Global Greeks - Scholars and Scientists
| Nicholas Christakis (Physician and Sociologist, USA) |
Nicholas Christakis, born in 1962, is a Greek American physician and sociologist at Harvard University. He was listed among TIME magazine’s 2009 100 most influential people .
Christakis conducts research on social factors that affect health, health care, and longevity. His current work is principally concerned with health and social networks.
Nicholas Christakis - Official Website
Nicholas Christakis at TIME
Nicholas Christakis at Wikipedia
In 1964, he completed his studies in nuclear physics at Charles University in Prague, joined the Laboratory for Astrophysics and Space Research at the University of Chicago - which he never left - and began working for NASA, as its youngest scientist at the time. He contributed to NASA’s missions to the Moon (1966-1968), NASA’s Apollo program (1961-1975), and developed tools and techniques that enabled several of NASA’s famous missions to be carried out successfully, such as the Mars Pathfinder mission (1993-1997).
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He received his Ph.D. degree in 2006 from the University of Melbourne, and he was a Research Fellow at The University of Melbourne in 2007 before relocating to California to join Adaptive Spectrum and Signal Alignment (ASSIA), Inc., the world's leader in Dynamic Spectrum Management of xDSL lines. John is a co-inventor behind two US/AUS patent applications and has worked with NEC Australia (3G Mobile R&D), Agilent Technologies (Advanced Networks Division) and Telstra Ltd.
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"I believe in the longer term every consumer device will have this technology," said project leader, Professor Stan Skafidas, NICTA Gigabit Wireless Project Leader who with his team spent almost a decade developing the chip.
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In 1996 he began teaching at Haverford College, where he is presently Associate Professor of History. He recently collaborated with filmmaker Maria Iliou as the historical advisor in the making of the documentary film The Journey: The Greek American Dream. The documentary recounts the arrival and settlement of the Greeks at the turn of the twentieth century, their gradual assimilation into American society and the revival of Greek ethnicity in the 1970s. |
His research work focuses on the genetics of autoimmune diabetes. Dr. Polychronakos led a team that discovered the mechanism by which the insulin gene is involved in the genetics of type 1 diabetes (T1D), and he leads a large-scale effort to discover additional genes that predispose to T1D.
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Dr. Papageorgiou also continues to serve as an adviser to governments, universities and hospitals, helping to organize perinatal services and train obstetricians, neonatologists and family practitioners from countries such as Greece, Poland, Morocco, Armenia, China and the former Soviet Union. He is the recipient of the Quebec Association of Pediatricians Prix d'excellence in 2002. |
The board "unanimously and enthusiastically" elected Zeppos to the position, said Chairman of the Board Martha Ingram. "Chancellor Zeppos has contributed his talents in many different capacities," she said. " He has seen Vanderbilt through important moments in our history, and has led our evolution into a truly global university." Zeppos, born in 1954 has received both his bachelor of arts and his law degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Prior to joining the faculty of the Vanderbilt Law School in 1987, he was a practicing attorney in Washington, D.C. Zeppos has written widely on legislation, administrative law, and professional responsibility. |
She has conducted fieldwork in Europe and Africa, and is currently directing paleoanthropological fieldwork in Greece (Aliakmon Paleolithic/ Paleoanthropological Survey project). The recent Science article on the early modern human fossil from S. Africa, co-authored by Katerina Harvati and colleagues, was chosen by TIME magazine as one of the top ten scientific discoveries of the year 2007. |
Sifakis, together with Edmund Clarke and Allen Emerson, won the 2007 A.M. Turing Award, widely considered the most prestigious award in computing, for their original and continuing research in a quality assurance process known as Model Checking. |
Born in Greece, in 1952, she came to London to study at the LSE and went on to a glittering career as chief economist for, among others, KPMG, Exxon Europe and the Royal Bank of Scotland. Vicky Pryce is married to Chris Huhne, the Liberal Democrat leadership contender.
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Aris Katzourakis, an evolutionary biologist and post doc researcher at the University of Oxford, is a leading figure in the team that discovered the fossilized remains of an ancient lentivirus (from the Latin for "slow") – the same type that causes AIDS – within the genome (i.e. the entire hereditary information of an organism encoded in the DNA) of the European rabbit.
Presentation of Aris Katzourakis’s research work in the New Yorker
Katzourakis's page at the University of Oxford
Dr. George Paxinos paved the way for future neuroscience research by being the first to produce a three-dimensional (stereotaxic) framework for placement of electrodes and injections in the brain of experimental animals, which is now used as an international standard. Dr. Paxinos has been honored with more than nine distinguished awards throughout his years of research. With 35 published research books, 115 refereed journal articles, 2 reviews, 25 book chapters and 13 CD-ROMs, he is currently President of the Australian Neuroscience Society and the IBRO World Congress of Neuroscience.
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Scholars and Scientists |