Getting Started as a Group Leader panel
Panel Date: Monday, May 15 2023
Time: 9 am PDT, 12 pm EDT, 6 pm CEST
The NAASC Early Career Scholars Subcommittee (ECSS) are hosting an upcoming career development panel
Register by May 14th to be emailed the Zoom link.
You may submit an (optional) question for the panel when you register.
Panelists
Dr. Aman Husbands, Assistant Professor of Biology at the University of Pennsylvania, USA
Dr. Xue Pan, Assistant Professor in the Department of Cell and Systems Biology at the University of Toronto Scarborough, Canada
Dr. Carlos Ortiz-Ramírez, Assistant professor at the Cinvestav Research Institute, Mexico
Some discussion questions (you can submit your own when you register):
What was your biggest challenge starting your lab?
What is your approach to mentoring?
How do you foster your lab culture?
How do you manage your work/non-work life balance?
Dr. Aman Husbands
Aman Husbands is an Assistant Professor of Biology at the University of Pennsylvania, USA. He did his PhD in the lab of Patricia Springer at UC Riverside working on LBD transcription factors before doing a postdoc with Marja Timmermans at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory working on adaxial-abaxial leaf patterning. Aman set up his research group in January 2018 at Ohio State University, before moving across to the University of Pennsylvania. His work focuses on CLASS III HOMEODOMAIN LEUCINE ZIPPER (HD-ZIPIII) transcription factors and how they function in different contexts during plant development and evolution.
Dr. Xue Pan
Xue Pan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of Toronto Scarborough, Canada. She did her PhD at the University of Alberta in the lab of Randall Weselake working on triacylglycerol biosynthesis in flaxseed before moving to UC Riverside for a postdoc with Zhenbiao Yang working on the function of membrane nanodomains in auxin signaling. In September 2022 Xue started her lab at the University of Toronto Scarborough where her lab studies lipid synthesis and signaling.
Dr. Carlos Ortiz-Ramírez
Carlos Ortiz-Ramírez is an Assistant professor at Cinvestav Research Institute, Mexico. He did his PhD in the lab of José Feijó at Gulbenkian Science Institute in Portugal working on gamete signaling during fertilization in Physcomitrium before doing a postdoc with Ken Birnbaum at NYU using scRNAseq to look at ground tissue specification in maize and Setaria roots. Carlos started his lab in January 2020 at Cinvestav. His group works on the regulation and evolution of cell identity in photosynthetic tissues using maize.