
Elison Blancaflor
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Elison Blancaflor, Ph.D., an assistant professor at The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation,
Inc., has received the 2005 Thora W. Halstead Young Investigator’s Award
from the American Society for Gravitational and Space Biology (ASGSB). The award
honors one young scientist each year who makes significant contributions to the
field of space biology. The award was established in 1994.
Paul Todd, Ph.D, president of ASGSB, indicated that the award recognizes Blancaflor’s
gravity-related plant research; the quality of his 37 published articles, which
included eight journal cover photographs; his mastery of communicating important
aspects of plant biology using microscopy; and his management of the Noble Foundation’s
cellular imaging facility.
Blancaflor received his Ph.D. in biology from the University of Louisiana-Lafayette
in 1996. He joined the Noble Foundation in 1999 after a three-year postdoctoral
fellowship at Pennsylvania State University. In addition to serving as head
of the Noble Foundation’s microscopy facility, Blancaflor leads a laboratory
that seeks to better understand the influence of gravity on plant growth and
development. Blancaflor has received federal funding from the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA) to support this research.
ASGSB fosters research, education, training and development in gravitational
and space biology. ASGSB members are drawn from university, government and industry
and represent many disciplines focused on the common issue of gravity's effects
on biological systems. ASGSB was founded in 1984.
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Elison Blancaflor |
The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, Inc. (www.noble.org), headquartered
in Ardmore, Okla., is a nonprofit organization conducting agricultural, forage
improvement and plant biology research; assisting farmers and ranchers through
educational and consultative agricultural programs; and providing grants to
nonprofit charitable, educational and health organizations.
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