Sandip Biswal, MD, assistant professor of radiology; Sheen-Woo Lee, MD, MSc, postdoctoral scholar; Shin Kamaya, BSE; Deepak Behera, DNB, postdoctoral fellow; Edward Graves, PhD, assistant professor of radiation oncology (radiation physics); and Garry Gold, MD, associate professor of radiology and, by courtesy, of bioengineering and orthopaedic surgery, were awarded the Moncada Award at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Society of Computed Body Tomography and Magnetic Resonance (SCBT/MR) for their outstanding research project "Imaging Pain and Nociception with Manganese-Enhanced MRI (MEMRI)." The Moncada Award was named in honor of Rogelio Moncada, MD, who helped establish the SCBT/MR research awards program. Please find photos and brief biographies of some of our award winners below.

Deepak Behera, diplomate of National Board (DNB), specialized in nuclear medicine from Medwin Hospitals in Hyderabad, India, after receiving his medical degree (MBBS) from MKCG Medical College in Orissa, India. Before coming to Stanford, he served as senior resident in the nuclear medicine clinics at PGIMER in Chandigarh, India. Dr. Behera is currently a postdoctoral fellow in the Molecular Imaging of Musculoskeletal Illnesses (MIMI) Laboratory where he is investigating a clinically applicable nociception imaging agent that has applications in both cancerous and noncancerous conditions. Outside the lab, he enjoys traveling, outdoor sports, dancing, and singing.

Sandip Biswal, MD, assistant professor of radiology, received his medical degree from Harvard Medical School-Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Division of Health Science and Technology (HST). As a faculty member at Stanford, he was won the Junior Faculty of the Year Resident Teaching Award twice and the RSNA Research Trainee Prize three times: once each in Informatics and Nuclear Medicine with Bao Do, MD, and once in Nuclear Medicine with Brian Kim, MD. Dr. Biswal is the leader of the Molecular Imaging of Musculoskeletal Illnesses (MIMI) Laboratory, where he researches the use of multimodality molecular imaging techniques to study nociception as it relates to bones, joints, the peripheral nervous system, and the spinal cord.

Garry E. Gold, MD, associate professor of radiology and (by courtesy) bioengineering and orthopedics at Stanford University, received a master's degree in electrical engineering from Stanford in 1988 and his MD from Stanford in 1992. Dr. Gold has authored over 60 journal articles, 170 abstracts, and 5 patents in MRI. He has been the principal investigator or a co-investigator on over 30 funded research projects, and he is the principal investigator on two NIH-funded projects to improve MR imaging of osteoarthritis and the use of real-time MRI for the study of biomechanics. The International Skeletal Society recently awarded Dr. Gold the President's Medal. He is also a five-time winner of the Lauterbur Award for the best MRI paper from the Society for Computed Body Tomography and Magnetic Resonance (SCBT/MR). Dr. Gold reviews manuscripts for ten peer-reviewed journals, including the Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (JMRI) and the journal of Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (MRM), and he is on the editorial board of several publications. At Stanford, Dr. Gold practices clinical musculoskeletal radiology, teaching medical students, residents, and fellows. He teaches two courses in imaging physics and human anatomy for medical students and graduate students, and he was recently awarded the Kaiser Award for outstanding and innovative contributions to education. He also serves as an advisor and co-advisor for many engineering graduate students and postdoctoral fellows.

Edward "Ted" Graves, PhD, assistant professor of radiation oncology (radiation physics), received his PhD in bioengineering in 2001 from the University of California, Berkeley, and San Francisco. After completing a postdoctoral fellowship in molecular imaging at Massachusetts General Hospital in Charlestown, Massachusetts, he came to Stanford in 2003 as an acting assistant professor of radiation oncology and joined the Department as an assistant professor in 2004. Dr. Graves has received numerous awards, including NIH-postdoctoral training grants and first prize in the student poster competition of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (ISMRM) Cancer Workshop. At Stanford, his research interests focus on developing applications of emerging functional and molecular imaging techniques in the radiation therapy of cancer. Dr. Graves' current research projects include the development and application of techniques for imaging radiobiology, focusing on tumor hypoxia; the engineering of methods for applying clinically-relevant conformal irradiation to small animal models of disease; and the creation of software for multimodality image analysis and quantitation. In his time away from Stanford, Dr. Graves enjoys playing video games and with his dog, Tara, as well as supporting the Chelsea Football Club.

