Adam R. Davis Sr., Ph.D.
US Citizen, Gulf War Veteran
** ******** ****** **. ******, GA 30054, 443-***-****
************@*****.***, https://www.linkedin.com/in/adam-davis-29aa822b/
Department of Defense Security Clearance Level: Secret -2019
Curriculum Vitae
Dr. Davis is a biomedical informaticist, molecular biologist, computational biologist, and information technology professional with 26+ years of experience leading laboratory research, computational biology, and data analytics for various disease and medical studies, with 9+ years of practical experience in Combat Medic, then a Practical Nurse. He is an expert in utilizing correct technologies to conduct research and design medical proposals for high-payout grants to support gene editing, omics (genetics, transcriptomics, proteomics), computational biology, computer science, Biomedical Informatics, human performance, and readiness. He has over ten years of experience building high-performing teams, directing strategic planning for research, and maintaining various stakeholder expectations. Proficient in many molecular biology techniques for RNA, DNA, methylation, and protein analyses (Whole genome sequencing (WGS)). Highly skilled in designing and applying statistical ( utilizing R and Bioconductor) and predictive algorithms in Python for the human classification of diseases and other phenotypes.
Academic Degrees:
Ph.D. in Biology (Computational and Molecular Biology), Clark Atlanta University, Atlanta, GA, Graduated: July 2005
BS in Biology, Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD, Graduated: May 1997
Certifications:
Certificate in Clinical Epidemiology, Program in Clinical Effectiveness, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, Completed: August 2006
Fellowships:
Fellow in Bioinformatics, Cardiovascular Research Institute, Morehouse School of Medicine Atlanta, GA, May 2005 - June 2006
Fellow in Biomedical Informatics, I2b2 National Centre for Biomedical Computing, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, June 2006 - November 2009
US Army Military Education:
Medical Specialist Course, Completed: August 1982
Combat Medical Professional Course, Completed: July 1984
Primary NCO Course, Completed: July 1985
Practical Nurse Course, Completed: June 1987
Patient Care Specialist Phase II, Completed: June 1988
Professional Development/Training
Recombinant DNA Methodology Training Program, National Institutes of Health
VASCULATA Training Program, Dartmouth College, USA
Level I, II, III Microarray Data Analysis Workshop, Agilent Technologies
Integrative Statistical Analysis of Genome-Scale Data, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, USA
Genetics of Complex Human Diseases, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, USA
US Army Practical and Development Training:
Medical Non-Commissioned Officer (NCO)
Air Assault Course
Certificate of Participation TEAM SPIRIT
Lighter Fighter Certificate of Achievement
NCO Academy Primary Leadership Development Course
General transportation of Hazardous Material Course
Jungle Warfare Training Course
Awards & Honors
4X winner of NIH Pathway to Independence Award (K99-R00) from Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, and Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA
3X recipient of the Outstanding Teaching Fellow Award from The Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Boston, MA
3X recipient of the NIH National Research Service Award (T-32) from i2b2 National Center for Biomedical Computing, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA
2X winner of NIH National Research Service Award (T-32) from Cardiovascular Research Institute, Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA
Recognized for Outstanding Scientific Presentation by Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA
3X awardee of NIH National Research Service Student Award (F31) from Clark Atlanta University, Atlanta, GA
Awarded Minority Scholar in Cancer Research Award from the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
4X honoree of Beta Kappa Chi, Biology Honor Society Award from Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD
Received Certificate of Outstanding Achievement in Biology from Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD
US Army Honors:
Kuwaiti Liberation Medal, Saudi Arabia Ribbon, United States
Army Service Ribbon
3X Good Conduct Medal, United States Army.
2X Army Achievement Medal
NCO Professional Development Ribbon
3X Southwest Asia Service Ribbon
Combat Medical Badge
Overseas Service Ribbon
National Defense Service Medal
Professional Experience
Atlanta Veterans Administration Medical Center, Atlanta, GA, 30033
Senior Data Scientist, Madabhushi Group (full time 40 hours a week) 9/2023 to present):
Manage the local Atlanta Veterans Administration Medical Center (AVAMC) AI research. Oversaw the development of grants, computer infrastructures, AI database development, analytical pipelines, and developed Clinical IRB protocols. Dr. Davis's research uses Cancer AI modeling to predict prognoses, treatment, and health outcomes. Additionally, he develops objectives and strategies for overseeing the implementation of the technological infrastructure (networks, computer systems, and databases) to streamline all internal operations and IT-related projects for optimal performance and strategic benefits at the AVAMC for Dr. Madabhushi’s group. He currently utilizes pathomics, radiomics, whole genome sequencing (genetics and transcriptomics), and clinical data to predict cancer stages, prognoses, and long-term health outcomes.
