Also known as William George Kaelin, William "Bill" G. Kaelin Jr., William G. Kaelin Jr., W. Kaelin, Bill Kaelin, B. Kaelin, W Kaelin, Kaelin
American Nobel Laureate, Professor of Medicine at Harvard University
William G. Kaelin is an American medical professor at Harvard University who won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his scientific discoveries. His work is important because it has advanced our understanding of fundamental biological processes that affect human health and disease.
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5 total works indexed
· 1996 · cited 61,493x
· 1976 · cited 43,862x
· 1983 · cited 38,972x
· 2010 · cited 30,722x
William G. Kaelin Jr. (born November 23, 1957) is an American Nobel laureate physician-scientist. He is a professor of medicine at Harvard University and the Dana–Farber Cancer Institute where his laboratory studies tumor suppressor proteins. He is the recipient of numerous awards including the Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research and the AACR Princess Takamatsu Award . In 2019 he won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in with Peter J. Ratcliffe and Gregg L. Semenza for their work on how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability.
Early life and education
· 1958 · cited 28,525x
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).