← Leaderboards
Rachel Segal Greenberg
Stanford University
$108,420
Attributed
$108,420
Total exposure
1
Grants
1
Lead (contact PI)
Attributed= this PI's even-split share of every grant they're on (the fair, additive number). Exposure = full size of all those grants. They are the sole PI on all grants (the two match).
Funding over time
peak $36.6K · FY2015–17$50K$37.5K$25K$12.5K$0
'15
'16
'17
Funding mix
By agency
NIH$108,420 · 1
By mechanism
F31$108,420 · 1
Top collaborators
No co-investigators on record.
Most similar at Stanford University
Same institution · by research overlap
- Geoffrey S Pitt$25,935,871
- Greer M Murphy$4,372,544
- Sai Gourisankar$259,309
- Gerald R. Crabtree$18,872,595
- Brian Yi Chuan Feng$97,300
Others in their field
Top investigators on “Developmental Plasticity”
- David Heimbrook · Leidos Biomedical Research, Inc.$56,561,099
- Leonardo Trasande · New York University School Of Medicine$52,222,017
- Larry Arthur$22,516,306
- Nenad Sestan · Yale University$15,714,338
- Carla J Shatz · Stanford University$14,950,141
- Joseph Piven · Washington University$12,842,583
Research focus
Developmental PlasticityDevelopmental ProcessAnimal ModelDevelopmental Disease/DisorderBiological ModelsAtac-SeqBiochemicalCartilageBiologicalCellsCharacteristicsChip-SeqChromatinBiologyCongenital AbnormalityBirthCraniofacialCraniofacial AbnormalitiesCraniofacial DevelopmentCell ModelCrebbp GeneDefectDepositionDiagnosis
Grant awards (3)
Floating Harbor Syndrome as a paradigm for understanding the role of chromatin perturbation in human craniofacial disorders$36,604
F31 · FY2017 · DE · contact PI
Floating Harbor Syndrome as a paradigm for understanding the role of chromatin perturbation in human craniofacial disorders$36,136
F31 · FY2016 · DE · contact PI
Floating Harbor Syndrome as a paradigm for understanding the role of chromatin perturbation in human craniofacial disorders$35,680
F31 · FY2015 · DE · contact PI