Professor @ Johns Hopkins | kidneys, GPCRs, blood pressure, gut microbes | #FirstGen | (she/her) | here on bluesky as an individual; posts do not represent the views of my employer http://pluznicklab.johnshopkins.edu/
The clarification Jeremy posted implies that they will not issue *NoFOs* that are specific for animal models. At least for now, I don't see how that would exclude someone from making/proposing a new model for brain mapping or development - or, disease. What am I missing?
July 22, 2025 at 11:32 AM
The clarification Jeremy posted implies that they will not issue *NoFOs* that are specific for animal models. At least for now, I don't see how that would exclude someone from making/proposing a new model for brain mapping or development - or, disease. What am I missing?
Yup. As a result of the arguing, I'm now much more vague ('unable to consider new hires at this time'), which I don't like doing. But if I give a reason (don't have funds/space) some folks argue incessantly (but that is no problem: my salary won't be much! I can share a bench!).
May 20, 2025 at 2:09 PM
Yup. As a result of the arguing, I'm now much more vague ('unable to consider new hires at this time'), which I don't like doing. But if I give a reason (don't have funds/space) some folks argue incessantly (but that is no problem: my salary won't be much! I can share a bench!).
I'm glad to hear you would be open to taking them! I suspect that it is students planning to apply for this fall who would be the first cohort to apply more widely...
March 21, 2025 at 12:43 PM
I'm glad to hear you would be open to taking them! I suspect that it is students planning to apply for this fall who would be the first cohort to apply more widely...
My op-ed below (which is a paper covering a chunk of Appalachia in Ohio) has gotten some attention. It’s not too hard to understand - people support cancer research.
I’m a biomedical researcher who lost his wife to cancer. Finding cures is personal.
My op-ed below (which is a paper covering a chunk of Appalachia in Ohio) has gotten some attention. It’s not too hard to understand - people support cancer research.
I’m a biomedical researcher who lost his wife to cancer. Finding cures is personal.