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  • Home
  • About Us
    • Overview
    • Our Team
    • Our Trainees
    • Our Partners
    • Contact Us
  • News
    • Upcoming Seminars
    • Previous Seminars
    • Blog
    • SRP Newsletter
    • Featured News Stories
    • Social Media
  • Resources
    • Community Resources
    • All About PAHs
    • Infographics
    • Videos
    • Mercury, The Community, and Me
    • Unsolved Mysteries of Human Health
    • K - 12 Educational Materials
    • Glossary of Project Terms
    • Research Resources
    • Zebrafish Model
    • Passive Sampling Devices
    • OSU Disaster IRB
    • SRP Analytics Portal
    • Multimedia approach to sampling and Health Risk Assessments
    • Indigenous Risk Assessment
  • Community Topics
    • Portland Harbor Superfund Site
    • Butter Clams
    • Hurricane Harvey
    • Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill, PAHs, and Health
    • Black Butte Mine Partnership
    • Effectiveness of Remediation Techniques
    • How Humans Metabolize PAHs
    • St. Helens Air Quality Study
  • Our Research
    • PAH Fate and Exposure
    • PAH Health Outcomes
    • Predicting Toxicity of PAH Mixtures
    • Mechanisms of PAH Susceptibility
    • PAH Remediation and Transformations
    • Divider Item
    • Virtual Lab Tours
    • Publications
    • Citation for Publications
  • Support Cores
    • Administrative Core
    • Chemical Mixtures Core
    • Community Engagement Core
    • Data Management and Analysis Core
    • Research Translation Core
    • Training Core

Our Trainees

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Jared Martin

What is the goal of your research?

My research will focus on expanding the knowledge surrounding cannabinoids. Cannabinoids are a class of recreationally popular compounds with pharmaceutical potential. With rising interest in the therapeutics of these compounds, understanding the potential negative effects of these compounds has become even more important. I will be using the zebrafish model to explore the bioactivity of cannabinoids.

What excites you about Superfund research?

I am most excited to dive deep into the "hard" toxicological sciences in the Tanguay Lab.

As a scientist, what do you hope your research helps accomplish?

Simply, I do hope that my research will make the cannabis industry safer. But, on a broad and long-term scale, I hope that my research will help inspire a generation of Filipino and Filipino-American scientists.

What was an interest or experience you had that contributed to your decision to become a scientist?

One of my closest friends from during my undergraduate years showed me what science could be. I did not have an interest in a career in science before I started my undergraduate degree in Marine Biology, but I found myself enjoying the creative ability to ask and answer questions that being in science provides.

What are your career goals?

I hope to be a successful academic, but I hope even more to be a good mentor to my future students.

What are your hobbies? What do you like to do when you aren’t doing science?

I love to explore the outdoors, especially marine and aquatic environments, chat with friends until the sun falls, and then rises, and explore the many cultures of the world.

Research Project(s):

Predicting Toxicity of PAH Mixtures

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The Superfund Research Center is federally funded and
administered by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
(NIEHS grant #P42 ES016465), an institute of the National Institutes of Health.

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