompson |
Treasurer | Holly A. LaVoie |
Key people | Graham Lusk (co-founder) |
Main organ | Experimental Biology and Medicine |
Website |
www |
The Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (abbreviated SEBM) is a nonprofit scientific society dedicated to promoting research in the biomedical sciences.
The SEBM was founded in 1903, after Samuel J. Meltzer proposed founding a society dedicated to experimental biology and medicine. Meltzer then teamed up with Graham Lusk to invite eight New York scientists to a conference at Lusk's home, where they discussed the possibility of founding a biomedical society. At the conference, the attendees uniformly agreed to appoint a committee for a permanent society. [2] [3]
The SEBM's official journal is Experimental Biology and Medicine, published by Frontiers Media. [4] It was founded in 1904 as the Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine, and obtained its current name in 2001. [5]
Abbreviation | SEBM |
---|---|
Formation | 1903 |
Type | Nonprofit organization |
Purpose | Research |
Headquarters | Washington, D.C. |
Location |
|
Membership (2004
[1]) | >1,600 [1] |
President | Stephania A. Cormier |
President-Elect | Michael Lehman |
Past President | Thomas Thompson |
Treasurer | Holly A. LaVoie |
Key people | Graham Lusk (co-founder) |
Main organ | Experimental Biology and Medicine |
Website |
www |
The Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (abbreviated SEBM) is a nonprofit scientific society dedicated to promoting research in the biomedical sciences.
The SEBM was founded in 1903, after Samuel J. Meltzer proposed founding a society dedicated to experimental biology and medicine. Meltzer then teamed up with Graham Lusk to invite eight New York scientists to a conference at Lusk's home, where they discussed the possibility of founding a biomedical society. At the conference, the attendees uniformly agreed to appoint a committee for a permanent society. [2] [3]
The SEBM's official journal is Experimental Biology and Medicine, published by Frontiers Media. [4] It was founded in 1904 as the Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine, and obtained its current name in 2001. [5]