Event class: research, hospital, became, university, institute, department, medicine, director, laboratory, medical
normalize
de-normalize
Events with high posterior probability
Lemuel Diggs | He joined the faculty of the University of Tennessee in Memphis in 1929 and later became Director of Medical Laboratories. |
Abraham Verghese | Physician-author Abraham Verghese (born 1955) is Professor for the Theory and Practice of Medicine at Stanford University Medical School and Senior Associate Chair of the Department of Internal Medicine. |
Norman Shumway | In 1958, he began working as an instructor in surgery at Stanford Hospital in San Francisco, California, and later, in Palo Alto when the hospital was moved. |
Joseph Widney | In 1886, Widney, then professor of the principles and practice of medicine in the college of medicine of the University of Southern California, proposed a structure for the study of medicine. |
Elliott P. Joslin | His postgraduate training was at Massachusetts General Hospital, and he also studied with leading researchers in metabolism from Germany and Austria before starting a private medical practice in Boston's Back Bay in 1898. |
Albert Hofmann | Regarding his decision to pursue a career as a chemist, Hofmann provided insight during a speech he delivered to the 1996 Worlds of Consciousness Conference in Heidelberg, Germany : Hofmann became an employee of the pharmaceutical-chemical department of Sandoz Laboratories (now a subsidiary of Novartis), located in Basel as a co-worker with professor Arthur Stoll, founder and director of the pharmaceutical department. |
John L. Cotter | He would ultimately receive his doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania in 1959 while working as Regional Archaeologist for the Northeast Region of the National Park Service. |
Margaret Lowenfeld | That year she established the Children's Clinic for the Treatment Study of Nervous and Difficult Children one of the first child guidance clinics in Britain in Notting Hill, London, which, by 1931, she had developed into the Institute for Child Psychology (ICP). |
S. W. Harrington | In 1920, Harrington became head of a section of surgery at the Mayo Clinic, eventually becoming a full professor. |
Desmond Morris | However, in 1973 Desmond left Malta returning to work for the Nobel Prize winner Niko Tinbergen, in his research group studying animal behavior, with the department of Zoology at Oxford University. |
Joseph Waeckerle | In 1972 he served his first year as an Orthopedic Resident at Akron City Hospital in Akron, Ohio, then the next two years as an Emergency Medicine Resident at Kansas City General Hospital in Kansas City, Missouri, becoming Chief Resident and helping to establish Kansas City's Emergency Medical Services system. |
Larry Constantine | Constantine trained under family therapy pioneers David Kantor and Fred and Bunny Duhl at the Boston Family Institute, completing a two-year post-graduate certificate program in 1973. |
William H. Stewart | After EIS, Stewart followed his mentor to the National Heart Institute and became a trainee at the Grants and Training Branch of the National Heart Institute (November 1953). |
Sivananda Radha Saraswati | ` Thoroughly sick at heart with the brutality and stupidity of the world', she survived and, in 1951, emigrated to Canada settling in Montreal, finding work in the advertising department of a chemical firm, and becoming a Canadian citizen. |
Jordi Folch Pi | In 1944, with only 33 years of age, Folch was appointed director of the new Biological Research Laboratory at the McLean Hospital (a division of Massachusetts General Hospital) and assistant professor of biological chemistry at Harvard Medical School to develop a program in Neuroscience. |
Donald E. Ingber | Donald E. Ingber, (born May 1, 1956, East Meadow, NY) is an American cell biologist and bioengineer, Founding Director of the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University, the Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology at Harvard Medical School and Boston Children's Hospital, and Professor of Bioengineering at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. |
Yohannes Haile-Selassie | In 2002, he became the Curator and Head of Physical Anthropology Department at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History in Cleveland, Ohio, where he works currently. |
Samuel Mackenzie Elliott | Studying with physicians and lecturing in Cincinnati, and Philadelphia, he eventually settled in New York City, practicing as what he called an Oculist, as his medical degree was not recognized in the United States until he graduated from the New York Medical College in 1851. |
Bert Bolin | During his doctorate he spent a year in 1950 at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, where he worked with Jule Charney, John von Neumann and others on the first computerized weather forecast, using ENIAC, the first electronic computer. |
Blas Cabrera Felipe | With a grant from the Junta de Ampliación de Estudios (1912), Cabrera visited several European research centers including the Physics Laboratory of the Politechnic of Zurich (directed by Peter Weiss), in which he carried out experiments in magnetochemistry. |
Donald E. Ingber | In 1984, Ingber became a research associate in surgery at Boston Children's and in pathology at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School. |
