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 | Erin Lavik
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Lavik lauded for innovation, leadership
Erin Lavik, an assistant professor of biomedical engineering, was honored
recently by the Connecticut Technology Council as one of their 2008 Women of
Innovation.
The annual event, now in its fourth year, honors Connecticut women in eight
categories for their achievements as small business owners, entrepreneurs,
researchers, community leaders and innovators. This year’s winners were
selected from 105 nominees.
According to Matthew Nemerson, president and chief executive of the council,
the awards help to identify and create a culture of innovation in the state.
Lavik, who was cited for her academic innovation and leadership, focuses her
research on developing new therapeutic approaches for the treatment of spinal
cord injury and retinal degeneration.
She begins repair of damaged tissues using biodegradable polymers formed into
three-dimensional scaffolds that mimic the structure of the tissue. After chemically
modifying the scaffold surfaces, she incorporates growth factors that further
create an environment for repair.
By combining neural or retinal stem cells with these environments, she is discovering
the cues that promote integration and differentiation of the cells into healthy
tissue. In a rodent model of spinal cord injury, the seeded scaffold promoted
functional recovery allowing the rats to regain a weight-bearing stride. She
also collaborated on an implantable system that can form and stabilize a functional
network of fine blood vessels critical for supporting tissues in the body.
Lavik is also noted for her leadership, and has played a role in organizing
and sustaining the Yale “Science Saturdays” series of workshops
for local schoolchildren. The program introduces middle- and high-school students
to Yale scientists who demonstrate the excitement of their research.
A member of the Yale faculty of biomedical engineering since 2003, Lavik has
received numerous honors. In 2003, she was named a Top Young Innovator by the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s publication Technology Review;
in 2004, she was nominated for a Wired Magazine Rave Award as a “leading
thinker and doer”; and in 2006, she received an Early Career Award for
research from the Coulter Foundation.
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