University of Washington biochemist David Baker chats with journalists online after receiving word that he’ll share the Nobel Prize in chemistry. (Photo by Ian C Haydon / UW Medicine Institute for ...
SEATTLE, Wash. — A University of Washington Medicine biochemist is now a Nobel Prize winner. David Baker, a Seattle native and Garfield High School graduate, got the call at 2:00 a.m., Wednesday. His ...
STOCKHOLM — The Nobel Prize in chemistry was awarded Wednesday to David Baker, Demis Hassabis and John Jumper for their breakthrough work predicting and designing the structure of proteins, the ...
Proteins, each with their own unique three-dimensional architecture, are the body’s molecular tools, adapted to perform the specific tasks necessary for maintaining life. For decades, researchers have ...
Building a company isn’t so different from building proteins, at least according to Nobel Prize-winning biochemist David Baker. On Wednesday, Baker–a professor of biochemistry and the director of the ...
Nobel laureate David Baker, right, speaks with BioCentury’s Simone Fishburn at the Life Science Innovation Northwest conference in Seattle. (GeekWire Photo / Lisa Stiffler) University of Washington ...
University of Washington professor David Baker has made a name for himself by borrowing computer science concepts like machine learning and artificial intelligence to solve problems in biology. A few ...
David Baker grew up on Capitol Hill with scientist parents. His father, Marshall Baker, was a physicist. His mother, Marcia Bourgin Baker, was a geophysicist. Both were faculty at the University of ...
University of Washington biochemist David Baker has won a share of this year’s Nobel Prize in chemistry for more than two decades of discoveries about the molecular structure of proteins — discoveries ...
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