Noah Rosenberg

Noah Rosenberg
Alma mater Rice University
Academic advisors Marcus Feldman[1]
Website
www.stanford.edu/group/rosenberglab

Noah Rosenberg is a geneticist working in evolutionary biology, human genetics, and population genetics, now Associate Professor at Stanford University. His research is concerned with quantifiable changes in the human genome over time, and he is famous for his studies of human genetic clustering.[2][3][4][5][6]

Education

Rosenberg earned his BA in mathematics from Rice University in 1997, his MS in mathematics from Stanford University in 1999, and his PhD in biology from Stanford University in 2001.

Career and Research

Rosenberg completed postdoctoral research in Computational Biology from University of Southern California (2001–2005).

Rosenberg is perhaps most famous outside the population genetics field for work that he did as a teenager. He spent his last three years of high school at the prestigious Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy in Aurora, Illinois, where he was involved in a number of math competitions. There he developed "The Noah Sheets," a four page collection of formulas and theorems from algebra and geometry which continues to remain useful in competitions at the middle and high school level. High school competitors in Chicago and elsewhere still use the publication, over ten years after Rosenberg's graduation.

References

  1. Noah Rosenberg at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. Steven Reinberg (February 20, 2008) "DNA Findings Reveal Genetic History of Humans", The Washington Post
  3. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/02/080220161704.htm
  4. Sohini Ramachandran, Hua Tang, Ryan N. Gutenkunst, and Carlos D. Bustamante, Genetics and Genomics of Human Population Structure, chapter 20 in M.R. Speicher et al. (eds.), Vogel and Motulsky’s Human Genetics: Problems and Approaches, 4th ed., Springer, 2010, ISBN 3-540-37653-4, p. 596 and pp. 589-600
  5. Code of many colors: can researchers see race in the genome
  6. Rosenberg, N. A.; Pritchard, J. K.; Weber, J. L.; Cann, H. M.; Kidd, K. K.; Zhivotovsky, L. A.; Feldman, M. W. (2002). "Genetic Structure of Human Populations" (PDF). Science 298 (5602): 2381–2385. Bibcode:2002Sci...298.2381R. doi:10.1126/science.1078311. PMID 12493913.

External links


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