Santhoshkumar Puttur, MSC, PhD

Research Assistant Professor

Meibomian gland dysfunction and dry eye, IOL drug delivery and PCO, Epigenetic roles in secondary cataract, Mini-chaperone therapeutics for protein aggregation diseases, Protein interactions in ...

Vasantharaja Raguraman, PhD

Post-Doctoral Fellow

I am a postdoctoral fellow at NextGen Precision Health, University of Missouri-Columbia. My research endeavors have focused on understanding the cellular and molecular mechanisms of graft versus host ...

Murugesan Raju, PhD

NIH- BD2K trainee

My research activities for the past several years have been focused on understanding the molecular mechanisms for the development of age related eye diseases, including protein conformation ...

Francisco I. Ramirez-Perez, MS, PhD

Postdoctoral Fellow

I have a diverse interdisciplinary background, having obtained a B.S. in Engineering Physics, an M.S. in Physics, and a Ph.D. in Biological Engineering. My research interests integrate biophysics, ...

Deepthi Rao, MD

Clinical Assistant Professor

Dr. Rao's research expertise is in various aspects of pancreatobiliary and hepatic pathology, and pathology informatics. With background in statistics and bioinformatics, she is interested in ...

Praveen Rao, MS, PhD

Associate Professor

Dr. Rao's research interests are in the areas of big data, data science, and health informatics. Specifically, he focuses on developing scalable algorithms and software systems to extract meaningful ...

Brycen Ratcliffe, MD

Resident

Rural health, disparities, surgery research

Blaine Reeder, PhD

Associate Professor

Health Informatics, Human-Centered Design, Human-Computer Interaction, Smart Homes, Mobile and Wearable Computing, Sensor Technology, Aging and Technology, Research Infrastructure, Public Health, ...

Lixing W. Reneker, PhD

Associate Professor

Dry Eye Disease, Meibomian glands, lacrimal glands, ocular surface, animal models.

Matthew Robinson, MD

Chair, Department of Emergency Medicine

Emergency medicine, shift work and sleep