Two researchers from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine were elected to the National
Academy of Sciences (NAS), a private, nonprofit community of esteemed scientists committed to
furthering science and scientific research within America. The NAS is also the publisher of the notable
journal, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, or PNAS.
Amy Bastian, Ph.D., and Jennifer Elisseeff, Ph.D., join over 120 members elected to NAS this year, who
will now be a part of over 2,500 active members of the organization. Scientists elected to NAS are
selected by their peers based on their exceptional contributions in research.
Amy Bastian, Ph.D., is the chief scientific officer and director of the Center for Movement Studies at the
Kennedy Krieger Institute, and professor of neuroscience, neurology, and physical medicine and
rehabilitation at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Bastian combines her expertise in neuroscience and physical therapy to study human movement.
Specifically, she has a focus on the effects of disease and damage to the central nervous system on
movement in adults and children, as well as how people learn new patterns of movement. Bastian
received her doctorate and did postdoctoral fellowship training in neuroscience at Washington
University in St. Louis. She joined the Johns Hopkins faculty in 2001.
Jennifer Elisseeff, Ph.D., is the Morton Goldberg Professor of Ophthalmology and director of the
Translational Tissue Engineering Center at the Johns Hopkins University Department of Biomedical
Engineering and the Wilmer Eye Institute.
The Translational Tissue Engineering Center is a research hub for immunoengineering. Since joining the
Johns Hopkins faculty in 2001, Elisseeff has developed biomaterials and designed regenerative medicine
technologies. Her lab is studying how the immune system responds to biomaterials and how these
materials can aid tissue repair. Elisseeff received her doctorate in medical engineering from Harvard–MIT and did her postdoctoral fellowship at the National Institute of General Medical Sciences. Elisseeff is also a member of the National Academy of Engineering and National Academy of Medicine.