Winston Hide
Winston Hide
Who is Winston Hide? Link to Bio
Winston Hide, PhD is an internationally recognized computational biologist specializing in bioinformatics, genomics, and systems biology. He is an Associate Professor of Pathology at Harvard Medical School and Director of the RNA Precision Medicine Core at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC). His research focuses on understanding molecular resilience mechanisms in neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s, and he has pioneered computational frameworks for integrating multi-omic data to identify therapeutic targets.
What I do
I apply systems biology approaches to omics data to reveal and drug critical disease processes occurring in cancer and neurodegeneration. This strategy can be used to build and implement systems that allow discovery of key target genes and processes involved in cancer, complex diseases and drug response. I have been funded by key industry partners, including Biogen Inc., to develop translational pipelines for target prioritization. My bibliography details research I care about
My provenance
I moved to Boston in 2019 from the UK, where I was professor and chair of computational biology at the Sheffield Institute of Translational Neuroscience in the Department of Neuroscience and Department of Computer Science at the University of Sheffield. Before going to the UK, I was an associate professor of bioinformatics and computational biology at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. I have been visiting faculty at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory and I was the founding director of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute Center for Stem Cell Bioinformatics. I started my career in South African where I founded the South African National Bioinformatics Institute.
My Training
I received my bachelor’s degree in zoology from the University of Wales, Cardiff, and my doctorate degree in molecular genetics from Temple University, Philadelphia. I performed postdoctoral training at the University of Texas, Houston, at the Baylor College of Medicine and at the Smithsonian Institution Museum of Natural History. I gained industry experience in Silicon Valley at the MasPar Computer Corporation while serving as director of genomics.
Early work in South Africa
Legend of South African Science in 2017. I was the first recipient of the “International Society for Computational Biology Award for Outstanding Achievement,” given in recognition of my work for the development of computational biology and bioinformatics in Africa.
Bio
Awards
- National President’s Award, South African Foundation for Research Development, 1998
- Elected, Academy of Science of South Africa, 2007
- Winner, Harry Oppenheimer Foundation Distinguished Sabbatical Research Fellowship, 2007
- Recipient, Harry Oppenheimer Foundation Distinguished Sabbatical Research Medal, 2007
- Awardee, First International Society for Computational Biology Award for Outstanding Achievement, 2011
- Honoree, “Honoring our Researchers” Cure Alzheimer’s Foundation, 2022