3rd Annual YPGA Symposium (2023)

Please view below for information archived from the 3rd Annual YPGA Symposium held on Aug 18, 2023 at the Yale Science Building:

Award Winners!

Best Posters:

  • Kat Su
  • Bailey Jones
  • Danna Tortal
  • Claudia Gaebler

Best Talk:

  • Pura Arroyo Morales
Check out our videos from the 3rd Annual YPGA Symposium!

Symposium Memories:

Symposium Interviews:

The Symposium committee is excited to announce the launching of YPGA’s 3rd Annual Symposium!

Are you currently exploring career paths? Are you interested in enhancing your professional goals? Are you looking to network with fellow postgrads and share your research?

Join us at the OC Marsh Hall in the Yale Science Building on August 18, 2023 for this excellent opportunity to foster your own professional growth and to expand your connections with other Yale postgrads, research assistants, staff and faculty! We have organized a full day of talks, poster presentations, and career development panels tailored specifically for postgrads. This event is a great way to celebrate your accomplishments and to make the most out of your time at Yale by contributing to meaningful discussion, all while socializing over food and learning from others.

Abstract Submission Link

Please submit your abstract by filling out this Google Form: https://forms.gle/LSrKJmRBLDTsTiCJ7

Guidelines on how to submit an abstract can be found on our Abstract Guidelines Page.

Guidelines on how to prepare your presentation can be found on our Poster/Talk Guidelines Page.

Who will be presenting?

Our symposium welcomes submissions from recent college-graduates who are currently conducting research at Yale. Individuals holding a bachelor’s or master’s degree within the past 5 years and have not started graduate/other doctoral/medical school by the symposium date are urged to submit their abstracts for consideration. We also welcome individuals of non-traditional college age who are intending to apply to graduate or professional school. We welcome presentations reflecting research conducted at Yale, from fields in STEM and the Humanities

If you have any inquiries or concerns, please refer to our FAQ page or contact megan.paterson@yale.edutaeji.lee@yale.edu, and reza.peyravi@yale.edu.

Program/Abstract Booklets

Link to the program booklet: https://bit.ly/3s88f3H

Link to the abstract booklet: https://bit.ly/3KGBfGa

Presenter Memo: 

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1a4LVfRh_bA5ULJ0o25IxNZt6c2tvqEN2nK7r…

General Attendee Memo:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1-CCfGvm2LIEgReu-u6Z0TQHemmQxILnHwIzb…

Keynote Speaker

The Symposium Committee would like to formally introduce and welcome the following speakers to the 3rd Annual YPGA Symposium!

Winnie Orchard, Ph.D.

Dr. Winnie Orchard is a Postdoctoral Associate with a joint appointment at the BABL, and the Holmes Lab. She completed her PhD in Neuroscience at the Turner Institute of Brain and Mental Health at Monash University, in 2021, under the supervision of Dr Sharna Jamadar.

Dr. Orchard’s research investigates the structural and functional brain changes associated with parenthood across the lifespan, with a special interest in how these changes relate to parental cognition and mental health in the postpartum period. She is passionate about the parental brain, and women’s health more broadly - how female biology and the experience of womanhood shape the brain, cognition and behavior across the life stages of adolescence, pregnancy, parenthood, peri-menopause and the aging process. Most recently, Dr. Orchard was awarded a Yale Women’s Faculty Forum Seed Award to support her work on understanding experiences of cognitive change in early motherhood. A 2022 Graduate Education Scholar, Dr. Orchard represented the 2022 American Australian Association scholar cohort at the annual Benefit Dinner.

Research Interests Panel

Trevor Sorrells, Ph.D.

Trevor Sorrells is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Genetics at Yale School of Medicine. His research focuses on understanding the neurons in the mosquito brain that control blood feeding behavior and how this behavior evolved. He began his lab in 2022 after postdoctoral work at Rockefeller University studying the behavioral persistence of mosquitoes to search for humans. During his PhD at UCSF he studied the evolution of transcription regulatory networks in yeast. In addition to research, Trevor has led organizations to provide support to LGBTQ+ scientists and mentored many junior scientists. Outside the lab he enjoys music, horticulture, travel, and spending time with his husband and daughter. 

Li Yan McCurdy, Ph.D.

