I am a research engineer expert in analyzing large genomic and transcriptomic datasets to decipher the architecture of complex phenotypes.
I was recruited by the Hub of Bioinformatics and Biostatistics in 2020 as a bioinformatician and biostatistician. Since then, I have been embedded in the Stem Cell and Development group since then. In this unit, my missions are diverse and mainly consist in processing and analyzing bulk and single-cell or single-nuclei transcriptomic datasets. As a biostatistician in the Hub, I am also involved in the statistical analysis of high dimensional data and support researchers in designing statistically efficient experiments.
Before joining the Hub, I graduated from the Ecole Nationale de la Statistique et de l’Analyse de l’Information (ENSAI) as a biostatistician engineer in 2010. I then obtained a PhD in Bioinformatics in 2015 from the Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers in Paris under the supervision of Jean-François Zagury. During this period and a first doctoral position, I performed Genome-Wide Association Studies on skin ageing phenotypes. In 2017, I joined the Statistical Genetics group led by Hugues Aschard at the Institut Pasteur. During this post-doctoral position, I focused on developing and applying methods to identify gene-environment interactions involved in complex phenotypes.