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Vijay S Pande

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Citizenship
  
USA

Role
  
University Professor


Name
  
Vijay Pande

Institutions
  
Stanford University

Notable students
  
Jeremy England

Vijay S. Pande httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons22


Alma mater
  
Langley High School Princeton University Massachusetts Institute of Technology University of California, Berkeley

Academic advisors
  
Philip Anderson, Daniel S. Rokhsar

Known for
  
Folding@home, Genome@home

Notable awards
  
Barany Award (2012) DeLano Award (2015)

Education
  
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1995)

Fields
  
Chemistry, Computational biology, Molecular biology

Similar People
  
Jeremy England, Leonidas J Guibas, Michael Levitt, Jean‑Claude Latombe, Douglas L Brutlag

Residence
  
United States of America

Vijay Satyanand Pande is an Trinidadian-American biomedical scientist and professor of chemistry, structural biology, and computer science at Stanford University. Pande is the director of the biophysics program and is best known for orchestrating the distributed computing disease research project known as Folding@home. His research is focused on distributed computing and computer-modelling of microbiology. His research focuses on improving computer simulations regarding drug-binding, protein design, and synthetic bio-mimetic polymers. Pande became the ninth general partner at venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz in November 2015.

Contents

Vijay S. Pande S Pande

Personal

Vijay S. Pande Vijay Pandes Profile Stanford Profiles

Pande was born in Trinidad to Indian parents. He has two children and likes cats. Pande also worked briefly at the video game development company Naughty Dog as a teenager in the early 1990s, serving as a co-programmer and designer on their 1991 release, Rings of Power.

Education

Vijay S. Pande Deep learning algorithm could aid drug development Stanford News

Pande graduated from Langley High School's class of 1988 while growing up in McLean Virginia. In 1992, Pande received his B.A. in Physics from Princeton University. He received academic advice from Nobel laureate Philip Anderson, T. Tanaka, and A. Grosberg for his BA and PhD theses on physics. MIT awarded him a PhD after his thesis in 1995.

Distributed computing

Vijay S. Pande Stanfordrun Foldinghome simulates activation of key cancer protein

The protein-folding computer simulations from the Folding@home project is said to be "quantitatively" comparable to real-world experimental results. The method for this yield has been called a "holy grail" in computational biology.

Vijay S. Pande Professors Brief Biographical Summaries Stanford Chemistry

Pande directed the Genome@home project with the goal to understand the nature of genes and proteins by virtually designing new forms of them. Genome@home started to close as early as March 2004, after accumulating a large database of protein sequences.

Vijay S. Pande Vijay Pande Andreessen Horowitz

Some of the programs and libraries involved are free software with GPL, LGPL, and BSD licenses, but the folding@home client and core remain proprietary.

Awards

In 2002, he was named a Frederick E. Terman Fellow and an award recipient of MIT's TR100. The following year, he was awarded the Henry and Camile Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar award. In 2004, he received a Technovator award from Global Indus Technovators in its Biotech/Med/Healthcare category. In 2006, Pande was awarded the Irving Sigal Young Investigator Award from the Protein Society. In 2008, he was named "Netxplorateur of 2008". Also in 2008 he was given the Thomas Kuhn Paradigm Shift Award and became a Fellow of the American Physical Society. Pande received the 2012 Michael and Kate Bárány Award for developing computational models for protein and RNA. He is the second person to ever win both the "Protein Society Young Investigator Award" and "Biophysical Society Young Investigator" award. In 2015, Pande received the DeLano Award for Computational Biosciences, as well as the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Distinguished Chair in Chemistry.

References

Vijay S. Pande Wikipedia


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