Shin Kamaya, BSE, grew up in Salt Lake City, Utah, and received his undergraduate degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Pennsylvania. He is currently a third-year medical student at the University of Colorado-Denver.
Comment by: Dr. Anurag Satpathy at April 18, 2008 09:14 PM
Many many congratulations & best wishes to Dr. Deepak Behera for carrying on his research work on MIMI. He has been my batchmate in undergraduate medical college. All the best to you dude.
Comment by: DR.DEEPAK PADHI at April 19, 2008 02:07 AM
Many many congratulations Deepak . . .I don't have any doubt in your capabilities. It is just starting my dear . . .you have to go a far way . . . my wishes are always with you . . .continue your good work. . .
Comment by: dr.devendra kuamr at April 23, 2008 09:59 PM
Congratulations to you, Deepak. Keep up the enthusiasm and good work. May you have many more awards in your bag as you are a hard working person with the right mind set. All the best for your future endeavours.
Comment by: Sneha at April 23, 2008 10:35 PM
Dear Deepak,
I am so happy to know about your achievements. I have no words to express my happiness, and I am sure you will achieve many more laurels and successes. I always tell my students about you as EKALAVYA who studied all by himself and attributes his knowledge to others. May god give you all the best in life and achieve many more in life. With love,
Dr. Prabhakar
Comment by: Dr V V S Prabhakar Rao at April 23, 2008 10:36 PM
Dear Deepak,
Heart felt greetings and Congratulations to the whole team for this award and also to your family.
This award will be a stimulus to work more in this direction.
Good luck for everything you cherish.
Dr. Prasanta K Pradhan
Associate Professor
Dept of Nuclear medicine
SGPGIMS,Lucknow
India PIN 226 014
Comment by: Dr P K Pradhan at April 23, 2008 11:00 PM
Hearty congratulations to Deepak and all his team.
WISH YOU ALL THE BEST FOR YOUR RESEARCH.
Comment by: Dr Sujit Nilegaonkar at April 24, 2008 01:09 AM
Many many congratulations to dear Deepak. Keep it up . . . .
it's great.
With best wishes,
Sandeep
Comment by: Dr Sandeep K Shrivastava at April 24, 2008 04:02 AM
Congrats. You are always different and you prove it again. lage raho D. bhai
Comment by: Dr.Manas panda at April 25, 2008 05:36 AM
Well done, Deepak! Wish you all the best in the future as well.
Dr. Akshey Nair
Specialty Registrar
Swansea NHS Trust
Comment by: Dr.Akshey Nair at April 25, 2008 11:58 AM
Hey Deepak,
Congratulations for the award and awaiting many more from you!!! All my best wishes are with you and your colleagues.
Comment by: Amitabh Singh at April 26, 2008 06:53 AM
Hearty congratulations, Deepak. Keep it up. . . . I am sure you are going to make us proud . . . on many such occasions . . . I wish you all the success for your future. . .
Comment by: Dr Ritu Salgia at April 27, 2008 07:30 AM
Great job, Deepak; I am really happy for you. Keep going.
Comment by: dr faraz farishta at May 2, 2008 01:30 AM
Bravo my son !!
I am proud of you !!!
Congratulations to Sandip also !!
I expect you to do more and achieve the best !!
Mummy joins me to congratulate you for your great success within a year.
I wish you all the success in the future !!
Comment by: Dr. B. N. Behera, MD at May 2, 2008 10:54 AM
A hearty congratulations to Dr. Deepak and the entire Department of Radiology. Am proud of your honor. May God bless you to continue your seek and find in a channeled effort towards alleviating human suffering.