Dr. McCurdy is a neurobiologist by training who has recently pivoted to translational addiction research. She is currently a postdoctoral research fellow in the Department of Radiology & Biomedical Imaging at Yale School of Medicine. Her program of research centers on uncovering neural and psychological mechanisms of addiction recovery, with a particular interest in developing psychosocial interventions to support people with addiction. She completed her PhD in neuroscience at Yale University, and her undergraduate degree in biochemistry at Columbia University. Outside of work, she volunteers in the local addiction recovery community and enjoys mentoring people who are early in their academic careers.

 

Tara Thompson-Felix, M.D.

Tara Thompson-Felix received her undergraduate degree from Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ and her MD from Rutgers, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. Prior to medical school, she worked as a postgraduate research associate in the Yale Child Study Center focusing on investigating the genetic basis of developmental language and behavioral disorders. After earning her M.D., she trained in adult psychiatry at the Lewis Katz Temple University medical school. At Temple, she served as a chief resident and completed the child and research track. Her research involved collaborations with the Temple OB/GYN and neuroscience department to investigate the epigenetic landscape of fetal neural exosomes associated with in utero exposure to opiates. Based on this work, Dr. Thompson-Felix was selected as an APA research colloquium awardee in 2018. Dr. Thompson-Felix is also a National Neuroscience Curriculum Initiative (NNCI) scholar and continues to work on developing new teaching materials, including a “this stuff is really cool” talk on exosomes and clinical commentary published in the Journal of Biological Psychiatry (2019). She was awarded the 2020 George Ginsberg Fellowship award from the American Association of Directors of Psychiatry Residency Training (AADPRT), acknowledging her commitment to teaching and education. Dr. Thompson-Felix is interested in improving child development starting from the in-utero experience and maternal health. At this time, she is pursuing her PhD in the Yale Investigative Medicine Program through the Yale Graduate School of Arts & Sciences. Her current project focuses on understanding the impact of maternal obesity on child neurodevelopment through the characterization of placenta and fetal neuron derived extracellular vesicles. This work is supported by various awards including the NRSA T32 training program, NIH Loan Repayment Program, and 2022 YCSC trainee pilot award. In her spare time, she enjoys dancing with her kids, spending time with family and cooking cultural dishes.

 
 

Milind Singh

Milind Singh is a PhD candidate in the Department of Cell Biology in the lab of Daniel Colón-Ramos where he studies the regulation of metabolism within brain cells of live worms (C. elegans). Milind is from India where he did his undergrad major in engineering physics with a minor in biotechnology from the Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati. He hopes to transition to a scientist position in the biotech industry. In his free time, Milind loves playing and watching a lot of sports.

Admissions Panel

Henry Park, M.D., MPH

Dr. Henry S. Park is a board-certified radiation oncologist who serves as Associate Professor, Vice Chair for Clinical Research, and Chief of the Thoracic Radiotherapy Program for the Department of Therapeutic Radiology at the Yale School of Medicine. He received his undergraduate degree from Yale College, master’s degree from the Harvard School of Public Health, and medical doctorate degree from the Yale School of Medicine. He completed his internal medicine internship at Harvard Medical School’s Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center before returning to Yale New Haven Hospital for his residency and chief residency in radiation oncology. 

Dr. Park subspecializes in radiation therapy for lung cancer and head and neck cancer. He leads a wide-ranging research program in clinical trials, real-world evidence, and health services. He has co-authored over 130 peer-reviewed original research articles and 40 reviews, book chapters, invited editorials, and practice guidelines. He serves as an oral boards certifying examiner for the American Board of Radiology and as an active committee member for the American Society for Radiation Oncology, SWOG, ECOG-ACRIN, and NRG. He has been honored with multiple awards for his contributions to patient care, clinical research, and medical education.

Kavita Israni-Winger, Ph.D.

Dr. Kavita Israni-Winger is a first year medical student at Yale University. She completed her graduate degree at Yale University in the department of Immunobiology and her undergraduate studies at the University of Toronto. She plans to pursue a career as a physician-scientist with a focus in inflammatory disease. 

Cecilia Frometa, Ph.D.

