RESEARCH TRAINING IN BIOMEDICAL IMAGING
Top: Trainee- Timothy Sherpherd, Co-Program Director-Dr. Thomas Link, Program Director - Fergus Coakley, Trainee- David Naeger Botton: Trainee- Gloria Chiang and Trainee - Sharon Kwan
The Department of Radiology at the University of California, San Francisco offers four one-year positions in biomedical imaging research. The Department has a long record of excellence in clinical and academic radiology, with substantive extra-mural funding, and the University provides a fertile ground for interdisciplinary collaboration with numerous outstanding basic scientists and clinicians already engaged in cutting edge imaging research. The program is sponsored by a grant from the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (1 T32 EB001631-04), and is designed to give radiologists-in-training and junior nuclear medicine physicians the skills required to become independent clinical scientific investigators and leaders in academic biomedical imaging. The Program includes formal training in Clinical Research, Biostatistical Methods, and Grant Writing. Trainees will complete one year of full-time dedicated research supplemented by appropriate core and project-specific coursework in one of 4 systematic tracks (Abdominal Imaging, Musculoskeletal Imaging, Neuroradiology, and Molecular/Nuclear Medicine) followed by an additional clinical fellowship with 40% dedicated research time in the associated Section. The systematic tracks are based on existing sections in the UCSF Department of Radiology that have an ongoing and established commitment to multidisciplinary collaborative research in biomedical imaging, although the Program emphasizes flexibility and alternative approaches may be possible according to individual interests. Mentorship and supervision will be provided by teams incorporating radiologists, basic scientists, and clinicians. The Department provided state of the art imaging facilities with extensive laboratory support.
Application Procedures
In order to be considered for the program, an applicant must:
- be a citizen of the U.S. or permanent resident.
- have an MD degree (or be in or completing an approved radiology or nuclear medicine residency program.
Interested applicants should send their curriculum vitae, a cover letter including a description of their research interests, and three letters of references to:
Fergus Coakley, MD
Training Grant Program Director
UCSF Department of Radiology
505 Parnassus Avenue
Room M372, Box 0628
San Francisco, CA 94143-0628
All applications will be reviewed by the Training Grant Selection Committee, and applicants may be invited to interview.
Stipend levels are in accordance with NIH guidelines based on years of postdoctoral experience and may be supplemented.
Core Coursework
TICR (Training in Clinical Research) Summer Clinical Research Workshop,
- Create a sound clinical research protocol.
- Recognize and resolve ethical dilemmas in clinical research.
- Become familiar with sources of funding for clinical research.
- Describe the roles of descriptive versus inferential statistics.
- Identify characteristics of the problem to help choose the appropriate analytic technique.
- Describe techniques appropriate for handling a single outcome variable and multiple predictors.
- Outline data limitations and their consequences.
- Identify the elements of a good grant proposal.
- Create a grant proposal outline and write and edit a first draft.
- Produce a realistic budget and support it with a strong budget justification.
- Follow agency instructions.
- Write a grant proposal for an intended audience that demonstrates the mechanics and psychology of good expository writing.
- Describe the review process and the psychology of reviewers.
All trainees are required to take the Winter Biostatistical Methods for Clinical Research II course run by the UCSF Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics. This course is a second course in statistics that supplements the preliminary course taken as part of the Summer Clinical Research Workshop. The advanced course covers multi-predictor methods, including exploratory data analysis, multiple regression (linear and logistic), survival analysis and repeated measures analysis. Emphasis is the practical and proper use of statistical methodology and its interpretation. At the end of the course, students will be able to: Project Specific Coursework
UCSF Bioengineering, Epidemiology and Biostatistics, and Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program courses
Samples of potential project specific courses at UCSF that could be selected by trainees, in conjunction with their research preceptors, are detailed below. These courses have been chosen to illustrate the extensive course options available at UCSF, but this listing is not intended to be necessarily a complete or comprehensive listing; the number, range, and continual evolution of courses available at UCSF precludes formulating a final or all-encompassing list. The courses are offered by the Department of Bioengineering, the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, and the Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program. The Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program (http://www.ucsf.edu/bms/academic.html) is geared towards training students to become basic researchers that study biomedical problems. Course material begins at the molecular and cellular level and then moves to higher levels of organization into tissues and organs. At each stage, relevant disease states and models are discussed. Coursework will be selected by trainees, in consultation with their preceptors, as appropriate to their individual educational needs and research track. Other appropriate postdoctoral or postgraduate courses may also be selected, if they facilitate training in the clinical or research aspects of the projects chosen by trainees. Such additional coursework will be selected by consultation between the trainee and their preceptor team and is subject to approval by the Program Director.
Potential Projects
Current and Past Trainees
2009-2010 Trainees
Standing: Timothy Shepherd (l) and David Naeger (r)
Seated: Gloria Chiang (l) and Sharon Kwan (r)
2008-2009 Trainees
From left to right: Amita Kamath, MD, Maureen Kohi, MD, Dorota Wisner, MD, PhD, Jeremy Collins, MD, PhD
2007-2008 T32 Trainees

From left - right: Akhilesh Sista, MD, David Wilson, MD, PhD,
Jafi Lipson, MD, and Nick Costouros, MD.
2006-2007 T32 Trainees
From left to right: Shiva Badiee, MD, Jeremy Durack, MD, Z. Jane Wang, MD
2005-2006 T32 Trainees
From left to right: Christopher Hess, MD, PhD, Antonio C. Westphalen, MD, Matthew Falk, MD
Informal inquiries can be addressed to:
Program Director and Abdominal Imaging Section Chief
Dr. Fergus V. Coakley, MD
Fergus.Coakley@radiology.ucsf.edu
Co-Program Director
Musculoskeletal Imaging Section Chief
Dr. Thomas Link
Thomas.Link@radiology.ucsf.edu
Neuroradiology Section Chief
Dr. William P. Dillon
Bill.Dillon@radiology.ucsf.edu
Nuclear Medicine Section Chief
Dr. Randall Hawkins
Randy.Hawkins@radiology.ucsf.edu
Research Award Opportunity for T32 Trainees
T32 Trainees are eligible to apply for the UCSF Resident Research Scholar Awards. For more information, please click here.