Sun He Waldron, MS

Sun He
Waldron
Data Scientist Associate I
Department of Biomedical Informatics
2525 West End Avenue
Nashville
Tennessee
37203
sun.h.waldron@vumc.org

Sun He Waldron is a Data Scientist Associate I under the supervision of Dr. Travis Osterman. She previously worked in Rheumatology at VUMC. She received her BS in Chemistry and MS in Computer Science with a concentration in Predictive Analytics from Austin Peay State University. Prior to joining Vanderbilt, she worked at Sarah Cannon Research Institute as a Research Care Associate.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/sun-he-waldron-06933b38/

Cathy Shyr, PhD

Cathy
Shyr
Assistant Professor
Department of Biomedical Informatics
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics
Assistant Professor of Biostatistics
2525 West End Avenue
Nashville
Tennessee
37203
cathy.shyr@vumc.org

Cathy Shyr, PhD is an assistant professor of biomedical informatics, pediatrics, and biostatistics at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. She is a statistical informatician specializing in machine learning, AI and methods for estimating personalized treatment effects. Her research focuses on the development and implementation of novel statistical machine learning (ML) and AI methods to advance precision medicine and accelerate diagnosis.

Dr. Shyr has developed methods aimed at improving the generalizability of statistical ML and causal inference models across multiple datasets for estimating personalized risks and treatment effects. She is an active member in the All of Us Research Program’s Data and Research Center and the Recruitment Innovation Center, where she leads the development of AI tools supporting the return of study results. In addition, she has developed and implemented large language models that leverage unstructured electronic health records data for diagnosing rare diseases at the Vanderbilt Undiagnosed Diseases Network. She is the recipient of the National Library of Medicine’s K99/R00 award for her proposal, “Development and Implementation of Statistical Machine Learning Methods to Shorten Rare Disease Odysseys.”

Dr. Shyr earned her PhD in Biostatistics at Harvard University and completed her postdoctoral training in Biomedical Informatics at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

DBMI Digest Dec 2022 Issue—Now Available!

The Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) Department of Biomedical Informatics's (DBMI) monthly newsletter, DBMI Digest, is now available to view. Read the December 2022 DBMI Digest here. Each DBMI Digest features department & faculty announcements, awards & appointments, educational & HR updates, funding opportunities and more. Each issue also includes a profile of one of our faculty, staff, postdocs and students. 

VUMC’s BioVU Reaches Milestone With Biological Samples

BioVU, Vanderbilt University Medical Center’s biobank, has reached another milestone — deep-freeze storage of more than 300,000 biological samples. Launched in 2007, BioVU is the world’s largest DNA biobank based at a single academic institution.

Surgical Risk Persists for Patients Who’ve Had COVID

When patients undergo any type of surgery after having had COVID, their odds of significant postoperative problems diminish with elapsed time from COVID diagnosis. Researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center now report that this trend of decreasing risk persists longer than previously known, for as long as 13 months after COVID. Their report appeared Dec. 14 in JAMA Network Open.

DBMI Special Seminar: James Cimino, 12/8 at 11AM CST

DBMI Special Seminar: James Cimino, 12/8 at 11:00 am CST THURSDAY, December 8, 2022 12:00 - 1:00 PM CT   Title: "Applying Clinical Informatics to Reinvent the EHR: Moving from Billing Diary to Clinical Assistant"