Last updated: November 17, 2011
From Double Helix to Human Sequence - and Beyond
From Double Helix to Human Sequence - and Beyond
Lecture Webcasts
April 15, 2003
Implications of Genomics for Human Disease
Session Chair: Caroline A. Kovac
IBM Life Sciences
From Genome to Successful Treatment in Leukemia
Janet Rowley
University of ChicagoGenetic and Genomic Insights into Cardiovascular Disease
Richard Lifton
Yale University School of MedicineParadigms for the Genetic Component of Diabetes
Nancy Cox
University of ChicagoGene Identification for Infectious Disease Resistence: The First 50 Years
Adrian Hill
The Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics
Implications of Genomics for Human Disease
Session Chair: Michael Gottesman
NIH
Genetics of Speech, Language and Reading Disorders
Anthony Monaco
The Wellcome Trust Centre for Human GeneticsHereditary Hearing Disorders in the Genomics Era
Thomas Friedman
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders
NIHImpact of the Human Genome Project on Hereditary Blindness, Simple and Complex
Val Sheffield
University of IowaGenetic Analysis Reveals Unexpected Connections Between Neurodegenerative Diseases
John Hardy
National Institute on Aging
NIHGenomic Views of Psychiatric Illness
Aravinda Chakravarti
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Implications of Genomics for Healthcare
Session Chair: Raynard Kington
NIH
Genomic Health Care
Wylie Burke
University of WashingtonGenes, Genomes and Drugs
Peter Goodfellow
GlaxoSmithKline Pharmaceuticals
Implications of Genomics for Society
Session Chair: Ellen Wright Clayton
Vanderbilt University
Race, Science and Society
Harold Freeman
Columbia University and Harlem Hospital CenterIntellectual Property: A Boon or a Barrier to Genomics?
Maria Freire
The Global Alliance for Tuberculosis Drug DevelopmentThe Genetic Revolution and its Impact in the Workplace
Paul Miller
U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity CommissionForensic DNA Testing and Human Identification
Robert Shaler
Office of the Chief Medical Examiner New York City
Genomics and Global Health
Sir David Weatherall
University of Oxford
Closing Remarks
Elias Zerhouni
Director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH)