Dr. Gamble-George joined Nobel Laureates and researchers considered the next generation of leading scientists from all over the world in Lindau to participate in the 64th Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting on Physiology or Medicine. More than 20,000 young scientists from 80 countries applied to attend this meeting, but only 604 undergraduates, master and Ph.D. students, and post-doc researchers were awarded this opportunity after a multi-stage selection process.
This is the second time, Dr. Gamble-George has competed on a global scale to participate in an international conference. In 2009, she was selected to participate in the International Students’ Meeting on Public Health (ISMOPH) and the 12th World Congress on Public Health in Istanbul, Turkey. ISMOPH was a satellite event of the World Congress that aimed to contribute to the improvement of health around the globe by reflecting a student’s perspective on international health issues thereby increasing student involvement in research, education, and practice in the field of public health. Due to her passion and dedication to the public health field, Dr. Gamble-George was honored with serving as an organizing committee member for the 2nd International Students’ Meeting on Public Health, which was held in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, Africa and was a satellite event of the 13th World Congress on Public Health.
Meeting Program Book: 64th Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting Program Book
Press Releases:
Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting: 600 Young Participants Selected (Source: Council for the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings)
Joyonna Gamble-George Selected to Attend Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting (Source: University of South Florida College of Public Health)
Joyonna Gamble-George, MHA `05, Selected to Attend Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting (Source: University of South Florida Alumni Association)
South Florida Alumna Selected to Attend Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting (Source: Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health)
International Behavioral Neuroscience Society (IBNS) Member News (Source: International Behavioral Neuroscience Society)
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