Ty Thomson: Difference between revisions

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...I must have other hobbies...  Am I really that lame?<p>
...I must have other hobbies...  Am I really that lame?<p>
''Things I'm good at that aren't quite hobbies''
''Things I'm good at that aren't quite hobbies''
*Sleeping
*Sleeping  
*Washing dishes
*Washing dishes



Revision as of 16:44, 17 February 2006

Personal

Bio

Born in Toronto in 1979. Grew up there, and attended the University of Toronto (UofT, not to be confused with UT, which is some school in texas I hear). Graduated in 2002 with a BASc (BASc = bachelor of applied science = canadian engineering degree) in Biomedical Engineering from the Engineering Science program. For 3 summers in undergrad I worked for MDS Proteomics (which changed names to Protana Inc, and was bought out by Transition Therapeutics). I started grad school at MIT in Biological Engineering (BE) in the fall of 2002. In January of 2003 I joined Drew Endy's lab. I mainly joined his lab cause he seemed to be the craziest and most outside-of-the-box faculty member in BE. I have been loosely involved in the synthetic biology community here (although my research is not really synth bio), including the sythetic biology working group, and I helped organize Synthetic Biology 1.0. I am somehow on the OWW steering committee, despite the fact that I rarely use OWW. I seem to be the skeptic/realist in the group, which is needed 'cause I work with a bunch of optimistic hippies.

Ty on the Sam Adams brewery tour

Hobbies

  • Beer brewing
  • Snowboarding
  • Playing various sports - hockey, football, softball (if that counts as a 'sport')

...I must have other hobbies... Am I really that lame?

Things I'm good at that aren't quite hobbies

  • Sleeping
  • Washing dishes

Contact

Address
31 Ames St.
68-570
Cambridge, MA 02139
Email Address
tmt -at- mit -dot- edu
Phone Number
617.258.8684

Science

Interests

  • Modeling
  • Parameter sensitivity/identifiability
  • Microfluidics
  • Yeast pheromone response

Thesis Project

Characterization of Signaling Pathways Using Time-Varying Stimuli

Near Future Plan and Notes

Publications

  • Stewart, I. I., Thomson, T., Figeys, D., and Duewel, H. S. (2003). "The Use of 18O Labeling as a Tool for Proteomic Applications", Handbook of Proteomic Methods, Edited by P. Michael Conn. Chapter 11, pages 145-179. (Totowa, New Jersey: Humana Press Inc.)
  • Stewart, I. I., Thomson, T., and Figeys, D. (2001). 18O labeling: a tool for proteomics. Rapid Commun. Mass. Spectrom. 15, 2456-2465 link on Pubmed