- Advanced Materials by Design: Theory and Computation
- African Diaspora and the Atlantic World Research Circle
- Agroecology
- American Indian Studies
- Bioethics
- Biomedical Engineering
- Biophotonics
- Chemical Biology
- Chemistry
- Cognitive Sciences
- Communication Technologies Research
- Comparative Political Economy
- Comparative U.S. Studies
- Computational Sciences
- Computational Systems Biology
- Computer Engineering
- Computer Sciences
- Cultural Studies in a Global Context
- Disability Studies
- Energy Sources and Policy
- Expressive Culture and Diversity in the Upper Midwest
- Food Pathogens and Toxins
- Functional Brain Imaging
- Functional Organic Materials
- Genomics
- Global Governance and International Finance
- Initiative for Studies in Technology Entrepreneurship
- Interdisciplinary Arts Residency Program
- International Environmental Affairs and Global Security
- International Public Affairs
- Land Use
- Law, Society and Justice
- Mathematical Physics - String Theory
- Middle Eastern Studies
- Molecular Biometry
- Nanophase Inorganic Materials and Devices
- Political Economy
- Poverty Studies
- Religious Studies
- Science and Technology Studies
- Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine
- Structural Biology
- Symbiosis
- Translational Research - Neurodegenerative Diseases
- Very High Energy Astrophysics and Cosmology
- Visual Culture
- Vitamin D
- Women's Health Research/Biology of Sex and Gender Differences
- Zebrafish Biology
Cluster focus
This cluster has brought new faculty to campus to undertake scientific research on sex and gender differences in health and disease. Such investigations are fundamental to understanding differences in disease epidemiology and health outcomes, as well as the overall control mechanisms of physiological processes in both sexes. In addition to multiple social differences in gender roles that impact health, there are significant biological differences between the sexes in such areas as gene expression that have been relatively unexplored. Further inquiry in this area can help understand mechanisms and develop treatments for diseases that manifest differently in males and females, such as heart disease and immune-related diseases. Another goal of the cluster was to bring more female scientists to UW-Madison. Increasing the number of women science faculty helps to not only create gender balance in the departments, but also to provide role models and mentors for the increasing number of women going into biological sciences. (For example, the student body of the School of Veterinary Medicine is now 70 percent female; the School of Medicine and Public Health enrollment is 50 percent female).
Cluster accomplishments
- Cluster faculty are researching diverse issues related to women’s health ranging from estrogen effects on neurological diseases to rare fungal diseases that only occur in women. These research specialties have led to a cluster faculty member being involved with a regular research group on campus studying the biology of the estrogen receptor. Another cluster faculty member is helping to create a critical mass of faculty who are researching fungal biology.
- All cluster faculty are working on new areas of research, which, in turn, offer new cutting-edge opportunities for graduate student and postdoctoral research.
- A cluster faculty member recently published a book with Harvard Press, Hot and Bothered: Women, Medicine and Menopause in America 1897-2000.
- Cluster faculty are also developing new courses, such as “Race in American Medicine and Public Health,” that otherwise could not be offered. Two cluster faculty have received prestigious NIH R01 awards to support their research.
Cluster structure
The cluster hires are affiliated with the UW Center of Women’s Health Research, a multidisciplinary center staffed by more than 13 faculty and staff members. The center is one of 20 National Centers of Excellence in Women's Health designated by the U.S. Public Health Service's Office on Women's Health. The center has monthly administrative meetings and an annual advisory meeting. In addition to participating in these meetings, cluster faculty also meet regularly on their own to determine common research tracks and plan ways to collaborate.
Cluster coordinator, faculty and lead dean
Cluster Coordinators
- Molly Carnes, Professor, Medicine and Women’s Health Research
- Linda Schuler, Professor, Veterinary Medicine
Cluster Faculty
- Judith Houck, Assistant Professor, Medical History and Bioethics and History of Science
- Christina Hull, Assistant Professor, Bimolecular Chemistry and Medical Microbiology and Immunology
- Jyoti Watters, Assistant Professor, Veterinary Medicine
Lead Dean
- Robert N. Golden, Dean, School of Medicine and Public Health