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Porsha Thomas

  • Vanderbilt University

    Andy Schwartz: Leveraging AI to improve the human condition

    As far back as he can remember, Andy Schwartz has been fascinated by two things—how the brain works and how humans process natural language.   Andy Schwartz, director of the Human Language Analysis Beings lab and research associate professor in the Vanderbilt College of Connected Computing (Submitted photo)… Read More

    Oct 13, 2025

  • Vanderbilt University

    John Wikswo: Transforming small-scale science into planet-sized impact

    When an “unsolvable” problem needs solving, put John Wikswo on the team. As director of the Vanderbilt Institute for Integrative Biosystems Research and Education and University Distinguished Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, and Physics, Wikswo is tackling questions crucial to the biotech and pharmaceutical industries, now with support from Vanderbilt's Innovation Catalyst Fund. Read More

    Sep 26, 2025

  • Vanderbilt University

    Eric Skaar: Exploring the connection between nutrient access and infection

    When bacterial pathogens enter our bodies, they’ve got one goal—hunt for food to multiply. And during the process, they make us sick. Eric Skaar, Ernest W. Goodpasture Professor of Pathology and director of the Vanderbilt Institute for Infection, Immunology and Inflammation, is uncovering how pathogens compete with healthy microbes for essential nutrients. He was recently elected a member of the National Academy of Sciences. Read More

    Aug 6, 2025

  • Tracy Denean Sharpley-Whiting

    Tracy Sharpley-Whiting: Illuminating the interior lives of trailblazing historical figures

    Tracy Sharpley-Whiting's research explores the interior lives of historical figures whose artistic influence shaped their worlds. Her impressive accomplishments led to her recent election to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, one of the nation’s oldest and most prestigious honorary societies. Read More

    Jul 30, 2025

  • Larisa R. G. DeSantis, Ph.D. in her office at Vanderbilt University

    Larisa DeSantis: Looking back for the future

    Our past has something to say. 2025 Guggenheim Fellow Larisa DeSantis is ready to translate. Read More

    May 18, 2025

  • Stephanie Wankowicz

    Stephanie Wankowicz: Exploring protein form and function

    Understanding how proteins get from point A to point B is top of mind for Stephanie Wankowicz, assistant professor of molecular physiology and biophysics and principal investigator at the Wankowicz lab. She conducts research on how entropy, a measure of the tendency toward disorder or randomness within a system, shifts when a protein binds to a drug or another protein. Now, her work is being shared through the diffUSE project, a new multi-institutional collaboration focused on reshaping the future of structural biology by moving beyond traditional “snapshot” views of proteins to reveal their full dynamic motions. Read More

    Apr 7, 2025

  • Julia Velkovska

    Julia Velkovska: Solving the world’s minuscule mysteries

    As Cornelius Vanderbilt Professor of Physics and chair of the Department of Physics and Astronomy, Julia Velkovska studies the tiny particles that form our universe. She focuses on how nuclear matter behaves when confronted with extreme density and temperatures (think trillions of degrees)—similar to the conditions existing microseconds after the big bang, right as the universe was starting to take shape. Just this year, Velkovska and her team of physicists were awarded the 2025 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics, along with 13,508 colleagues across four landmark CERN experiments. The prize honors decades of work expanding our understanding of the physical universe. Read More

    Apr 7, 2025

  • James Crowe

    Collector instincts and abstract thinking are behind immunologist James Crowe’s drive to use game-changing technology to prevent infectious disease

    See how art collector turned immunologist James Crowe combines abstract thinking with game-changing technology to prevent infectious disease. Read More

    Feb 12, 2025

  • Vanderbilt University

    The Greatest Upset

    It was a sun-soaked Saturday afternoon when the Dores came out to play. With their team squaring off against the No. 1-ranked Alabama Crimson Tide, Commodore fans squeezed into a sold-out FirstBank Stadium. Little did they know that on the fifth day of October, history was about to be made. Read More

    Oct 10, 2024