Shenandoah University, Winchester, VA. 22601
Visiting Assistant Professor, Biology Department: Lecturing Anatomy & Physiology, Cancer Methodology 8/2022 to 8/2023:
Lecture Anatomy & Physiology and separately Mechanisms of Cancer for undergraduate students, three hours, three times a week, a total of nine hours per week of lectures.
Family Sabbatical (12/2020 - 8/2022)
During this period, I took a necessary sabbatical to focus on my family following a significant personal transition. As a single parent to three young children—two sons (ages 8 and 7) and one daughter (age 6)—I navigated the challenges of adjusting to a single-parent household after the separation and eventual divorce in 2024. This time allowed me to focus on my children's well-being and my own mental health, while developing the skills and knowledge required to manage our household independently.
Neurostat Analytical Solutions, LLC., Vienna, VA., 22182
Biomedical Informatics and Information Systems, Independent Consultant (Full Time 40 hours per week), 06/2020-12/2020:
To empirically measure the host molecular interactions and gene regulatory processes associated with clinical and psychological measurements and interventions to identify genomic biomarkers. Provided experimental design, developed and implemented psychogenomic precision medicine and epidemiology protocols utilizing various omics assays (nucleic acid, protein, and epigenomic). Develop AI statistical pipelines for the prediction of variously defined human psychological states. Additionally, set objectives and strategies overseeing the implementation of the technological infrastructure (networks and computer systems) to streamline all internal operations and IT-related projects for optimal performance and strategic benefits for the organization. Including DOD FedRAMP cybersecurity requirements, data encryption for extensive data collection, and data sharing.
Office of The Vice President for Research, Uniform Services University, Dept of Defense, Bethesda, MD., 20814
Clinical Information System Director – HJF Contractor (Full Time 40 hours per week), 11/2017 – 05/2020:
Conduct an institutional assessment for research infrastructure and provide solutions to bring the university computer infrastructure into DOD FedRAMP+ IL2 and IL4 compliance. Design processes and procedures to remove bottlenecks in research acquisition. Designed computer infrastructure to grow the university’s research portfolio. Assisted university faculty with biomedical informatics and epidemiology research designs, genomic biomarker analysis, hardware, and software designs for cloud computing on Amazon Web Services, and establishing omics (genetics, genomics, and epigenomics) analytical and computational pipelines, designing and selecting cybersecurity solutions meeting FedRAMP requirements for data management and encryption and de-identifying methodologies for data sharing compliant with DOD FedRAMP for PHI and PII.
Genomics of Metabolic, Cardiovascular & Inflammatory Disease Branch, National Human Genome Research Institute, Bethesda, MD., 20892
Senior Staff Scientist – Biomedical Informatics, Cardiovascular Disease Section, Federal Employee Band 2, Tier2, (Full Time 40 hours per week) 12/2012 – 11/2017:
Designed, developed, and implemented a research environment with standard operating procedures; configured computer cluster for computation and bio-specimen biobank and translational biorepository. Designed large-scale precision medicine studies and clinical trials. Developed standard operating procedures (SOPs) for ongoing studies. His research focused on identifying human genomic /phenomic omics biomarkers (genetic, genomic, epigenomic) for cardiovascular disease and new drug treatments. He has conducted/reviewed biomedical informatics, systems biology, and computational analyses and published peer-reviewed publications.
Morehouse School of Medicine (MSM), Atlanta, GA., 30310
Assistant Professor, Department of Physiology and Cardiovascular Research Institute, Morehouse School of Medicine, (Full Time 40 hours per week) 11/2009 – 12/2012:
Dr. Davis’ research focused on identifying human genomic /phenomic omics biomarkers (genetic, genomic, epigenomic) for cardiovascular disease and asthma to identify new drugs for treatment. Dr. Davis was instrumental in establishing, designing, and implementing the RCENTER research web portal. He created the MSM on-premises bioinformatics computer environment (computer cluster, high throughput network storage) for omics, clinical data processing, and analytical pipelines to support research. Additionally, he served on the committee to design, implement, and develop the MSM cryo-repository rooms and LIMS system integration for the MSM research community.
