Meet Our Physicists

Ned Wingreen

Princeton University

Ned Wingreen received his Ph. D. in theoretical condensed matter physics from Cornell University in 1989. He did his postdoc in mesoscopic physics at MIT before moving, in 1991, to the newly founded NEC Research Institute in Princeton. At NEC, he continued to work in mesoscopic physics, but also started research on the statistical mechanics of protein folding. Thinking about proteins led him inexorably down the path into biology. During a sabbatical at UC Berkeley in 1999, his primary focus shifted to systems biology of bacteria. Wingreen joined Princeton University as a Professor of Molecular Biology in 2004, with a joint appointment in the Lewis-Sigler Institute as of 2008. Wingreen’s current research focuses on modeling the biophysics of bacteria and their viruses (phage), intracellular phase separation, and, most recently, immunology.

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Public Lecture

How Your Immune System Learns

Wed, Jul 29, 5:30–6:30pm
Flug Forum, Aspen Center for Physics