Paul Blainey
Paul Blainey is an investigator and core faculty member at the Broad Institute in Boston, Massachusetts, and assistant professor of biological engineering at MIT.[1] He is recognized for his work in single cell genomics.
Paul Blainey | |
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Alma mater | |
Scientific career | |
Fields | genomics |
Institutions |
Blainey studied mathematics and chemistry as an undergraduate at the University of Washington. He continued his studies in physical chemistry at Harvard University, earning an MS and PhD. He did a postdoc at Stanford University, where he developed high-throughput methods for whole-genome amplification of DNA from individual microbial cells in Dr. Stephen Quake’s laboratory.[2]
Awards
- Burroughs Welcome Foundation Career Awards at the Scientific Interface, 2011
- Agilent Early Career Investigator Award, 2014
- 2017 NIH New Innovator Award[3]
gollark: Does it MATTER if you can smelt iron at lowish costs?
gollark: Yes, and?
gollark: That would DOUBLE the cost of smelting.
gollark: Too high.
gollark: And it's not round.
References
- "Paul Blainey, PhD - MIT Department of Biological Engineering". be.mit.edu.
- "Paul Blainey - Broad Institute". www.broadinstitute.org.
- "Ten researchers from MIT and Broad receive NIH Director's Awards". MIT News.
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