Director of the Informatics Computation and Analytics Development (ICAD) Core, 06/2010 – 12/2012: As the ICAD Director, I designed and implemented a university-level computer infrastructure and bioinformatics pipelines for omics and other clinical data analyses for the MSM research community.
Director Bioinformatics and Computational Biology (BCB), 12/2009 – 12/2012: As the BCB Director, he assisted MSM faculty in bioinformatics and precision medicine protocol designs and analytics.
Co-Director, R-Center Biomedical Informatics Unit, 12/2009 – 12/2012: Coordinated inter-institutional clinical and translational research projects for MSM. Consultant for electronic medical record data extractions, data transformations for research, and analytical reports on medical treatment and decision processes to improve patient health outcomes.
Harvard-MIT Health Sciences and Technology (HST) Summer Institute, Boston, MA., 02115
Assistant Director in Bioinformatics (Full Time Summers 40 hours per week) 06/2006 – 06/2012: Dr. Davis partnered with a team on electronic medical record data extraction for integration into the i2b2 data repository. His research focused on omics data from several studies to identify biomarkers for disease. He conducted omics analyses on various research datasets. Additionally, he worked with students in designing research projects as part of the HST BIG summer program.
Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA., 02115
Research Fellow in Bioinformatics, i2b2/National Center for Biomedical Computing, (Full Time 40 hours per week) 06/2006 – 12/2009:
Dr. Davis conducted research utilizing omics data from several studies to identify biomarkers for disease and ancestry. Additionally, he performed analysis related to EMR extraction and data integration into the i2b2 data repository.
Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA., 30310
Post-Doctoral Fellow in Bioinformatics, Cardiovascular Research Institute, (Full Time 40 hours per week) 06/2005 – 06/2006:
Dr. Davis has conducted mRNA analyses on cardiovascular disease patient data, comparing multiple datasets for a combined analysis.
Clark Atlanta University, Atlanta, GA., 30314
Graduate Student Research Assistant, (Full Time 40 hours per week) 10/1997 – 01/2002:
Molecular Biology: Conducted research for the development of a Cathepsin-K transgenic mouse. Construct oligonucleotides using DNASTAR and Oligo programs for PCR and DNA sequencing. Perform plasmid construction, amplification, and purification using digestion enzymes, bacterial cultures, and the following plasmid purification kits: Qiagen, Eppendorf, and 5prime 3prime. Perform mammalian cell culture transfection efficiency and promoter functionality studies. He has performed assays such as 14C labeled chloramphenicol acetyltransferase assay (CAT), beta-galactosidase assay (B-GAL), and green fluorescent protein (GFP). DNA isolation and purification from mammalian and cell culture samples, including human studies and mouse breading genotyping. DNA, RNA, and protein isolation using standard techniques such as sodium acetate/ethanol and chloroform/phenol DNA precipitation, Trizol RNA and Protein isolation methods, northern blotting, western blotting, SDS-PAGE, and agarose electrophoresis. He is experienced with tissue culture types, including DNA transfection of tissue culture cells using electroporation or lipofectamine ™.
Computational Biology: Besides wet bench research, Dr. Davis conducted computational and bioinformatic research elucidating RNA secondary structure folding free energy analyses. He has a solid knowledge base with the NCBI Reference Sequence (RefSeq) whole transcriptome, experience with DNA and RNA sequence folding programs, and characterization of the data results into a biological functional computational database. Develop relational databases using SQL languishes, mining large data sets (Terabit) relating to Gene Ontology (GO) Consortium and constructing functional relationships between Biological Process, Molecular Function, and Cellular Component databases with experimental data set results. Develop .bat files to expedite extensive data manipulations and reduce some manual computer commands. He applied biostatistics, including One-Way ANOVA, Two-Way ANOVA, T-test, z-score, and statistical blocking methods to identify meaningful data results. He has configured a computer cluster of 18 computers to work together through a university-level network for mRNA folding permutations using genetic algorithms such as J-express, ArrayTools, and Gene Cluster.
Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD., 21251
Student Research Assistant, (Full Time 40 hours per week) 09/1996 – 05/1997:
Daily, animal research assays were conducted utilizing semisolid cell cultures (Bone and spleen), and I-125 radioimmunoassay. Statistical analysis, image analysis, Rat bone marrow & spleen extraction and preparation for light microscope, Benzidine, Wright’s, and Giemsa cell staining.
Kennedy Krieger Research Institute, Baltimore, MD., 21205
Research Assistant, (Full Time 40 hours per week) 05/1994 – 09/1996:
He performed clinical research assays using chromatography, high-speed centrifugation, sonication, gel electrophoresis, dialysis, southern & western blots, 14C16 & 14C24 synthetase, Lowry Bradford, Beta-oxidation, Catalase, and SDH assays for clinical patients. Organelle preparation of yeast Pichia Pastoris peroxisomes and mitochondria subcellular fractionations using sucrose and nicodence gradients.
United States Army, USA
Medical Nurse and Combat Medic, (Full Time 40 hours per week) 08/1982 – 08/1992:
Supervised Aid-Station and Emergency Facility for over 2000 soldiers, cared for patients with chronic and acute disorders, and prepared patients pre/post-surgery. Performed minor emergency surgical procedures (examples: suturing of lacerations, removing subcutaneous lipomas and hemorrhoids). Performed cardiopulmonary resuscitation using artificial respiration (chest tubes and O2). Administered intravenous fluids, applied tourniquets, and immobilized fractures. During Wartime, he administered morphine, treated for numerous types of shock, and triaged casualties.
Grants/Funding
HG200393 (Senior Scientist, Davis), 11/08/12 - 11/04/17, NIH/NHGRI, $15M
Cardiovascular Disease Cluster (CVD), Biomedical Informatics
Objectives: Establish infrastructure to support a team of 11 bioinformatics staff. Design, develop, and execute precision health clinical trials utilizing current and new clinical trial data to elucidate biomarkers for cardiovascular diseases. Collaborate with NHGRI information technology staff to create computational and storage environments to support CVDS systems biology and bioinformatics.
R00350067-224001-21 (Principal Investigator, Davis), 06/25/09 - 11/08/12, NIH/NHLBI, $611,249
Phenome-Genome Characterization of Asthma in African Americans
Objectives: To distinguish the genetic basis of differences in asthma susceptibility and the course of asthma (e.g., risk of exacerbations) between African American (AA) and Caucasian (CA) populations
1RC4MD005964-01 (Co-Investigator, Davis), 09/30/10 - 11/08/12, NIH/NIMHD, $11,628,781
Minority Health-GRID Network: A Genomic Resources for Health Disparity Research
Objectives: To create a minority-focused research network to link health information with genetic data and assess genetic, personal, and environmental factors associated with severe hypertension (HTN) or high blood pressure
2G12RR003034-26 (Co-Investigator, Davis), 07/07/12 - 11/08/12, NIH/NCRR, $1,407,264
The Morehouse School of Medicine G12 Multidisciplinary Biomedical Research Center
Objectives: Develop a critical level of biomedical research capability, productivity, and training that expands MSM’s research portfolio, allowing MSM to pursue multidisciplinary approaches to discovery science that translate into the amelioration of health disparities.
Research & Presentations
Adam R. Davis, Presentation July 2019: MarkLogic Distributed Computing Meets AI Mining in an Integrated Biorepository: A Bioinformatics Ecosystem for New Discovery, XXXVIth International Congress on Law and Mental Health, Rome, Italy.
Adam R. Davis, Ryan A. Neff, Jose Vargas, Rakale Quarells, Minority Health-GRID Network, and Gary H. Gibbons, Presentation December 2014. Alignment to an Ancestry Specific Reference Genome Discovers Additional Variants among the MH-GRID Cohort, National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities Grantees’ Conference, Washington, DC., USA.
Ryan Neff, Gary Gibbons, Adam Davis, Presentation, October 2014. Alignment to an Ancestry Specific Reference Genome Discovers Additional Variants Among 1000 Genomes ASW Cohort, American Society for Human Genetics, San Diego, CA, USA.
