I'd like to thank Douglas and everyone for their kind words about my "cloning experiment" and impending appointment to Arizona State in Tempe.
I will be part of the
Center for Evolutionary Medicine and Informatics in the Biodesign Institute and the
Evolutionary Biology Program in the School of Life Sciences. I was hired as part of a genomics cluster, which is currently still hiring (Initial deadline is this Friday. See the ad below.) You could have the office next to me and Prof. Steve Steve.
I am looking to take students and graduate recruitment is underway. I'm looking for students with a background in biology, computation, mathematics, and/or statistics and interested in studying evolution theory and bioinformatics. I work on a variety of topics in computational evolutionary genetics, with most of my research dealing with mutations and developing analysis methods for detecting it from genomic data and high-throughput sequencing. I also have research programs in frequency-dependent selection and scientific computing with Javascript. If you are interested, you can check out my
full CV, but I've appended a list of recent papers to this post. I can send anyone reprints if desired.
I'm also looking for undergraduate students to join my lab next semester as well. So if you are a current or future ASU undergrad and want to work along side
Prof. Steve Steve, send me an email at cartwright@asu.edu.
The application deadline for the graduate program is December 15th, and the process is described
here.
Rice University is also looking for a postdoc to fill my vacated Huxley Fellowship. See the ad below the fold.
ASU Graduate Program
Graduate Program in Evolutionary Biology
The Evolutionary Biology PhD program at Arizona State University is
recruiting students for entry in the Fall 2012 semester. This new program is
interdisciplinary by design and enables faculty and students using diverse
models and technologies to engage in novel and innovative research to answer
questions related to a number of disciplines including ecology, behavior,
physiology, population genetics, bioinformatics, and anthropology.
General information about the program as well as the application process and
materials can be found at: http://sols.asu.edu/grad/evo_bio.php
Interested candidates are strongly encouraged to contact listed faculty to
inquire about potential openings, fellowships, and general questions about
research projects.
Program questions can be directed towards either of the Evolutionary Biology
program chairs:
Michael Rosenberg (msr@asu.edu)
Brian Verrelli (brian.verrelli@asu.edu)
Cartwright Lab Recent Papers
- Cartwright et al (accepted). A family-based
probabilistic method for capturing de novo mutations from high-throughput short-read
sequencing data. Statistical Applications in Genetics and Molecular Biology.
- Conrad et al (2011). Variation in genome-wide mutation rates within and
between human families. Nature Genetics, 43:712-714.
- Cartwright et al (2011). History can matter: Non-Markovian
behavior of ancestral lineages. Systematic Biology, 60:276-290.
- Cartwright and Graur (2011). The multiple personalities of Watson and Crick
strands. Biology Direct, 6:7.
- Price et al (2011). Neutral evolution
of robustness in Drosophila microRNA precursors. Molecular Biology and Evolution,
28:2115-2123.
- Lücking et al (2011). PICS-Ord: unlimited
coding of ambiguous regions by pairwise identity and cost scores ordination. BMC
Bioinformatics, 12:10.
- Cartwright (2011). Bards, poets, and cliques: Frequency-dependent selection
and the evolution of language genes. Bulletin of Mathematical Biology. 73:2201-2212
- The 1000 Genomes Project Consortium (2010). A map of human genome variation from
population-scale sequencing. Nature, 467:1061-1073.
ASU Genomics Job
Faculty Position in Genomics at Arizona State University
The School of Life Sciences and The Biodesign Institute at Arizona State
University invite applications for a tenure-track faculty position at the
level of Assistant Professor whose research is at the interface between
Genomics and Life Sciences. Research methods may include theoretical,
computational, and empirical approaches in population genetics, functional
and comparative genomics, and bioinformatics. The successful candidate will
be expected to develop an innovative, extramurally-funded, research program,
teach at the undergraduate and graduate levels, and have a commitment to
outreach and service. The successful candidate will be expected to mentor
undergraduate and graduate students as well as postdoctoral fellows. A
competitive start-up package and teaching load compatible with high research
productivity will be provided.
Arizona State University has made a commitment to accelerating the
translation of basic discoveries into practical benefits for society through
the construction of state-of-the-art research facilities and the recruitment
of world-class faculty members. The successful candidate will participate in
university-wide health and/or sustainability initiatives supported by core
facilities for functional genomics and next generation sequencing,
functional proteomics, high throughput cellular screen, bioinformatics, high
performance computing, and imaging. More information on genomic research
opportunities at the Biodesign Institute and the School of Life Sciences at
ASU can be found at http://genomics.asu.edu.
Candidates must have a Ph.D. (or equivalent) in an appropriate field, and a
minimum of 2 years of postdoctoral training is preferred. Demonstrated
teaching and research excellence is preferred.
