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Naşide Gözde Durmuş

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Naside Gözde Durmuş
Born1985 (age 38–39)
Izmir, Turkey
Alma mater
Scientific career
InstitutionsStanford University

Naside Gözde Durmuş (born 1985, Izmir) is a Turkish scientist and geneticist. She is currently Assistant Professor of Radiology at Stanford University. Her research focuses on nanotechnology and micro-technology applications on current world-threatening health issues, like cancer and antibiotic resistance. In 2015, MIT Technology Review listed her under the category of pioneers in the magazine's list of 35 Innovators Under 35.[1]

Biography

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Durmuş was born in 1985 in Izmir, Turkey.[2] In 2003, she started her undergraduate studies at the Middle East Technical University, specializing in Molecular Biology and Genetics. Later on, she obtained a Fulbright scholarship and moved to the United States to pursue higher education, achieving a Masters in Engineering from Boston University in 2009, and receiving a Ph.D. degree in Biomedical Engineering from Brown University in May 2013.[3]

Durmus is currently an Assistant Professor at Stanford University. In 2014, she took a position as a post-doctoral researcher at Stanford. She conducted her postdoctoral research with Ronald W. Davis at the Stanford University Genome Technology Center and Stanford University School of Medicine.[4] In 2015, she has been recognized among the "Top 35 Innovators Under 35" (TR35), as a pioneer in biotechnology and medicine, by MIT Technology Review Magazine.

Career

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Her work focuses on developing low-cost nanotechnology tools that can be used for the diagnose and treatment of diseases, like for instance a fast method for detecting the physical features of a cell, by having them levitate in a magnetic field, this being able to measure in a shorter period of time how a microbe responds to a certain drug,[1] and making it possible to differentiate cancerous cells from healthy ones.[5]

References

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  1. ^ a b Gozde Durmus, 30 | It’s amazing what you can learn about a cell when you levitate it.
  2. ^ Kanser teşhisinde çığır açan buluş Archived 2018-12-28 at the Wayback Machine (in Turkish)
  3. ^ Naside Gozde Durmus|Stanford Profiles Archived 2018-06-09 at the Wayback Machine.
  4. ^ Dünyanın Gururu İki Türk Bilim İnsanı Bursa'ya Geliyor. (in Turkish)
  5. ^ "Stanford team develops technique to magnetically levitate single cells". phys.org.
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