Nathan Wolfe

Nathan Daniel Wolfe, Ph.D. (born 24 August 1970) is an American virologist. He was the founder (in 2007) and director of Global Viral[1] and the Lorry I. Lokey Visiting Professor in Human Biology at Stanford University.

Nathan D. Wolfe
Wolfe at the 2011 Time 100 gala
Born (1970-08-24) August 24, 1970
CitizenshipUnited States
Alma materStanford, Harvard
Scientific career
FieldsVirology
InstitutionsStanford, UCLA

Career

Dr. Wolfe spent over eight years conducting biomedical research in both sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia. He is also the founder of Metabiota, which offers both governmental and corporate services for biological threat evaluation and management. He serves on the editorial board of EcoHealth and Scientific American and is a member of DARPA's Defense Science Research Council. His laboratory was among the first to discover and describe the Simian foamy virus.[2]

In 2012, his book The Viral Storm was short-listed for the Winton Prize.[3]

As reported in a Wired feature in 2020, Wolfe worked with the German insurance firm Munich Re to offer major corporate leaders pandemic policies, which were not purchased; a stark reality during the ensuing COVID-19 pandemic.[4]

Awards

Wolfe has been awarded more than $40 million in funding from a diverse array of sources including the U.S. Department of Defense, Google.org, the National Institutes of Health, the Skoll Foundation, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the National Geographic Society.[5]

  • Fulbright fellowship recipient (1997)
  • National Geographic Emerging Explorer (2004)[2]
  • NIH Director's Pioneer Award (2005)
  • Popular Science: "Brilliant 10" (2006)
  • Rolling Stone: "Top 100 Agents of Change" (2009)
  • World Economic Forum's Young Global Leaders (2010)

Press

Wolfe’s work has been published in and covered by the popular media including The New York Times, The Economist, Discover and Scientific American. He has appeared on CNN and is a regular TED presenter. He has also appeared as one of Time magazine's "Time 100" for 2011.

Personal life

Wolfe is married to the playwright Lauren Gunderson. As part of his work, he has lived in Cameroon, Malaysia and Uganda.[3]

gollark: Anyway, I think some education system is probably good but my preferred ideas are far enough from "school" that it probably wouldn't be sensible to call it the same thing.
gollark: Do they actually work? I thought a big percentage of the US believed in creationism and such.
gollark: "Never used"?
gollark: It does say there it can only measure X-rays/gamma rays.
gollark: I don't like GPUs because you should just do trillions of mathematical operations per second by hand and then sketch points very precisely.

References

  1. Langreth, Robert. Finding the Next Epidemic Before It Kills. Forbes. 2 November 2009.
  2. Geographic, National (June 2020). "Grantee 2004-2005: Nathan D. Wolfe". National Geographic Emerging Explorers. Retrieved 9 July 2020.
  3. "Nathan Wolfe". DCP3. Retrieved 29 June 2020.
  4. Ratliff, Evan (July–August 2020). "We Can Protect the Economy From Pandemics. Why Didn't We?". Wired. Retrieved 9 July 2020.CS1 maint: date format (link)
  5. "Nathan Daniel Wolfe". tanford University. Retrieved 29 June 2020.


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