To apply, send cover letter, your curriculum vitae, three representative
publications, separate statements of future research plans and teaching
philosophy and interests, and contact information for three references to be
sent to Alan Rawls, Chair, Genomics Faculty Search Committee, School of Life
Sciences, PO Box 874501, Tempe, AZ 85287-4501. Electronic applications sent
as PDF files to solsfacultysearch@asu.edu are preferred. The initial closing
date for receipt of applications is November 11, 2001; applications will be
reviewed weekly thereafter until the search is closed. A background check is
required for employment. Arizona State University is an equal
opportunity/affirmative action employer committed to excellence through
diversity. Women and minorities are encouraged to apply. For additional
information on this position and the School of Life Sciences, please visit
http://sols.asu.edu/jobs.
Huxley Fellowship in Evolution
The Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department of Rice University
(http://eeb.rice.edu/) seeks to fill a Huxley Fellow position in
EVOLUTION. The position is a two-year appointment with a third year
extension possible, with a start date of July 1st 2012. Our prestigious
Huxley Fellow Program aims to recruit outstanding researchers with a
PhD and postdoctoral experience, who merge excellence in teaching (25%)
and research (75%). The Huxley Fellows receive faculty status, employee
benefits, competitive salary, and research funds for independent or
collaborative research. Collaborative interests with the existing faculty
are a plus and applicants are encouraged to identify a potential faculty
host within the EEB department.
An application (curriculum vitae, statement of research interests
and statement of teaching) and three letters of recommendation should
be submitted via e-mail to Diane Hatton, rdh@rice.edu. Please write
"Evolution Huxley Fellow Application" in the subject line. Application
review will begin immediately.
For further questions and informal inquiries please contact Dr. Nicholas H
Putnam, Huxley Fellow Search Committee, nputnam@rice.edu. Rice University
is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Women and minorities
are encouraged to apply.
13 Comments
ogremk5 · 7 November 2011
sigh...
Joe Felsenstein · 7 November 2011
Reed, congratulations on the job. When you get there say hi for me to Sudhir Kumar and lots of other folks there, including the head of the Biodesign Institute, who is a former colleague of mine in my department (he was our very own Nobel laureate).
In case anyone wonders why Rice University can grandly name its fellowship the Huxley Fellowship, in fact Julian Huxley had a connection there. In 1914, after three years of a job at Oxford University, he became head of Biology Department at Rice Institute. On his way there, he stopped to visit Thomas Hunt Morgan's famous fly lab at Columbia University. He was impressed by one of the graduate students there and offered him a job at Rice Institute. This was H. J. Muller. They overlapped for some months at Rice, then Huxley went back to England and into military service, as World War I had broken out. A major part of his legacy at Rice was H. J. Muller's presence there for several years.
Ron Okimoto · 7 November 2011
Sounds like a great opportunity for Reed and any of his future students. I now work in industry. It pays better than academia, and there is a shortage of bioinformaticians. I don't know how long the shortage will last, but we are at the stage of the early biotech companies of the 1980's that were hiring microbiologists because they couldn't get molecular biologists. A few months ago we got two terabases of DNA sequence to analyze. It is more sequence than the DOD generated in the previous year. We are not that big of a company and have openings for two post docs in the field of genomics and bioinformatics.
My guess is that if you get a solid understandings of the basics and can write scripts and analyze tons of data that you won't have any problem finding a decent paying job at the end of your degree.
Genomes are being sequenced for a few thousand dollars, but it takes people that know what they are doing to make sense of all the data. Getting a degree where you become proficient in grinding through tons of data isn't going to be a waste of your time, and you stand a chance of figuring out some really interesting problems. Understanding the underlying biology is one of the shortages.
Gary_Hurd · 7 November 2011
Congratulations. Best wishes.
https://www.google.com/accounts/o8/id?id=AItOawnGXzqMlOZje1hV0lvlTbcFgGAVlE_Xemg · 7 November 2011
Congratulations, Reid. It sounds like a fabulous place to work. (But someone tell him that ASU is in Phoenix, not Tempe....)
Reed A. Cartwright · 8 November 2011
Paul Burnett · 8 November 2011
Atheistoclast · 9 November 2011
I will be definitely be applying, Reed. Have you read my journal articles?
Btw, I recently had a paper accepted on the subject of computational pop genetics. One of the regulars on this forum helped me out on it, but I won't say who.
Paul Burnett · 9 November 2011
Atheistoclast · 9 November 2011
Reed A. Cartwright · 9 November 2011
Are you willing to post the abstract?
Atheistoclast · 9 November 2011
John · 9 November 2011