2016
Audacious Ingenuity: Pushing the Boundaries of Science
The 2016 Hancock Symposium explored how scientific inquiry,
Green Foundation Speaker: Dr. Bennet Omalu
Dr. Bennet Omalu is a pioneer in the study and diagnosis of Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy in professional football players. He is a forensic pathologist, professor, medical examiner, and founder of the Bennet Omalu Foundation. Dr. Omalu's fight against the National Football League for awareness and acceptance of CTE as a threat to the health and safety of professional football players was featured in the film Concussion (2015)
Plenary Speakers
Dr. Tyrone B. Hayes, Professor of Integrated Biology, University of California-Berkeley
Dr. Hakeem Oluseyi, Associate Professor of Physics and Space Sciences, Florida Institute of Technology; MLK Visiting Professor of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; and Chief Science Officer, Discovery
Executive Speakers
Dr. Norman Lederman, Distinguished Professor of Mathematics and Science Education, Illinois Institute of Technology
Dr. Sharon Deem, Director, Institute for Conservation Medicine, Saint Louis Zoo
Dr. Mario Livio, Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science, and Astrophysicist, Space Telescope Science Institute, 1991-2015
Dr. James C. Carrington, President, Donald Danforth Plant Science Center
Dr. Francis Ali-Osman, Professor of Surgery and Professor
Breakout Speakers
Dr. R. E Burnett, Associate Dean of Academics and Professor, National Defense University
Dr. Jay McDaniel, Professor of Religion and Director of the Steel Center for the Study of Religion and Philosophy, Hendrix College
Dr. Julia Halsey, Hospitalist, University of Missouri
Dr. Bina Vanmali '99, Director of the Arizona Science Education Collaborative, Arizona State University
Dr. Aric Krogstad, Veterinarian,
Dr. Colleen Mitchell, Associate Professor of Mathematics, University of Iowa
Dr. Daniel Jackson '04, Assistant Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Missouri, and Physician, MU Health
Dr. Zachary Feinstein, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering, Washington University in St. Louis