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Beyond the Lab, Understanding Communication Disorders Speaker Series: The Making of the Inner Ear


May 24, 2017 update: Watch an archived webcast of this talk on the NIH videocast website.


On Tuesday, May 23, NIDCD researcher Doris Wu, Ph.D., chief of the NIDCD Laboratory of Molecular Biology and the Section on Sensory Cell Regeneration and Development, will present the next talk in the NIDCD’s Beyond the Lab, Understanding Communication Disorders speaker series. She will discuss how the inner ear develops and how it enables us to hear and maintain our balance.

A woman balancing while doing yoga outside.

Designed for administrative and support staff as well as scientists, the Beyond the Lab series gives NIH staff and the public the opportunity to learn about the NIDCD’s research and about scientific advances in communication disorders—conditions that directly affect about one in six Americans during their lifetime. The goal of the series is to present the science of the NIDCD's mission areas in ways that everyone can understand. The series is open to the larger NIH community and to the public. 

  • What: “The Making of the Inner Ear,” presented as part of the NIDCD Beyond the Lab, Understanding Communication Disorders speaker series
  • Who: Doris Wu, Ph.D., chief of the NIDCD Laboratory of Molecular Biology and the Section on Sensory Cell Regeneration and Development
  • When: Tuesday, May 23, 2017 from 11:00 a.m. to noon
  • Where: Dale and Betty Bumpers Vaccine Research Center, Building 40, Rooms 1201/1203, National Institutes of Health campus, Bethesda, Maryland

The presentation will also be available via videocast. 

For questions or reasonable accommodation requests, contact Lonnie Lisle at 301-827-8183.

Portrait of Doris Wu.

About the Speaker

Doris K. Wu received her bachelor’s degree from the University of Wisconsin at Stevens Point, her master’s degree from the Department of Physiology at the University of Southern California, and her Ph.D. from the Department of Anatomy (currently the Department of Neurobiology) at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA). She received her postdoctoral training from the Mental Retardation Center (now the Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center) at UCLA and from the Department of Genetics at Harvard Medical School. She joined the NIDCD in 1993 and has published many papers on the molecular mechanisms underlying inner ear development.

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