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Stanford University Mass Spectrometry’s 2022 Research Applications Symposium (SUMS-RAS 2022)
November 16, 2022 @ 8:00 am - 11:00 am PST
Free- Sponsored by Stanford University Mass Spectrometry
- November 16th, 9am-Noon, Online via Zoom, Free, Registration required
- View abstracts and speaker bios | Event Website
- SUMS-RAS 2021 recordings are viewable on demand
Stanford University Mass Spectrometry’s 2022 Research Applications Symposium, Mass Spec: The Voyage Home, will transport scientists from around the world for a virtual visit with Stanford’s mass spectrometry community, sharing our exciting campus research and resources featuring these speakers:
Dr. Yuqin Dai, Director, ChEM-H Metabolomics Knowledge Center, Stanford University. Metabolomics Knowledge Center: Open Access LC/MS Facility To Support Life Science Research
Dr. Ruth Huttenhain, Incoming Assistant Professor, Dept. of Molecular & Cellular Physiology, Stanford University. Mapping the Diversity in Spatiotemporal Regulation of G Protein-Coupled Receptors
Dr. Christie Jilly-Rehak, Research Scientist/Lab Manager, SHRIMP-RG Lab, Stanford University. Dynamic SIMS at Stanford: Applications in Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry using the NanoSIMS and the SHRIMP-RG Instruments
Dr. Chris Lock, Clinical Associate Professor, Dept. of Neurology & Neurological Sciences, Stanford University. Exhaled Breath Analysis for Metabolic Profiling, Drug Levels, and Biomarker Discovery
Dr. Parag Mallick, Associate Professor, Dept. of Radiology, Stanford University. Quantifying the Reproducibility of Proteogenomic Analyses using a Semantically Aware Discovery Engine
Dr. Sharon Pitteri, Associate Professor, Dept. of Radiology, Stanford University. Intact Glycopeptide Analysis of Human Tissue and Fluid Samples for Cancer Detection
Dr. Karrie Weaver, Technical Director, SIGMA Lab Facility, Stanford University. Mass Spectrometry in Space and Time: Using ICPMS to Characterize Materials Across Disciplines and Through the Ages
Dr. Shouling Xu, Research Scientist, Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution for Science. Making Invisible Visible