Lyle Palmer Biobanking - Blue Sky Horizons (ABNA 19th Annual Conference)

Lyle Palmer

Professor Palmer relocated to Adelaidefrom Torontoin 2014to take up a new opportunity as Professor of Genetic Epidemiologyat the University ofAdelaide.He is currently leading the creation of several new resources in Adelaide, including the South AustralianFamily Connections Project. Before moving to Adelaide, Professor Palmer was a Senior Principal Investigator and Program Director at the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, and a Professor of Biostatistics, Epidemiology,and Obstetrics & Gynecology at the University of Toronto.Together with many partner organizations across Ontario, Professor Palmer led a large-scale expansion of the provincial capacity intranslational epidemiology. From 2010 to 2014, he was the founding Executive Scientific Director of the Ontario Health Study (www.ontariohealthstudy.ca/), thelargest population-based cohort study (n=230,000) ever undertaken in Canada. Prior to moving to Canada, Professor Palmer was the foundation Winthrop Chair in Genetic Epidemiology and the founding Director of the Centre for Genetic Epidemiology &Biostatistics at the University of Western Australia, where he was also a Professor in theSchools of Medicine & Pharmacology and Population Health. Whilstin Perth, he was responsible for establishingover tenmajor clinical andgeneral population-basedcohorts, including the WA Twins Register, in addition to National researchprograms in glioma and mesothelioma. Until 2003, he was an Assistant Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and the Director of Statistical Genomics atthe Channing Laboratory, Boston. His background includes training in clinical epidemiology, human genetics,bioinformatics, and biostatistics. He has a particular interest in the areas of life-course genetic epidemiology,the developmental origins of health and disease (DoHAD), and chronic disease clinicaland genetic epidemiology.Professor Palmer has been recognized for his leadership role in biomedical research by numerous awards, including Fulbright and Churchill Fellowships. He has chaired and/or given invited symposia at over 60 international scientificmeetings, has delivered over 300 invited lectures, has produced over 300publications, and has co-edited a commercially successful encyclopedia of genetic epidemiology that has become a standard reference work. Professor Palmerhas extensive experience in constructing and using ‘big data’, particularly linked health data, for translation-orientedresearch. His research team in Adelaide is focused on applyingdeep learning methods to clinical problemsandis active in producing new software and methodsfor data analysis and visualization.

Abstracts this author is presenting: