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Appendix B: Biographies
Pages 95-116

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From page 95...
... Prior to joining DOE, she served as a Program Administrator for the congressionally mandated Veterans Advisory Board on Dose Reconstruction for the Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs at the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements. She previously held a position as Senior Program Officer/Study Director with the Board on Radiation Effects Research at the National Research Council/National Academy of Sciences, where she directed 12 studies, 5 of which were congressionally mandated studies.
From page 96...
... Mr. Andersen is certified as a health physicist by the American Board of Health Physics and is a U.S.
From page 97...
... She was founding Co-Chair of the NCI-Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Interagency Oncology Task Force, founding Co-Chair of the Cancer Steering Committee of the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health Biomarkers Consortium, and was responsible for NCI's international cancer research programs.
From page 98...
... , where she is a Senior Staff Biophysicist with more than 44 years of professional experience in molecular, cellular, and animal radiobiological research directed at studying the basic mechanisms of radiation responses, with an emphasis on charged particle radiation effects. She also holds a faculty affiliate appointment in the Department of Radiological Health Sciences at Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, and is a Clinical Professor of radiation medicine (nontenured)
From page 99...
... Dr. Blakely is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advance­ ent of Science, a recipient of the Distinguished Service Award of m the Radiation Research Society, and a Distinguished Emeritus Member of the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements.
From page 100...
... Mr. Boyd is an active member of the Health Physics Society and is a delegate to the International Radiation Protection Association, where he is currently a member of its International Congress Program Committee for IRPA 15, which will be held in Seoul, Korea, in May 2020.
From page 101...
... He served on the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements for almost 30 years and was on the Board of Directors for that organization, was a member of the Environmental Protection Agency Science Advisory Board, was on the National Academy of Sciences team that produced the BEIR VI report on Radon Health Effects, and was the Chief Scientist for the Department of Energy Low Dose Radiation Research Program. He recently published the book Low Dose Radiation: The History of the U.S.
From page 102...
... Dr. Cool has more than 36 years of experience in radiological protection and is a Fellow of the Health Physics Society.
From page 103...
... Dr. Dauer served as Chair and Vice Chair of the Radiation Safety Committee of the American Association of Physicists in Medicine, President and Executive Council Member of the Medical Physics Section of the Health Physics Society, President of the Greater NY Chapter of the HPS, and Board Member of the Radiological and Medical Physics Society of New York, as well as a member of the International Commission on Radiological Protection Committee 3–Radiation Protection in Medicine.
From page 104...
... He was the first recipient of the Molecular Cancer Research Chair at Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, joining Georgetown in 2006 from the Harvard School of Public Health, where he was the director of the John B Little Center for the Radiation Sciences and Environmental Health.
From page 105...
... His omics studies were then extended to the small-molecule level (i.e., metabolomics) and his team along with collaborators developed the field of radiation metabolomics and have demonstrated low dose radiation effects at the metabolomic level.
From page 106...
... is the Director, Oregon Health & Science University Center for Spatial Systems Biomedicine, and Associate Director for Biophysical Oncology, Knight Cancer Institute. He applies -omic and multi-scale molecular imaging technologies to elucidate mechanisms by which cancers arise, progress, and become resistant to treatment and uses this information to develop therapeutic strategies to more durably control cancers with emphasis on breast cancer.
From page 107...
... Lawrence Award, Department of Energy; the Curt Stern Award, American Society for Human Genetics; the Alfred G Knudson Award in Cancer Genetics, National Cancer Institute; election as a Fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering and the American Association for Cancer Research; and election to the National Academy of Medicine.
From page 108...
... Dr. Hertel is currently the President of the Health Physics Society (HPS)
From page 109...
... He has published more than 45 papers in peer-reviewed literature. His research interests encompass various fields of radiobiology, including effects of low doses on DNA damage and repair, epigenetics, micro­ nvironment, and carcinogenesis in somatic and stem cells.
From page 110...
... Anderson, the University of North Carolina, and Stanford; and is an affiliate member of the American Association for Cancer Research and an alumnus of their Scientist-Survivor Program. He has served on the Patient Advisory Committee for one of the largest pharmaceutical companies, has given presentations and served on panels of numerous cancer organizations including the International Kidney Cancer Coalition and the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, and has served on several committees with the North Carolina Comprehensive Cancer Program and the South Carolina Cancer Alliance.
From page 111...
... . His work at NEA has focused on the evolution of the system of radiological protection, radiological risk assessment and management, radiological protection ­ technical and social science, stakeholder involvement and risk governance, radiation protection policy and regulation, nuclear emergency management, occupational exposure at nuclear power plants, and decommissioning.
From page 112...
... Examples of current and recent work in this portfolio, which Mr. Neumann continues to lead, include the cost and schedule performance of National Science Foundation construction projects, such as telescopes and research ships; reviews of the policies and procedures for federal science agencies to maintain scientific integrity and for science agencies to more effectively deal with allegations of sexual harassment among grant recipients; and considerations for maintaining U.S.
From page 113...
... Surgeon General and past President of the Baltimore-Washington Chapter of the Health Physics Society. Captain Noska serves on several inter-agency committees and workgroups related to radiological emergency response.
From page 114...
... He has served as a visiting scientist at the World Health Organization's International Agency for Research on Cancer, the French Institute for Radiological Protection and Nuclear Safety, and the Radiation Effects Research Foundation in Hiroshima, Japan. Since 2007, he has served as Director of the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health–funded training program in occupational epidemiology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
From page 115...
... Prior to that he was the Barbara Cox Anthony Distinguished Chair in Oncology at Colorado State University and Director of the Colorado State component of the University of Colorado Consortium Comprehensive Cancer Center. He is recognized internationally for his research on mechanisms and risks of cancer following exposure to ionizing radiation and for his scientific leadership of laboratory, academic, and medical programs.
From page 116...
... Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University, and is a member of the Center for Genetic Medicine, and the Northwestern Comprehensive Center on Obesity.


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