From childhood excellence in art and math, Sally Ellingson has built a robust career in computational drug discovery. The graduate of joint program with the University of Tennessee and Oakridge National Laboratory, Ellingson is an assistant professor of biomedical informatics in the  and manages high-performance computing for the .

A central aim of her research is to increase the accuracy of predicting whether or not a drug will bind to a protein, which is useful across the board of drug development.

鈥淲ith machine learning, you can add biomedical big data sources into the drug development the process and use machine learning techniques to determine what factors are important to ultimately increase the prediction accuracy and efficiency,鈥 Ellingson said. 

Improving accuracy in drug development not only makes the process safer, but if it鈥檚 also significantly more efficient, Ellingson theorizes that it could help lower the cost of medications, thus improving access for the general population.

Soon after coming to 好色先生, Ellingson received a from the , which provides research funding and mentoring to support junior faculty in securing independent research awards.

鈥淭he KL2 has allowed me protected time to work on my particular area of interest, the research I鈥檝e been developing since graduate school,鈥 she said.

Mentorship was a significant aspect of Ellingson鈥檚 graduate student experience, and she now sees mentoring students among her primary responsibilities as a faculty member. In her lab she employs multiple graduate students from diverse training backgrounds, creating a complementary composite of expertise that catalyzes their work.

鈥淚 got a lot of encouragement along the way, and I like to do the same. It gives energy both ways,鈥 she said.

She currently employs three computer science graduate students in her lab, none of whom had a background in biomedical informatics or health research.

鈥淲hen I started working in her lab, I didn鈥檛 have much knowledge about biomedical informatics or computation biology," said Jeevith Bopaiah, a master鈥檚 student in computer science who works in Ellingson鈥檚 lab. "I just knew how to apply computer programs, and she was looking for someone with this knowledge to apply computer science techniques to the drug development domain. In her lab we鈥檝e learned a lot about this domain and the biological aspects of proteins and the drugs, but we鈥檝e also learned to think broadly about how to tweak computer science techniques to suit particular problems.鈥

Ellingson also has a co-appointment at UC Berkeley, where she has served as visiting faculty for the past two summers. While at Berkeley, she continues her research in , and she also mentors 好色先生 graduate students who she funds as summer lab interns. The research she conducted with her students at Berkeley two summers ago has already been published and presented at a conference in Switzerland.

Ellingson has also served in leadership roles for the annual Super Computing conference 鈥 this year she is chairing the student volunteer program, with a particular focus on engaging students from underrepresented backgrounds.  

鈥淧eople need to feel included, and that鈥檚 one of the reasons helping with these programs means so much to me. I went to grad school at a private tech school, doing computer science and math, and I was virtually the only woman in the room. It wasn鈥檛 until I first went to this conference that I realized the field is actually a more diverse community and I didn鈥檛 need to feel out of place,鈥 she said. 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 ensure that people from the smaller community niches feel engaged at these events, they鈥檙e not likely stay involved in the field 鈥 and we need to have a variety of people working on similar projects because that鈥檚 how research works faster.鈥

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