Meet Noah

Noah Watson

Noah James Watson

  • Hometown: Blount Springs, Alabama
  • Area of Research: Epigenetics and Intracerebral Hemorrhage
  • Why is your research important? Intracerebral hemorrhage is an often fatal, always devastating disease in which blood vessels in the brain rupture, causing neurotoxic blood components to cause widespread damage to surrounding brain tissue. It currently has no effective treatment, and incidence is expected to greatly increase as the overall global population ages. By targeting the brain’s inflammatory response via epigenetic modulation, we hope to develop the first effective treatment for intracerebral hemorrhage and ease the large burden the disease takes on its victims.
  • Why did you choose your degree program? My original career interest was in clinical neurology, but after working for a neurologist for six months while in college I quickly realized that many, many neurological conditions have no effective, reliable treatment and that treatment is often limited to palliative care. Pursuing a PhD in Pharmacology allows me to do the most good for the most people by helping develop new, novel therapies that may improve clinical treatment options for suffering patients.
  • What is the greatest lesson you have learned from your mentor? Science is difficult, and things will rarely go exactly according to plan. If an experiment doesn’t work out how you plan, don’t think of it as a failure, think of it as an opportunity to learn. Besides, there are a lot of interesting results in “failure.”
  • What have you found most beneficial about your program? Augusta University is a very collaborative environment, and knowing that I can easily ask any professor or fellow student a question and get a positive response. Additionally, my work gives me the opportunity to feel like I can make a real positive change in the world.
  • What words of advice do you have for someone considering this program? If you find yourself interested in a specific department or specific faculty member, don’t be afraid to send them an email! Scientists are universally nerds (myself included) who would love nothing more than telling an interested potential student about their work.
  • Have you been involved in any AU clubs or groups? I serve on the Graduate Student Council and regularly attend the Graduate School Book Club, which amazingly still allows me to recommend novels to read. Both have given me the opportunity to meet people from outside the Biomedical Sciences program, which is always nice.
  • What have been some of your most rewarding moments as a student? Recently demonstrating that our drug of choice has a profound impact in reducing levels of neuroinflammation after an intracerebral hemorrhage in mice was very uplifting and encouraging.
  • What are your career goals? In the short term, I would like to land a prestigious postdoctoral position and do high-impact, high-quality research in the field of neurodegeneration and/or neurological disorders for a decade or so. In the long term, I think I would enjoy a teaching position in which I could help train and mentor young and upcoming scientists. In the very long term, I would like to retire and take up a position in my twilight years as a ranger in the National Park Service.
  • What courses in your program stand out as most helpful for your specific career goals? Neuropharmacology has been very helpful in illustrating how different chemical compounds affect brain chemistry and communication and highlighting the exact mechanisms of the compound’s effects.
  • What AU resources have been most helpful? The primary faculty and research faculty. They are all willing to help anytime I have a question or need a clarification, with a special shout out to the Department of Pharmacology’s excellent administrative staff. The vending machine near my lab which sells cherry coke is also very nice.
  • What do you do for fun? I have far too many hobbies, including guitar, miniature painting, cooking, reading, hiking, and a weekly board game/Dungeons and Dragons night with other close friends in the program. I am very into music, and at the time of writing recently finished listening through the book 1001 Albums to Hear Before You Die, and am about 100 albums into my next project, listening to the top album in every subgenre listed on RateYourMusic.com, a little over 2000 total.

 

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Former Student

Khadijah Alexander

 

"Everyone will tell you that picking your mentor is the most important decision you will make. I want to expand and add that it is equally important to pick a supportive department. An extended support network can be a huge boost to your resilience and success."

 

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Mostafa Khater

 

"My area of research is elucidating the underlying mechanism of the signaling pathway involved in the cell proliferation and invasiveness of prostate cancer"

 

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