非常抱歉,
你要访问的页面不存在,
非常抱歉,
你要访问的页面不存在,
非常抱歉,
你要访问的页面不存在,
验证码:
职称:Professor and Chair
所属学校:Boston University
所属院系:School of Public Health
所属专业:Environmental Health
联系方式: (617) 638-4620
Roberta F. White is a trans-disciplinary scientist whose research focuses on the effects of exposure to industrial pollutants on brain function. Initially trained as a clinical psychologist/neuropsychologist, her work employs cognitive and behavioral test measures and neuroimaging techniques to identify pollutant effects on the central nervous system. Combining the fields of public health, behavioral neuroscience, and epidemiology as well as clinical neuropsychology, she has explored the effects of occupational lead and solvent exposures on cognitive and affective expressions of brain function; elucidated prenatal effects of exposure to methylmercury and polychlorinated biphenyls on cognitive function and neuropsychological outcomes; identified chemical exposures that are associated with the occurrence of Gulf War Illness (GWI) following the Persian Gulf War in 1991, and uncovered cognitive and neuroimaging evidence of structural brain damage associated with GWI and sarin exposure in the GW veteran population. Her work has had significant public health impact in setting standards for occupational exposure to lead, environmental exposure to methylmercury in utero, and acceptance of GWI as a physical illness related to chemical exposures in theatre. She has written extensively on the clinical correlates of encephalopathies caused by exposure to chemical pollutants and co-wrote the World Health Organization criteria for diagnosis of solvent encephalopathy that are used internationally. Dr. White’s research and clinical career have led to leadership positions in the field of public health and psychology. She has been Chair of the Department of Environmental Health since 2003, enhancing the department’s stature as a leader in community environmental health, environmental epidemiology and toxicology. She is Associate Dean for Research at Boston University School of Public Health, where she oversees the research portfolio, which has grown in size and funding diversification under her leadership. In addition, she is Scientific Director of the Congressionally mandated Research Advisory Committee on Gulf War Illness, which advises the Veterans Administration on its GWI research portfolio. She has testified before Congress and the Institute of Medicine many times in her areas of research expertise, particularly GWI. Prior to beginning her tenure as Chair of Environmental Health, she ran the neuropsychology programs at BUSM and VA Boston Medical Center, overseeing clinical work as well as APA-approved doctoral and post-doctoral training programs in clinical neuropsychology. She also directed a VA-funded center on Environmental Hazards through two funding cycles before leaving the VA to work fulltime at BUSPH.
She has been Chair of the Department of Environmental Health since 2003, enhancing the department’s stature as a leader in community environmental health, environmental epidemiology and toxicology. She is Associate Dean for Research at Boston University School of Public Health, where she oversees the research portfolio, which has grown in size and funding diversification under her leadership.