Meet the women who integrate science, engineering, and design at the Childhood Cancer Data Lab
Did you know that 70% of the Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation (ALSF) Childhood Cancer Data Lab team are currently women? Advancing our mission to empower childhood cancer researchers with knowledge, data, and tools would not be possible without their expertise. On the International Day of Women and Girls in Science, we are excited to introduce you to these women who integrate science, engineering, and design to tackle some of the greatest challenges faced by the pediatric cancer research community!
Jaclyn N. Taroni, PhD
Director of the Childhood Cancer Data Lab
Dr. Jaclyn Taroni joined the Data Lab in 2018 as the team's first full-time scientist and has served as Director since 2021. Dr. Taroni established our training workshop program and has played an instrumental role in every Data Lab project to date. She served as the scientific lead for refine.bio, was one of the main organizers of the Open Pediatric Brain Tumor Atlas (OpenPBTA) project, and has guided the development of the Single-cell Pediatric Cancer Atlas (ScPCA) Portal. Dr. Taroni supports the entire Data Lab team and leads our mission.
“As a data analyst, self-taught programmer, and former trainee, I love to consider what would have made past-me a more effective researcher and work with our talented team every day to get closer to realizing that for the pediatric cancer research community.”
Deepa Prasad
User Experience (UX) Designer
Deepa Prasad has been the UX Designer at the Data Lab since 2017. She leads studies to gain a deeper understanding of the behaviors, processes, attitudes and barriers of pediatric cancer researchers. She uses these insights to guide the development of our products and services and to make improvements as needed. She designed the interfaces for refine.bio and the ScPCA Portal — tools which have been used by researchers across the globe. Her contributions ultimately help researchers use data more effectively!
"Understanding pediatric cancer researchers’ practices around not just sequencing data and analysis, but also the broader academic environment they operate in, has been beneficial to delivering tools and resources which are tailored to their needs. I look forward to exploring researchers’ subcultures around other data types and I am excited by possibilities that lie ahead."
Ally Hawkins, PhD
Data Scientist
Dr. Ally Hawkins joined the Data Lab in 2021 as a Data Scientist. Since then, she has trained hundreds of childhood cancer researchers to better analyze their own data and has played an essential role in developing the ScPCA Portal. Dr. Hawkins helped create scpca-nf, the open-source pipeline behind the Portal, which uniformly processes data and makes it immediately useful to researchers. She has collaborated with other labs to improve their own data processing pipelines and to help them work more efficiently. Dr. Hawkins is dedicated to helping others bring their research to the next level!
"As a former trainee in pediatric cancer research, I witnessed the critical need for open-source data and analysis resources tailored specifically for the pediatric research community. Every day, I'm inspired by the members of our team who are constantly striving to make sure we provide every pediatric researcher with the data and skills that they need to get further, faster."
Stephanie J. Spielman, PhD
Data Scientist
Dr. Stephanie Spielman started her journey with the Data Lab as an external collaborator, assisting with training workshops and offering her time and skills to the OpenPBTA project. In 2022, she officially joined the team as a Data Scientist! Dr. Spielman helped lead the OpenPBTA until it was completed. She now contributes to the ScPCA and teaches researchers valuable data science skills at our workshops. She developed much of the material for our reproducible research practices course, which has received overwhelmingly positive feedback from the community.
"I am so proud to live the ALSF mission every day working in the Data Lab; I come to work knowing that our efforts are making a real-time tangible difference across the entire pediatric cancer research field. Being able to arm researchers with the skills and resources they need to make impactful discoveries faster than ever for the kids who need it the most has been one of the greatest honors of my career."
Nozomi Ichihara
Front-End Engineer
Nozomi Ichihara joined the team as a front-end engineer in 2022. She collaborates across teams to conceptualize, develop, and maintain products that directly benefit researchers. She helps enhance the usability and performance of our existing tools by improving the code quality and making our applications more accessible for users everywhere. The pressing needs of the childhood cancer research community are at the center of her work as a Data Lab engineer!
"I support our research team by building open-source web applications that make their diligent and great work accessible to other researchers around the world. Together with our UX designer and engineering team, we are always looking for ways to improve our applications for the research community and I love what we do. Furthermore, learning how the research team works closely together to achieve common goals and hearing the courageous stories of children and families fighting cancer with hope, inspire me to be and do better. I am grateful to work with the caring and talented ALSF team and to be a part of this incredible cause."
Each of these women have been instrumental in creating remarkable data resources for the pediatric cancer research community. As the Scientific Community Manager for the Data Lab, I’m proud to help maximize the impact of their work by sharing it with you! Today, and always, we celebrate women across the world whose contributions are moving science forward.