Dr. Cecilia Frometa is a Licensed Clinical Psychologist and Assistant Professor at the Yale University School of Medicine. She is a core faculty member within the Psychology Section at the Child Study Center where she serves as a member of the Child Study Center’s American Psychological Association (APA) Admission Committee in the Pre-post-Doctoral Fellowship Program in Psychology. Dr. Frometa is the Director of Yale’s Family Based Recovery Program (FBR).

She has been in the mental health field for over 27 years and has extensive therapeutic, clinical supervision, teaching, mentoring, program development and public policy experience. She is a part of the Yale Child Study Center’s Post Graduate Program (PGA) where she has mentored numerous undergraduate and graduate students on ways of navigating the graduate and medical school process.

Dr. Frometa has been a keynote speaker, expert panelist, and presenter at several national and state-wide mental health forums with an emphasis on child development/mental health and culturally centered care consideration for children and families. She has secured several travel scholarships for Yale of undergraduate, graduate and postdoctoral students interested in further developing their clinical, research and policy planning skill set.

Most recently, Frometa was chosen to lead a 16-member team of Yale Medical School alumni who take part on international service trips focused on improving the socio-emotional landscape of disenfranchised communities. Dr. Frometa was also featured on NBC Nightly News on a segment on ‘helping parents identify depression in children during the COVID pandemic’. She is also Chair of a Child Study Center Steering Committee focused on the creation, teaching and implementation of tools to enhance clinical engagement of minoritized populations in mental health care

 

Steven Riley, Ph.D.

Steve Riley works on developing methods for analyzing fMRI correlation matrices, with the goal that these methods improve accuracy of diagnosis and classification for substance use disorders. His PhD is in psychology from Emory, and he majored in mathematics at Stanford. He has previously been a computer programmer, a teacher, a tutor, and a therapist. He played the trombone in college and was the drum major of the Leland Stanford Junior University Marching Band in 2001. He has published three crossword puzzles in the New York Times. He is definitely not the Steve Riley who was the drummer for the hair metal bands L.A. Guns and W.A.S.P.

 

We express our continued gratitude to the following Yale Departments and Offices for their generous investment in our vision and in our symposium. 

Your sponsorship is integral for YPGA Symposium’s success:

  • Yale Office for Postdoctoral Affairs

  • The Yale Child Study Center

  • Department of Immunobiology

  • Department of Psychiatry

  • Department of Internal Medicine

  • Department of Radiology & Biomedical Imaging

  • Department of Genetics

  • Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology

We thank previous symposium chairs, all VP’s of YPGA, Dhruv Khanduja, Victoria Hallinan, Yahaira Otero, and the OPA office for their time, guidance, and continuous support throughout the planning of the symposium!

The YPGA symposium would not be possible without the help and hard work of our symposium committee members. We are thankful of the time and hard work that each member has put into making the symposium happen!

Please reach out to our Symposium Co-Chairs, Tracy (taeji.lee@yale.edu) & Ray (reza.peyravi@yale.edu), for any inquiries about the symposium or for any interest in helping out!

when & where is the symposium being held?

August 18th, 2023 at OC Marsh Hall in the Yale Science Building

how long is the symposium?

This is a full day event! We expect and encourage registrants/presenters to participate for the full length of the day. Food will be provided as per registration.

what is the dress code?

Attire should be professional (semi-formal). Please do not wear jeans or casual clothing to this event. Please wear attire that you would wear at any other conference.

who can register to attend the symposium?

Any Yale-affiliate can register to attend the symposium. Please spread the word to other Postgraduates and lab members.

who can present at the symposium?

Our symposium welcomes submissions from recent college-graduates who are currently conducting research at Yale. Individuals holding a bachelor’s or master’s degree within the past 5 years and have not started graduate/doctoral/medical school by the symposium date are urged to submit their abstracts for consideration. We also welcome individuals of non-traditional college age who are intending to apply to graduate or professional school. We welcome presentations reflecting research conducted at Yale, from fields in STEM and the Humanities.

can i submit research that i have presented previously at another conference?

Yes! However, please only submit Yale-affiliated research projects that you have worked on as a postgrad,  regardless of when the work has been conducted during your postgrad years.

who can i reach out to for questions about the symposium or the ypga?

Please feel free to reach out to the Symposium Co-Chairs, Tracy (taeji.lee@yale.edu) & Ray (reza.peyravi@yale.edu), for any inquiries