Skip to main content

Mentor Areas

Dr. Skarke is studying the human chronobiome under basal and perturbed conditions integrating multiomics, clinical and remote sensing outputs. These reference data are necessary to interrogate the time dependence in the incidence or severity of disease phenotypes. Please see the open access article "A Pilot Characterization of the Human Chronobiome" in Scientific Reports (https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-17362-6).

Description:

Research projects address the clinical relevance of temporal patterns for the human condition in health and disease. Specific projects will vary. Interested students should contact us to discuss possibilities. Research projects and mentoring can be completely (or partially) conducted remotely to facilitate physical distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Preferred Qualifications

HIPAA privacy training; CITI Certificate Protection of Human Subjects Research; interest and some experience in parsing biomedical data to enable remote work

Details:

Preferred Student Year

First-year, Second-Year, Junior, Senior

Academic Term

Fall, Spring, Summer

I prefer to have students start during the above term(s).

Volunteer

No

Yes indicates that faculty are open to volunteers.

Paid

Yes

Yes indicates that faculty are open to paying students they engage in their research, regardless of their work-study eligibility.

Work Study

No

Yes indicates that faculty are open to hiring work-study-eligible students.

Researcher


McNeil Fellow in Translational Medicine and Therapeutics