Did you know that 70% of the Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation (ALSF) Childhood Cancer Data Lab team are currently women? Advancing our mission to empower childhood cancer researchers with knowledge, data, and tools would not be possible without their expertise. On the International Day of Women and Girls in Science, we are excited to introduce you to these women who integrate science, engineering, and design to tackle some of the greatest challenges faced by the pediatric cancer research community!
Jaclyn N. Taroni, PhD
Director of the Childhood Cancer Data Lab
Dr. Jaclyn Taroni joined the Data Lab in 2018 as the team's first full-time scientist and has served as Director since 2021. Dr. Taroni established our training workshop program and has played an instrumental role in every Data Lab project to date. She served as the scientific lead for refine.bio, was one of the main organizers of the Open Pediatric Brain Tumor Atlas (OpenPBTA) project, and has guided the development of the Single-cell Pediatric Cancer Atlas (ScPCA) Portal. Dr. Taroni supports the entire Data Lab team and leads our mission.
“As a data analyst, self-taught programmer, and former trainee, I love to consider what would have made past-me a more effective researcher and work with our talented team every day to get closer to realizing that for the pediatric cancer research community.”
Deepa Prasad
User Experience (UX) Designer
Deepa Prasad has been the UX Designer at the Data Lab since 2017. She leads studies to gain a deeper understanding of the behaviors, processes, attitudes and barriers of pediatric cancer researchers. She uses these insights to guide the development of our products and services and to make improvements as needed. She designed the interfaces for refine.bio and the ScPCA Portal — tools which have been used by researchers across the globe. Her contributions ultimately help researchers use data more effectively!
"Understanding pediatric cancer researchers’ practices around not just sequencing data and analysis, but also the broader academic environment they operate in, has been beneficial to delivering tools and resources which are tailored to their needs. I look forward to exploring researchers’ subcultures around other data types and I am excited by possibilities that lie ahead."
Ally Hawkins, PhD
Data Scientist
Dr. Ally Hawkins joined the Data Lab in 2021 as a Data Scientist. Since then, she has trained hundreds of childhood cancer researchers to better analyze their own data and has played an essential role in developing the ScPCA Portal. Dr. Hawkins helped create scpca-nf, the open-source pipeline behind the Portal, which uniformly processes data and makes it immediately useful to researchers. She has collaborated with other labs to improve their own data processing pipelines and to help them work more efficiently. Dr. Hawkins is dedicated to helping others bring their research to the next level!
"As a former trainee in pediatric cancer research, I witnessed the critical need for open-source data and analysis resources tailored specifically for the pediatric research community. Every day, I'm inspired by the members of our team who are constantly striving to make sure we provide every pediatric researcher with the data and skills that they need to get further, faster."
Stephanie J. Spielman, PhD
Data Scientist
Dr. Stephanie Spielman started her journey with the Data Lab as an external collaborator, assisting with training workshops and offering her time and skills to the OpenPBTA project. In 2022, she officially joined the team as a Data Scientist! Dr. Spielman helped lead the OpenPBTA until it was completed. She now contributes to the ScPCA and teaches researchers valuable data science skills at our workshops. She developed much of the material for our reproducible research practices course, which has received overwhelmingly positive feedback from the community.
"I am so proud to live the ALSF mission every day working in the Data Lab; I come to work knowing that our efforts are making a real-time tangible difference across the entire pediatric cancer research field. Being able to arm researchers with the skills and resources they need to make impactful discoveries faster than ever for the kids who need it the most has been one of the greatest honors of my career."
Nozomi Ichihara
Front-End Engineer
Nozomi Ichihara joined the team as a front-end engineer in 2022. She collaborates across teams to conceptualize, develop, and maintain products that directly benefit researchers. She helps enhance the usability and performance of our existing tools by improving the code quality and making our applications more accessible for users everywhere. The pressing needs of the childhood cancer research community are at the center of her work as a Data Lab engineer!
"I support our research team by building open-source web applications that make their diligent and great work accessible to other researchers around the world. Together with our UX designer and engineering team, we are always looking for ways to improve our applications for the research community and I love what we do. Furthermore, learning how the research team works closely together to achieve common goals and hearing the courageous stories of children and families fighting cancer with hope, inspire me to be and do better. I am grateful to work with the caring and talented ALSF team and to be a part of this incredible cause."
Each of these women have been instrumental in creating remarkable data resources for the pediatric cancer research community. As the Scientific Community Manager for the Data Lab, I’m proud to help maximize the impact of their work by sharing it with you! Today, and always, we celebrate women across the world whose contributions are moving science forward.