Francis L. Delmonico | After serving for two years in the United States Navy as a Staff Surgeon at Walter Reed Medical Center, an Assistant Professor of Surgery at the Uniformed Services University School of Medicine, and as Ship's Surgeon on the USS Independence, Delmonico was recruited to the Massachusetts General Hospital in 1980 as a member of the Transplantation Unit of the Department of Surgery. |
Wilbur Downs | In 1961 he became Associate Director of the Medical and Natural Sciences Division in charge of the Rockefeller Foundation's arbovirus programme. |
Herbert Wilson | In 1962 he was Visiting Research Associate at the Children's Cancer Research Foundation, Boston Mass. |
David Khayat | Head of the Department of Medical Oncology at the Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital since 1990, he is also Professor of oncology at the University Pierre and Marie Curie and adjunct Professor at the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas. |
Martin Henry Dawson | In 1926 he was appointed a National Research Fellow, assigned to the Rockefeller Institute in New York. |
Kefah Mokbel | He was granted the Master of Surgery degree in 2000 by The Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine for his research in the field of molecular biology of breast cancer. |
Robert Kraichnan | From 1962 on, he was supported by research grants and worked as a freelance consultant for the Los Alamos National Laboratory, Princeton University, the Office of Naval Research, the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and NASA. |
Maurice Ewing | In 1972 he joined the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, and was named the head of the Division of Earth and Planetary Sciences of the Marine Biomedical Institute. |
Roger Daley | In 1995, Daley accepted a position as a UCAR Distinguished Scientific Visitor at the Marine Meteorology Division, Naval Research Laboratory, in Monterey, California, and moved his family to the Carmel Valley. |
Eleanor Mariano | By 1991, Mariano was a commander and the division head of internal medicine and director of the internal medicine clinic at the San Diego naval hospital. |
Deepak Pandya | In 1973, Pandya joined the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Bedford, Massachusetts, as a staff internist. |
Gertrude Stein | In 1897, Stein spent the summer in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, studying embryology at the Marine Biological Laboratory. |
Devi Nampiaparampil | In 2005, the Department of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation (PM&R) at Harvard Medical School honored her for her efforts `` to further the field of PM&R.'' |
William H. Oldendorf | In 1956, Oldendorf joined the faculty of the new medical school at the University of California, Los Angeles and the staff of the nearby UCLA-affiliated West Los Angeles Veterans Administration Medical Center. |
Joseph Gaither Pratt | Pratt continued as Assistant Director of the Parapsychology Laboratory until, in 1964, Rhine reorganized the Laboratory outside of Duke University, and within his own Foundation for Research on the Nature of Man. |
Clarence S. Clay, Jr. | In 1955 Clay moved to the Hudson Laboratories of Columbia University where he was a Senior Research Associate for marine geophysical research. |
A. Roberto Frisancho | In 1969, he received his Ph. D. in Anthropology from Pennsylvania State University and became Research Scientist at their Center for Human Growth and Development and Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the Department of Anthropology. |
Kefah Mokbel | In 2013, Kefah Mokbel featured on BBC world news regarding the news that actress Angelina Jolie had preventative double mastectomy after finding that she is a BRCA1 gene carrier Kefah Mokbel is currently the Lead Surgeon at The London Breast Institute of The Princess Grace Hospital, an honorary Consultant Breast Surgeon at St George's Hospital, Professor of Breast Cancer Surgery (The Brunel Institute of Cancer Genetics and Pharmacogenomics), President of Breast Cancer Hope, and Chair of The Breast Tumour Board, Hospital Corporation of America. |
Virginia Apgar | In 1949, Apgar became the first woman to become a full professor at CUCPS while she also did clinical and research work at the affiliated Sloane Hospital for Women. |
Herbert Ratner | In 1943 Ratner was appointed director of Student Health and associate clinical professor of Family and Community Medicine at the Stritch School of Medicine of Loyola University in Chicago. |
John Templeton, Jr. | He retired in 1995, as chief of pediatric surgery at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia to become head of the John Templeton Foundation. |
Herman B Wells | In 1933, Wells took leave from his recent appointment as an assistant professor at Indiana University to work as supervisor of the Division of Banks and Trust Companies and the Division of Research and Statistics in the newly created Indiana Department of Financial Institutions, an agency with origins in the Study Commission's recommendations. |
Michael Somogyi | In 1922, his colleague P. A. Schaffer at Cornell University persuaded him to return to the USA to become a professor of biochemistry at the Washington University's medical school in St. Louis. |
Frank E. Snodgrass | He became an Associate Research Engineer in 1961 and later a research engineer at Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) and the Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics (IGPP) in La Jolla, California. |
Robert Peter Gale | Since 2005 Gale has been a Visiting Professor of Haematoloy in the Department of Medicine, Division of Experimental Medicine, Section of Haematology, Imperial College, London assigned to Hammersmith Hospital (Jane Apperley, John Goldman). |
