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The Lewis-Sigler Institute at Princeton University was established
with a mandate to create innovative research and teaching programs at
the interface of modern biology and the more quantitative sciences.
One impetus came from the need to deal with the explosion of
information based on the genomic sequences of the human and all major
experimental organisms. The other major impetus came from the
realization that the most interesting and difficult problems in the
quantitative disciplines, especially physics, chemistry and computer
science, frequently lie in biological phenomena and applications.
The Institute was founded by Shirley Tilghman, who subsequently became
president of the university, and is now led by Director David
Botstein, Evnin Professor of Genomics, whose research interests are in
genetics and genomics. The Institute was endowed through a generous
gift from Peter B. Lewis, class of 1955, to
honor his dear friend and Princeton roommate, Paul B. Sigler, class of 1955. It is housed in
a striking building designed by Rafael Viñoly
Architects of New York. The construction of the building was
funded by a gift from Carl Icahn, class
of 1957.
Intellectually, the Institute is very diverse: resident faculty
include members of the Physics, Chemistry, Computer Science, Chemical
Engineering and Molecular Biology Departments. There are also many
non-resident affiliated faculty, most of whom are participants in
teaching programs led by the Institute. The Institute has a unique
endowment that supports exceptional young experimental scientists and
theorists (recent Ph.D.s) as Lewis-Sigler Fellows. The fellowship
funds their independent research at the Institute for five years,
during which time the Fellows participate in the design and
execution of the Institute's innovative teaching programs.
Several curricular innovations have been initiated at Princeton under
Institute leadership. A new Graduate Program in Quantitative and
Computational Biology (QCB) was established in 2003 and
serves as an intellectual hub for graduate education in quantitative
biology at Princeton. The QCB Program includes 70 faculty from 12
different departments, and the Institute has been awarded NIH funding
for a new training program in the area of genomics and quantitative
biology.
At the undergraduate level, a new curriculum prepares students for majors in any of several departments, currently including Physics, Chemistry, Computer Science, and Molecular Biology. The curriculum also leads to a new Certificate Program in Quantitative and Computational Biology.
One of the goals of the Lewis-Sigler Institute is to provide a focus
for Princeton-wide interdisciplinary research programs and to provide
research infrastructure (see Resources
page) for them. A Center of
Excellence in Quantitative Biology was funded by the National
Institute of General Medical Sciences in 2003. One of only five in the
nation, it focuses on the application of genome-scale technologies,
mathematical modeling, and modern molecular imaging.
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Copyright © 2007 Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics.
Princeton University. All Rights Reserved.
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