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Joanne Luciano Joins Renowned Web Science Research Group at Rensselaer
Luciano brings expertise in health care and life
science research to the Tetherless World Research
Constellation
Joanne Sylvia Luciano
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Joanne Sylvia Luciano has joined Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute as research associate professor in the Tetherless
World Research Constellation. Luciano’s research uses
computational modeling and the World Wide Web to improve health
care and advance medical discovery.
Luciano is an experienced technology consultant to major
hospitals, biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies. In
addition to her nearly 30 years as a consultant, she held a
joint appointment with Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts
General Hospital for nine years, where she served as a lecturer
and research scientist using computational modeling to study
human disease.
She joins an interdisciplinary research team within the
Tetherless World Research Constellation at Rensselaer,
dedicated to advancing science and society through
understanding and utilization of the World Wide Web.
“There’s a vast amount of medically relevant data sitting in
databases or websites and not being utilized,” Luciano said.
“The focus of my research is to create technologies that make
it easy to do medical research whether you are a doctor,
patient, pharmaceutical company, or searching for alternative
therapies or lifestyle changes.”
To accomplish these aims, Luciano utilizes ontologies and
advanced mathematical modeling and computer simulation to
understand illness, share medical data, and advance medical
discovery and patient care. She builds computer-based
technologies that improve healthcare by translating discoveries
made at the laboratory or computer bench to the care received
at an individual patient’s bedside – known as bench to bedside
care.
“There is an urgent need to shorten the time it takes to
bring basic life science research results to clinical practice,
and to get the clinical observations back to the research lab
for further analysis,” she said. “To do this, technologies need
to be in place that allow scientists to better represent,
reuse, and communicate medical data.”
Luciano has helped develop several important ontologies
including BioPAX, which is an international standard used for
data related to cellular processes. BioPAX enables data to be
combined in ways that were not possible before, making it
possible to ask and answer complex biological questions. The
language enables data to be combined automatically by
computers, and because the representations are true to the
current understanding of biology, other technology can be used
to make inferences and reason over the data.
At the MITRE Corporation, she developed InfluenzO, an
ontology to support influenza research, surveillance, and
outbreak monitoring. She continues to lead this collaboration
with the University of Maryland, the University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center, and the Canadian government.
She helped create the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) Health
Care and Life Sciences (HCLSIG) special interest group. The
HCLSIG integrates the efforts of pharmaceutical and clinical
researchers, doctors, and technologists to build the next
generation of medical Web-based technology standards.
She is also a co-organizer of the BioPathways Consortium
(BPC), a group of scientists working to support scientific
advancement in the area of biological pathways. Such research,
which has been a foundation of Luciano’s career, uses
computation to understand cell development, genetics, drug
development, and disease.
In addition to ontologies, Luciano also utilizes
mathematical modeling to study the dynamics of medical
treatment response, looking for patterns that will help
clinicians make more informed treatment choices. Patterns of
treatment response often exist in groups of individuals. This
study of treatment response patterns leads to so-called
“personalized medicine” in which individual response to
treatment can be modeled effectively and is important because
individuals may respond differently to a treatment. She began
this research at McLean Hospital while at Boston University,
where she earned her doctorate. The work began as a study of
different treatments (drug and therapy) for major depressive
disorder (MDD).
That research led to the development of patented methods to
select the best treatment for individual patients and predict
the expected recovery patterns of treatments.
Luciano holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in computer
science and a doctorate incognitive and neural systems from
Boston University.
About the Tetherless World Research
Constellation
The Tetherless World Research Constellation at Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute (RPI) explores the research and
engineering principles that underlie the Web, to enhance the
Web’s reach beyond the desktop and laptop computer, and develop
new technologies and languages that expand the capabilities of
the Web under three themes: Future Web, Informatics, and
Semantic Foundations.
The goals of the constellation include making the
next-generation Web natural to use while being responsive to
the growing variety of policy, educational, societal, and
scientific needs. Research areas include: Web science, privacy,
intellectual property, general compliance, Web-based medical
and health systems, semantic eScience, data-science, semantic
data frameworks, next-generation virtual observatories,
semantic data and knowledge integration, ontologies, semantic
rules and queries, semantic applications, data and information
visualization, and knowledge provenance, trust, and explanation
for science.
The faculty, staff, and students (graduate and
undergraduate) use powerful scientific and mathematical
techniques from many disciplines to explore the modeling of the
next-generation Web from network-, data-, and
information-centric views.
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Published
November 23,
2010 |
Contact: Gabrielle DeMarco
Phone: (518) 276-6542
E-mail: demarg@rpi.edu |
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