Bill Haast | In 1949, he began supplying venom to a medical researcher at the University of Miami for experiments in the treatment of polio. |
Malcolm Adiseshiah | 9 Just before his return to Madras (as Chennai was then named), in Sep. 1970, he and his wife Elizabeth registered in Paris a trust fund for starting Madras Institute of Development Studies (MIDS hereafter). |
Arshad Hasan | From April to August 2004, Arshad worked as an assistant canvass director for the Fund for Public Interest Research in Rochester, New York. |
George Alan Rekers | Rekers joined the University of Florida College of Medicine in 1977 and became the chief psychologist at the Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry as well as an associate professor of psychiatry, clinical psychology, and pediatrics. |
Dennis Slamon | He completed his internship and residency at the University of Chicago Hospitals and Clinics, becoming chief resident in 1978. |
Max Hamilton | After working as a visiting scientist at the National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA, he became a member of the external staff of the Medical Research Council and in 1963 succeeded G. R. Hargreaves in the Leeds Chair of Psychiatry. |
Frits Warmolt Went | After two years as simply Professor of Botany at Washington University, in 1965 he then became director of the Desert Research Institute at the University of Nevada-Reno, where he continued his research on desert plants for the remainder of his career. |
Edward Maynard | In 1857 he became professor of theory and practice in Baltimore College of Dental Surgery. |
John E. Sarno | John E. Sarno (born 1923) is Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine, New York University School of Medicine, and attending physician at the Howard A. Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine, New York University Medical Center. |
Hilde Bruch | She worked and studied at various medical facilities in New York and Baltimore before becoming a professor of psychiatry at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston in 1964. |
William Frederick Meggers | After a few years at the Carnegie Institute of Technology in Pittsburgh, in 1914 he joined the National Bureau of Standards, and while working there earned his PhD from Johns Hopkins University. |
Frederick Corbet Davison | Davison worked for the American Veterinary Medical Association as the assistant director of the Scientific Activities Division for a year before being named dean of the UGA College of Veterinary Medicine in 1964. |
David Naylor | He completed work in internal medicine and clinical epidemiology at the University of Western Ontario and Toronto and joined the academic staff of the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto in 1987. |
James Van Allen | On April 5, 1950 Van Allen left Applied Physics Laboratories, to accept a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation research fellowship at the Brookhaven National Laboratory. |
Donald E. Ingber | Ingber began his independent career in 1986 as a research instructor in pathology at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital, and in surgery at Boston Children's Hospital. |
Thomas Hunt Morgan | In 1894 Morgan was granted a year's absence to conduct research in the laboratories of Stazione Zoologica in Naples, where Wilson had worked two years earlier. |
Herwig Kogelnik | In 1961 he joined Bell Laboratories in Holmdel, New Jersey where he became Director of both the Electronics Research Laboratory and the Photonics Research Laboratory. |
Willard Parker (surgeon) | In 1836 he was appointed professor of surgery in the Cincinnati Medical College, and afterward spent some time in the hospitals of Paris and London. |
Deepak Pandya | He moved to Boston in 1966 and joined the Aphasia Research Center at the Boston Veterans Administration Medical Center, and the Departments of Anatomy and Neurology at Boston University School of Medicine as an Assistant Professor. |
Ryuzo Yanagimachi | In 1966 Yanagimachi ended up at the University of Hawaii as an assistant professor and has become a full professor of anatomy, biochemistry, physiology and reproductive biology at the John A. Burns School of Medicine. |
Michale Fee | In 1996 Michale Fee joined the Biological Computation Research Department at Bell Labs as a permanent researcher (Member of Technical Staff), at which time he began working on the mechanisms of vocal sequence generation in the songbird. |
Morton Mower | In 1968, Mirowski, then the director of the Coronary Care Unit at Sinai Hospital, met Mower, the chief of medicine in the Coronary Care Unit. |
Bernard Ogilvie Dodge | Dodge remained at Columbia University as Instructor of Botany until 1920, when he accepted an appointment as Plant Pathologist (in fruit diseases) in the Bureau of Plant Industry of the U. S. Department of Agriculture. |
Lightner Witmer | Witmer also founded the world's first'' Psychological Clinic'' in the United States at the University of Pennsylvania in 1896. |
Dirk Schulze-Makuch | In 1998 he joined the University of Texas at El Paso as assistant professor, investigating microbe and chemical transport in groundwater, and microbial interaction in a planetary environment. |
Norma Reid Birley | In 1988 she was appointed to Coventry University as Head of Department and Professor of Health Sciences in the first interdisciplinary Department of Health Sciences in the UK, comprising physiotherapy, occupational therapy and nursing. |
