Noah Rosenberg
Dr. Rosenberg first became interested in the intersection of mathematics, evolution, and genetics as an undergraduate research fellow, working at David C. Queller's laboratory in the W. M. Keck Center for Computational Biology at Rice University in Houston, Texas. After receiving the prestigious national Barry M. Goldwater scholarship in 1996, Dr. Rosenberg used his mathematics skills in an internship at the U.S. Department of Defense in Fort Meade, Maryland in 1997.
After graduating from Rice summa cum laude and as a member of the Phi Beta Kappa honor society in 1997, Dr. Rosenberg received a National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate fellowship for further study in mathematics at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. After completing his MS at Stanford, Dr. Rosenberg received a graduate fellowship from the Program in Mathematics and Molecular Biology. Dr. Rosenberg's PhD dissertation, under advisor Marcus W. Feldman, concerned statistical modeling and data analysis in population genetics. Dr. Rosenberg's work on, "Features of Evolution and Expansion of Modern Humans" has been recognized in Discover magazine's 100 top science stories of 2003, and his article, "Genetic Structure of Human Populations" was named 2003 Paper of the Year by the British medical journal Lancet.
After receiving his PhD, Dr. Rosenberg completed his National Science Foundation post-doctoral fellowship in biological informatics at the University of Southern California Department of Biological Sciences. In 2004, Dr. Rosenberg received the five-year Burroughs-Wellcome Fund Career Award in the Biomedical Sciences. Dr. Rosenberg is a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Society of Human Genetics, and the Society for the Study of Evolution. He is also a reviewer for many journals in genetics, evolutionary biology, and mathematical biology.
Noah Rosenberg