Davis Adam and Isaac S. Kohane, Presentation August 2008. Investigation of Gene Expression Specific to Continent of Origin, National Center for Biomedical Computing, 2008 All Hands Meeting, http://www.ncbcs.org/pdf/ahm2008/1110_Davis.pdf., Boston, MA, USA.
Davis A., Didgby D., Seffens W., Presented November 2005. Whole Transcriptome Variance Analysis of mRNA Secondary Structure Free Energies in Human, Mouse, and Arabidopsis, Proceedings of The Fifth Georgia Tech International Conference on Bioinformatics, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Davis A., Didgby D., Seffens W., Presentation October 2005, Human Transcriptome Database Reveals clustering of Apoptosis Genes by mRNA Secondary Structure, The Second Annual Biotechnology and Bioinformatics Symposium, Colorado Springs, CO, USA.
Adam Davis and William Seffens. Presentation May 2005, Whole Transcriptome Variance Analysis of mRNA Secondary Structure Free Energies in Human, Mouse, and Arabidopsis, Proceedings of The Fifth Georgia Tech International Conference For Bioinformatics, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Davis A., Didgby D., Seffens W., Presented December 2004. Whole Human Transcriptome Pattern Analysis Using GO Vocabulary Terms and mRNA Secondary Structure Free Energies, Proceedings of RCMI International Symposium on Health Disparities, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Davis A., Didgby D., Seffens W., Presented September 2004. Comparison of mRNA Secondary–Structure Folding Properties Across Whole Transcriptomes, Georgia Life Sciences Summit, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Davis A., Kimbro S. Presented March 2001. Cathepsin K Expression in Prostate Cancers. AACR 2001 Symposiums, New Orleans, LA, USA.
Davis A., Kimbro S. Presented September 2000. The Characterization of Osteoblast-specific Estrogen Receptor-alpha Expression in Osteoblast-like Cells, The American Association for Bone and Mineral Research, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Davis A., Carmichael R., Presented April 1997. Evidence Suggesting Erythropoietin Transfer to Suckling Rats Via the Maternal Milk. FASEB Experimental Biology 97 Research Symposium, New Orleans, LA, USA.
Publications
Zilbermint, M., Gaye, A., Berthon, A., Hannah-Shmouni, F., Faucz, F. R., Lodish, M. B., Davis, A. R., Gibbons, G. H. and Stratakis, C. A. “ARMC 5 Variants and Risk of Hypertension in Blacks: MH- GRID Study”, J Am Heart Assoc. 2019: 8(14): p. e012508.
Cihan Oguz, Shurjo K. Sen, Adam R. Davis, Yi-Ping Fu, Christopher J. ODonnell, Gary H. Gibbons. “Genotype-driven identification of a molecular network predictive of advanced coronary calcium in ClinSeq and Framingham Heart Study cohorts,” BMC Systems Biology, 2017. 11(1): p.99
Gebreab, S.Y., Riestra, P., Gaye, A., Khan, R. J., Xu, R., Davis, A. R., Quarells, R. C., Davis, S. K, Gibbons, G. H. Perceived neighborhood problems are associated with shorter telomere length in African American women. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 2016. 69: p. 90-7.
Horbal SR, Seffens W, Davis AR, Silvestrov N, Gibbons GH, Quarells RC, Bidulescu A “Associations of Apelin, Visfatin, and Urinary 8-Isoprostane With Severe Hypertension in African Americans: The MH- GRID Study”. American Journal of Hypertension, 2016. 29(7): p. 814-20.
Zilbermint M, Xekouki P, Faucz FR, Berthon A, Gkourogianni A, Schernthaner-Reiter MH, Batsis M, Sinaii N1, Quezado MM, Merino M, Hodes A, Abraham SB, Libé R, Assié G, Espiard S1, Drougat L, Ragazzon B, Davis A, Gebreab SY, Neff R, Kebebew E, Bertherat J, Lodish MB, Stratakis CA, “Primary Aldosteronism and ARMC5 Variants”. The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2015 Jun;100(6): E900-9. ISSN (online): 1945-7197.
Quarshie, A.; Davis, A.; Strayhorn, G.; Weaver, C.; Delano, C.; Winters, K.; Rice, R.; Ofili, E.; “Establishing the Morehouse School of Medicine (MSM) R-Center Clinical and Translational Research Web-Portal: The Role of Focus Groups,” Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved 22. 2011: Pages 165-173.