David de Kretser | He began working at Monash University in 1965, in the university's department of anatomy, and previously worked as both foundation director of the Monash Institute of Reproduction and Development (recently renamed the Monash Institute of Medical Research) and as Associate Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences (the Biotechnology Department). |
Thomas J. Fogarty | In 1969, when he began teaching surgery at the Stanford University Medical Center, Fogarty was first introduced to the wine industry. |
Paul Alivisatos | In January 2003 he was appointed director of the Materials Sciences Division at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. |
Alvan Feinstein | He was Board Certified in Internal Medicine in 1955 and became the medical director of Irvington House Institute (which later became part of New York University Langone Medical Center). |
Emmett Leith | Much of Leith's holographic work was an outgrowth of his research on synthetic aperture radar (SAR) performed while a member of the Radar Laboratory of the University of Michigan's Willow Run Laboratory beginning in 1952. |
Michael M. Crow | By 1991, he had become an Institute Professor there and had also worked as a consultant for the U. S. Department of Energy and Columbia University. |
John Robert Schrieffer | In 1992, Florida State University appointed Schrieffer as a university eminent scholar professor and chief scientist of the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, where he continued to pursue one of the great goals in physics : room temperature superconductivity. |
Osayuki Godwin Oshodin | In 1981 he lectured at Hunter College of City University of New York in the department of academic Skill/Seek, where he taught Health education,'' Anatomy and Physiology'', Biostatistics,'' Health Science'' and Community health. |
Frederick Osborn | In 1928, he became a research associate at the American Museum of Natural History studying anthropology and population. |
Howard Barrows | Barrows returned to New York city in 1957 to complete his residency in neurology at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center. |
William H. Thomas (physician) | Although he left full-time medical practice in 2004, he continues to lecture at the SUNY Health Science Center's Clinical Campus in Binghamton. |
Aksel C. Wiin-Nielsen | In 1961 he accepted an offer to work at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colorado, where his research focused on the general circulation of the atmosphere. |
Otto F. Kernberg | He first came to the U. S. in 1959 on a Rockefeller Foundation fellowship to study research in psychotherapy with Jerome Frank at the Johns Hopkins Hospital. |
Kellie Leitch | She became a fellow of clinical paediatric orthopaedics at the Children's Hospital of Los Angeles/University of Southern California in 2002. |
Donald J. Grace | In 1969, Grace took a position at the University of Hawaii as the head of the Center for Engineering Research. |
Gerty Cori | In 1922, the Coris both immigrated to the United States (Gerty six months after Carl because of difficulty in obtaining a position there) to pursue medical research at the'' State Institute for the Study of Malignant Diseases'' (now the Roswell Park Cancer Institute) in Buffalo, New York. |
Joseph Waeckerle | He became a member of the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) and the University Association of Emergency Medicine (UAEM - now the Society of Academic Emergency Medicine SAEM) in 1974. |
Marc Zabeau | In 1976, on an NFWO scholarship as a Fulbright Hayes postdoctoral fellow, he went for two years to the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York, the United States. |
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin | In 1923 he traveled to China with Father Emile Licent, who was in charge in Tianjin of a significant laboratory collaboration between the Natural History Museum in Paris and Marcellin Boule's laboratory. |
David A. Wolfe | Wolfe joined the faculty in the Department of Psychology at the University of Western Ontario in London, Ontario, Canada in 1981 where he conducted research in the field of child abuse. |
Nancy Snyderman | In 1988, Snyderman moved to San Francisco where she practiced head and neck surgery at the University of California San Francisco and California Pacific Medical Center. |
Nick Charles (sportscaster) | As of March 2010, the cancer became more aggressive and he returned to M. D. Anderson in Houston for a chemotherapy clinical trial. |
Carl-Gustaf Rossby | In 1931 he also became a research associate at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. |
Joseph Thoburn | He relocated in 1849 to Brownsville, Pennsylvania, where he briefly partnered in a medical practice before resigning to accept an appointment in Columbus at the Ohio Lunatic Asylum as an assistant to the chief physician. |
Andrew Huxley | In 1953, Huxley worked at Woods Hole, Massachusetts, as a Lalor Scholar. |
James Franklin Hyde | In 1951, Hyde was appointed the position of senior research scientist for basic organosilicon chemistry at Dow Corning. |
Alice Everett | In 1917 and at the age of fifty-two, Everett joined the staff of the National Physical Laboratory. |
Dickinson W. Richards | He was on the staff of the Presbyterian Hospital in New York until 1927, when he went to England to work at the National Institute for Medical Research in London, under Sir Henry Dale, on the control of circulation in the liver. |