Rhee Lab Talks
- "Thriving In Extremes: A Virtual Conversation with Sue Rhee Hosted by President Eric Isaacs", Carnegie Digital Lecture Series, January 2th, 2022, Sue Rhee
- "Building a Plant Cell Atlas Community", EMSL XChange Seminar Series, August 17, 2021, Sue Rhee
- "A journey through biophysics, seed physiology, and ecology to discover a water sensing molecule that controls seed germination", 2021 Synapsis Symposium: Cultivation & Culture, Cornell University, April 23, 2021, Sue Rhee and Yanniv Dorone
- "Challenges and opportunities in studying genes of unknown function" ASPB's Plantae Presents, June 16, 2020, Sue Rhee
- "Speeding up gene discovery to understand the genetic basis of natural variation" DOE JGI Genomics of Energy & Environment Meeting, 2015, Sue Rhee
- "Towards rational assessment of changes in metabolites from genetic modification: Opportunities and challenges in genomics, metabolomics, and metabolic network modeling", HESI: Genetic Basis of Unintended Effects in Modified Plants, 2014, Sue Rhee
Rhee Lab Interviews
- "Humans of Banbury: Interview with Seung Yon (Sue) Rhee", Humans of Banbury Interview, April 2024, Sue Rhee
- "Mapping Plant Cells", eLIFE podcast, episode 77 @ 13:07, December 2021, Sue Rhee
Talks Produced by the Rhee Lab
- Carnegie Plant Biology Summer Internship Program, 2010
- This 5-min video captures the essence of a summer internship research expereicnece at Carnegie Science's Plant Biology department using the 2010 year as an example.
- Living Legends: Winslow Briggs, 2010
- Dr. Winslow Briggs of Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Plant Biology, speaks about how he started his illustrious career in science and his exciting and inspiring journey through orchids, fern, blue light and bruellosis and shares some endearing anecdotes. Dr. Briggs, Director Emeritus of Carnegie's Department of Plant Biology, is one of the preeminent biologists of our time and is the recipient of numerous awards including the prestigious International Prize for Biology from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.
- Living Legends: Mike Freeling, 2010
- Dr. Michael Freeling is a professor of biology at University of California at Berkeley. Here he talks about how he started his career in science and the fascinating and wonderful paths and discoveries he made along the way. Currently, he is actively engaged in using plant comparative genomics to test evolutionary hypotheses, and often focuses on conserved noncoding sequences.
- Living Legends: Charley Yanofsky, 2010
- Dr. Charley Yanofsky, professor emeritus of biology at Stanford, talks about his illustrious career in science. The combined use of genetics, biochemistry and molecular biology led his group to elucidate the beautiful and elegant pathway of making an essential amino acid, trypophan. Along the way, he has made some seminal, Nobel-prize worthy discoveries such as the experimental proof of the one gene-one protein hypothesis, in vivo confirmation of the genetic code and discovery of transcriptional attenuation. He has influenced hundreds of world-class scientists directly through training and thousands of students through teaching and hopefully millions of aspiring scientists through this video.