Carey VJ, Davis AR, Lawrence MF, Gentleman R, Raby BA. Data structures and algorithms for analysis of genetics of gene expression with Bioconductor: GGtools 3.x. Bioinformatics. 2009;25(11):1447-1448.
Davis AR; Kohane IS; “Expression differences by continent of origin point to the immortalization process,” Hum Mol Genet. 2009;18(20):3864-3875.
Yoo, J.; Digby, D.; Davis, A.; Seffens, W.; “Whole Transcriptome mRNA Secondary Structure Analysis Using Distributed Computation,” Proceedings of the 2006 IEEE International Conference on Granular Computing, USA. May 2006: Pages 647-650.
Adam R. Davis, David Digby, and William Seffens, “Human Transcriptome Database Reveals Clustering of Apoptosis Genes by mRNA Secondary Structure,” Proceedings of the Second Annual Biotechnology and Bioinformatics Symposium, Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA. October 2005: Pages 59-62.
Technical Proficiencies
Proficient in statistical programming to include predictive modeling and AI utilizing RStudio and Bioconductor, Python and Perl on the LINX platform.
Proficient in Molecular Biology techniques, RNA, DNA, protein extraction, gel electrophoreses (SDS and 2D), Northern and Western blots, chromatography, high-speed centrifugation (cell organelle subcellular fractionations using sucrose and nicodence gradients), sonication (tissue, cells, DNA, and RNA), cell separation for most tissue and body fluids
Proficient in most methods for biological specimen collection and long term cryo-repository storage for tissue, cells, organelles, analytes, and fluids
Proficient in constructing oligonucleotides using DNASTAR and Oligo programs for PCR and targeted sequencing
Proficient in CLIA level diagnostics testing for 14C16 & 14C24 synthetase, Lowry, Bradford, Beta-oxidation, Catalase, and SDH assays for clinical patients.
Perform plasmid construction, amplification, and purification using digestion enzymes, bacterial cultures, and plasmid purification
Proficient with DNA transfection of tissue culture cells using methods, e.g., electroporation or lipofectamine.
Proficient in predicting and simulating mRNA folding analysis using genetic algorithms incorporated into array expression programs such as J-express, ArrayTools, Gene Cluster, and NCBI RefSeq database.
Experienced in designing and implementing sequencing pipelines and data processing utilizing hisat2, bowtie2, samtools, bwa-mem, FastQC, Picard-tools, Cufflinks
Data mining utilization of artificial intelligence supervised learning (e.g., Na.ve Bays, ANN, decision trees, random forest) and unsupervised learning (Hierarchical, k-means, affinity propagation)
Expert in omics data analysis, dimensionality reduction, and visualization techniques
Highly trained and proficient with most NCBI web-based applications for pathway and gene network research utilizing GEO, DbGap, DBVar, GeneCrad, and other gene-gene interaction network enrichment software, examples: Ingenuity, MediCore (GeneGo), Navigator, Kegg
Capable of developing databases utilizing Microsoft SQL Server, Access, Hadoop, and PolyBase using Teradata and Oracle ETL tools
Very knowledgeable of clinical protocol data system design and data integration i2b2, RedCap, NIH-Clinical Trials Database
Knowledgeable of ITP analytics such as IBM Watson and Microsoft PowerBI, and others
Hands-on experience designing network-attached storage (NAS), including RAID methodology, SAN high-speed InfiniBand storage network bandwidth requirements
Familiar with Azure Stream Processing and Cloud-based warehouses, including IBM Netezza, HortonWorks, Azure DW
Proficient in website and application development utilizing GoDaddy and OutSystems,
Proficient in Microsoft Word, Excel, Access, PowerPoint
GoDaddy and OutSystems
Professional Associations
Member, 2015 – Present, Council Member, American Heart Association (AHA)
Member, 2013 – Present, American Society of Human Genetics (ASHG)
Member, 2010 – 2011, African and Southern African Societies of Human Genetics (SASHG)
Member, 2000 – 2003, American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
Member, 2001 – 2002, American Association for Bone and Mineral Research (ASMBR)
Member, 1997 – 1998, Federation of American Societies for Experiential Biology (FASEB)