Dr Nancy Gonzales, PhD
Nancy Gonzales is the executive vice president and university provost of Arizona State University. In this role, she serves as ASU’s chief academic officer for the Academic Enterprise, advancing innovative educational programs, modalities and degrees for ASU’s diverse student population, and building the world-class faculty needed to train future leaders.As provost and chief of ASU’s Academic Enterprise, Gonzales leads 23 deans and 16 interdisciplinary colleges and academic units. She is responsible for enhancing the university’s intellectual climate, strengthening instruction and scholarship, broadening access and equitable outcomes, creating outstanding student experiences to ensure student success, and supporting innovative teaching and learning strategies to meet students’ needs in an ever-changing world.As a nationally recognized psychologist, she has conducted groundbreaking research, funded by the National Institutes of Health, on culturally informed models of human health and development with the goal of developing public health strategies to reduce health disparities in vulnerable communities. She is a fellow of the American Psychological Association and the recipient of distinguished career awards from the American Psychological Association, the Society for Research on Adolescence, the Society for Clinical and Child Psychology, and the Society for Prevention Research. She was named an Arizona Latina Trailblazer and one of the 2021 Most Influential Women in AZ.
Biography from: https://www.asugsvsummit.com/speakers/nancy-gonzales
Kenro Kusumi is senior vice provost and dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (The College) and professor of life sciences at Arizona State University. He received his AB from Harvard College in Biochemical Sciences and his PhD in Biology from MIT. He carried out postdoctoral training as a Hitchings-Elion Fellow of the Burroughs Wellcome Fund at the National Institute for Medical Research in London. Kusumi was previously faculty at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, where he served as director of pediatric orthopaedic research. At ASU, he has served in a number of roles including as director of the School of Life Sciences and associate dean and dean of natural sciences in The College. Kusumi helped to launch the University of Arizona College of Medicine-Phoenix in partnership with ASU 2006, and he is adjunct faculty at the Translational Genomics Research Institute. Kusumi is committed to promoting access to higher education and student success as well as excellence in research.
Kusumi’s research uses the power of genome biology to help conserve and study the functional adaptations of reptiles. Among the reptiles, more than half of the living turtle species are threatened with extinction, and Kusumi has sequenced the genomes of the threatened Mojave desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii), Sonoran desert tortoise (G. morafkai) and Texas tortoise (G. berlandieri) as tools for conservation efforts. The anole lizards have been described as the “Darwin’s finches” of reptiles, and Kusumi has led genome-scale analyses of accelerated evolution associated with their functional adaptations. His group has also uncovered sets of genes that are critical in the ability of anole lizards to adapt and regenerate parts of their bodies.
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