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Jason Thomas Palladino
Johns Hopkins University
$218,266
Attributed
$218,266
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 $78.9K · FY2022–24$100K$75K$50K$25K$0
'22
'23
'24
Funding mix
By agency
NIH$218,266 · 1
By mechanism
F32$218,266 · 1
Top collaborators
No co-investigators on record.
Most similar at Johns Hopkins University
Same institution · by research overlap
- Mark B Van Doren$16,124,332
- Ekaterina Voronina$2,697,970
- Elias T Zambidis$6,212,497
- Livia A Casciola-Rosen$11,279,825
- Malia Michelle Edwards$4,407,329
Others in their field
Other Rising Stars on “Detection”
- Alaina J Harkness · Current Innovation, Nfp$13,724,091
- Kari A Stephens · University Of Washington$9,270,394
- Nancy Glenn · Boise State University$8,000,000
- Sarah Biber · University Of Washington$7,911,975
- Shaunna Shen · Duke University$7,747,008
- Rangarajan Sampath · Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics Inc.$5,422,657
Research focus
DetectionAgingAge RelatedAdult Stem CellBiological ModelsCancer CellCancerousCancer TypeCell AgeBiologicalCell Cycle ProgressionCell Differentiation ProcessCell DivisionCell LineageCell NucleusCell PhysiologyCellsCell TypeChromatinClustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic RepeatsCuesCell BehaviorDesignDeterioration
Grant awards (3)
Development and Application of a Novel Method to Study Histone Inheritance in Asymmetrically Dividing Cells$78,892
F32 · FY2024 · AG · contact PI
Development and Application of a Novel Method to Study Histone Inheritance in Asymmetrically Dividing Cells$71,792
F32 · FY2023 · AG · contact PI
Development and Application of a Novel Method to Study Histone Inheritance in Asymmetrically Dividing Cells$67,582
F32 · FY2022 · AG · contact PI