Ginger Tsueng
Ginger Tsueng
Senior Research Scientist / Scientific Outreach Project Manager
The Scripps Research Institute
gtsueng at scripps dot edu
Google Scholar
Bio
Love science and research? I do! I’m an extremely enthusiastic researcher with a Ph.D. from the Cell and Molecular Biology program offered jointly from SDSU and UCSD. My dissertation research was on viral persistence in the stem cells of the central nervous system. I enjoy engaging in cross-functional, multi-disciplinary, collaborative team endeavors.
Education
Ph.D., Biology, UCSD/SDSU Cell/Molecular Bio. Joint Doc. Program
MBA, Business Administration, San Diego State University (SDSU)
BS, Cell Biology and Biochemistry, University of California, San Diego (UCSD)
BS, Psychology, University of California, San Diego
Recent Posts
Finding an awesome job–is it just dumb luck? part I
by ginger | Jun 2, 2014 | career, career advice, cover letter, job search, sulab, work
As I was finishing up my PhD, I followed the relevant advice I received from colleagues, acquaintances, and linkedin posts quite faithfully: I carefully considered the traditional and non-traditional post PhD routes; I used AAAS’s IDP tool to...Answer the Call, Save a Scientist
by ginger | May 30, 2014 | conference, crowdsourcing
The 2015 Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing will be held from Jan 4-8 on Kohala Coast in Hawaii! Andrew and Ben (together with collaborators Robert and Zhiyong at NCBI) are organizing the session on Crowdsourcing and Mining Crowd Data. For the...Contest Deadline Extended
by ginger | May 27, 2014 | BioThings, crowdsourcing
The DBP contest for the Network of BioThings has been extended to June 30, 2014. The $500 prize has yet to be claimed. What is the goal of the Network of BioThings? The Network of BioThings aims to structure the biological knowledge found in...PGLYRP1 does not stand for Pretty Ugly Rabbit Problem #1 – #GeneOTW
by ginger | Apr 28, 2014 | GeneOfTheWeek
In the movie Monty Python and the Holy Grail, the Rabbit of Caerbannog was a seemingly innocuous leporid with “nasty, big, pointy teeth” and “a vicious streak a mile wide.” It appeared harmless enough, but was capable of decapitating a grown man...Recent Publications
Addressing barriers in FAIR data practices for biomedical data
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A retrospective evaluation of a decade of Gene Wiki Reviews and their impact
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