Vijay Pande

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Vijay S. Pande
A portrait of Vijay Pande, looking straight ahead. His ethnicity is Indian. He has medium-length black hair, black-rim glasses, and a short mustache and beard. He is wearing a blue polo shirt under a black suit coat.
A 2012 portrait of Vijay Pande
Born Trinidad
Residence USA
Citizenship USA
Fields Chemistry, computational biology, molecular biology
Institutions Stanford University
Alma mater Langley High School
Princeton University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
University of California, Berkeley
Academic advisors Philip Anderson, Daniel S. Rokhsar
Known for Folding@home, Genome@home
Website
pande.stanford.edu

Vijay S. Pande is a biomedical scientist and a Stanford University professor of chemistry, structural biology, and computer science. Vijay S. Pande is the Director of the Biophysics Program and is best known for orchestrating the disease research project called Folding@home distributed computing.[1] His research is focused on distributed computing and computer-modelling of microbiology. [2] His current research focuses on improvising computer simulations regarding drug-binding, protein design, and synthetic bio-mimetic polymers.[3]

Personal

Pande was born in Trinidad to Indian parents.[4][5] He is married to Elizabeth Stephens Pande, has two children, and likes cats.[1]

Education

Pande graduated from Langley High School's class of 1988 while growing up in McLean Virginia.[6] In 1992, Pande received his B.A. in Physics from Princeton University.[2] He received academic advice from Nobel laureate Philip Anderson, T. Tanaka, and A. Grosberg for his BA and PhD theses on physics.[7] MIT awarded him a PhD after his thesis in 1995.[2]

Distributed Computing

The protein-folding computer simulations from the Folding@home project is said to be "quantitatively" comparable to real-world experimental results. The method for this yield has been called a "holy grail" in computational biology.[8][9]

Pande directed the Genome@home project with the goal to understand the nature of genes and proteins by virtually designing new forms of them. Genome@home started to close as early as March of 2004,[10] after accumulating a large database of protein sequences. [10][11]

Awards

In 2002, he was named a Frederick E. Terman Fellow and an award recipient of MIT's TR100. The following year, he was awarded the Henry and Camile Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar award.[3] In 2004, he received a Technovator award from Global Indus Technovators in its Biotech/Med/Healthcare category.[5] In 2006, Pande was awarded the Irving Sigal Young Investigator Award from the Protein Society. In 2008, he was named "Netxplorateur of 2008". [5] Also in 2008 he was given the Thomas Kuhn Paradigm Shift Award and became a Fellow of the American Physical Society.[2] Pande received the 2012 Michael and Kate Bárány Award for developing computational models for protein and RNA. [2][5] He is the second person to ever win both the "Protein Society Young Investigator Award" and "Biophysical Society Young Investigator" award.[12]

Publications

As of March 2013, Pande has contributed to 297 scientific publications.[13]

Pande's ten most-cited works are:

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "The Setup / Vijay Pande". 2011. Retrieved 2012-07-29. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 "Stanford University - Vijay Pande". Stanford University. 2011. Retrieved 2011-10-25. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 "About Me". 2011. Retrieved 2011-10-25. 
  4. "Vijay Pande - Technology Review". Technology Review. 2002. Retrieved 2012-07-29. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Pande Group (2011). "Folding@home - Awards". Stanford University. Retrieved 2011-10-09. 
  6. "Vijay Pande". Facebook. 2011. Retrieved 2011-12-13. 
  7. "Vijay Pande". Stanford University. 2011. Retrieved 2011-10-25. 
  8. G. Bowman, V. Volez, and V. S. Pande (2011). "Taming the complexity of protein folding". Current Opinion in Structural Biology 21 (1): 4–11. doi:10.1016/j.sbi.2010.10.006. PMC 3042729. PMID 21081274. 
  9. "Bio-X Stanford University: Vijay Pande". Bio-X Stanford University. 2011. Retrieved 2011-10-16. 
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Genome@home Updates". 2002-03-04. Retrieved 2011-09-05. 
  11. Pande Group. "Genome@home FAQ" (FAQ). Stanford University. Retrieved 2011-09-05. 
  12. Vijay Pande (June 29, 2012). "Re: Protein Folding Conference (F@h and experiments)". Retrieved June 29, 2012. 
  13. "Vijay Pande - Google Scholar Citations". Google. March 22, 2013. Retrieved March 22, 2013. 

External links

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