"I have always been fascinated by DNA, but did not realize what burgeoning fields statistical genetics and bioinformatics are."

Danielle Bowen

Danielle Bowen came to Cornell with interests in math and biology, and left with a prestigious scholarship and solid grounding in the cutting-edge area of statistical genetics. She says her eyes were first opened to the burgeoning field in Bioinformatics, a computer science course taught by Andy Wildenberg.

She later joined Wildenberg for computer-based genetic research on bacterial mRNA, and also performed wet-lab research on fire coral genetics with biology professor Craig Tepper. And during her senior year she spent a block researching the genetics of renal disease in diabetics patients at the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen) in Phoenix, supported the Dimensions Program and a Cornell Fellowship.

"Being able to spend all day at TGen for weeks at a time was exceedingly helpful for making career decisions," she says. "Without the block plan, I would not have been able to take advantage of the opportunity at TGen during the school year."

Cornell's One-Course-At-A-Time schedule also enabled a focused independent study of computer tools used in statistical genetics under Wildenberg's guidance.  During this class, she also attended a four-day conference in Philadelphia focused on the interface between statistics, computing, and systems biology.

"The class was very specialized to my interests and gave me a lot of tools to use when I start graduate study," she says.

Bowen earned a Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship for her achievements at Cornell. She is now pursuing a doctoral degree in genetics and statistics at Iowa State University.
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