Tierra Thomas, Visiting Archivist, Collection Services, Rose Library

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“I am so excited to be here at Emory, processing several collections focused on Jewish people and Jewish history in the south.” – Tierra Thomas

Tierra Thomas is the new visiting archivist for the Southern Jewish Collection in the Rose Library. Prior to this position, Tierra spent two years as a graduate research assistant at the Louis Round Wilson Special Collections Library at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. She also spent two years as a student assistant at the Georgia State University Special Collections and Archives.

Born in Canonsburg, PA (outside of Pittsburgh), Tierra has a bachelor’s degree in history, with a minor in African-American studies, from Georgia State University, and a master’s degree in library science from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Despite being from Pennsylvania, Tierra has two sisters and a brother who also live in Atlanta. “I still visit my hometown often to see my huge extended family, especially for the holidays.”

In her spare time, Tierra enjoys reading and has picked up a renewed interest in gaming. Some games she loves include the Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, the Sims, and World of Warcraft. When there isn’t a pandemic outside, she enjoys going to the movies.

“I am so excited to be here at Emory, processing several collections focused on Jewish people and Jewish history in the south. Atlanta especially has a large community of Jewish people, and I hope that in getting these collections organized for use, it’ll facilitate further research into their history,” says Tierra. “And although we haven’t been able to meet in person or work together in the same space, I am thrilled to be working with such a great group of folks here at the Rose and in LITS more generally. I’m also glad to be starting this position at the same time as my friend and coworker from UNC, Anicka Austin.”

You can reach her at tierra [dot] marie [dot] thomas [at] emory [dot] edu.

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LITS recent headlines and upcoming events

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Recent LITS headlines:

Upcoming LITS events:

(go HERE for more information for each event)

  • September 4WHSCL Seminar Series: “Making Reproducibility Practical” 2:00 pm, registrants will be sent a Zoom link
  • Sept 4 – Oct 4AJC Decatur Book Festival: Link
  • September 9InfoForum: 9:30 am – 10:30 am, Zoom Link
  • September 17IT Briefing: 10:15 am – noon, Zoom Link
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Ghosn Lab becomes an industry leader through AWS technology

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Dr. Eliver Ghosn, next to a 10X Genomics controller, which encapsulates thousands of single cells for downstream single-cell multi-OMICs assays.

“We are using AWS for so many things.”

When Dr. Eliver Ghosn (Assistant Professor of Medicine and Pediatrics, Lowance Center for Human Immunology, SOM) moved to Emory from Stanford University about three years ago, he knew he would need partners in IT who could help his new lab with enormous computational needs. His solution was turning to the AWS at Emory team. “They were truly helpful in getting me settled in at Emory,” says Ghosn.

In the Ghosn Lab, they study the development and function of the mammalian immune system at a single-cell level, including the immune response to the new coronavirus SARS-CoV-2. Biomedical research is moving at a pace where, especially in in the field of cellular biology, the data you can get from a single cell is huge. For Eliver and his colleagues, it became almost impossible to analyze those data sets on local computers. They needed to move to data science to mine all of the datasets that they generate in the lab.

Ghosn needed to use AWS to analyze all of their single-cell multi-omics data. Multi-omics is single-cell RNA sequencing in which they measure many different parameters of each cell, then run the test on thousands of cells. Multiply that by the 25,000 genes in the genome, and you begin to see how many data points they have.

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The welcome page of the Ghosn Lab.

“We brought the first single-cell platform to Emory, designed by 10x Genomics,” says Ghosn. “We acquired the instrument to run this platform so that we could do all of our work in-house. Initially, I was doing all of the analysis manually. 10x Genomics had a pipeline called Cell Ranger that used a Linux system. But the datasets we would get would be close to a terabyte in size, so downloading and running them on a local computer was no longer feasible.”

Plus, the computing power they need kept changing, so they couldn’t keep buying computers. They decided to move to AWS.

At first, they kept the Linux system but transferred all of their data to AWS, where they ran Cell Ranger to analyze it, then transferred the output data back to local computers. But then the AWS Team wrote a script to automate this process, and now they can run many analyses simultaneously and keep the massive amounts of data on AWS.

The Ghosn Lab is divided between basic and translational research science and technology development. Ghosn’s lab students all have user accounts with AWS and can control their data and access. They also have several bioinformatics students from Georgia Tech who come to the lab to do research and help them run visualizations of the data. By utilizing sponsored accounts, the Tech researchers can use Emory’s AWS to run a matrix of the data that allows many different pipelines to run analyses of the data.

Laughs Ghosn, “And we are constantly updating our analyses. Our lab is expanding.”

the Ghosn Lab logo

The Ghosn Lab logo of a B-cell is an extension of his keen interest in diversity and inclusion in education and science. B-1 cell = Be yourself.

Another element of the AWS at Emory service that has been helpful for Ghosn’s research was that the massive data generated by genomic sequencing could be transferred directly from a third-party sequencer into their AWS account without having to download it to local machines. With scripts written by the AWS at Emory Team automating the process, the process has become quicker and more reliable.

Additionally, AWS provides backups that keep their data much safer than storing on an Emory local server.

“Automating this whole system allows us to keep our lab in the top tier and become leaders in the field,” says Ghosn “This lab was the first to bring the 10x Genomics platform to Emory and after three years we have developed a reputation for generating quality results, both reliably and quickly.”

With regards to his collaboration with the AWS at Emory Team, “I tell our colleagues to go ahead and get an AWS account. It makes life easier and gives you peace of mind that your scientific work is safely kept, uploaded where it needs to go, can be accessed from anywhere, and doesn’t require a computer science background to run it. AWS at Emory has all of this and more.”

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Last day to submit your impressions of the LITS Online News

Today is the last day to help guide the future direction of YOUR divisional newsletter. The response to the LITS Online News survey has been strong, with over 60 of your colleagues weighing in so far.

Our goal is to make the LITS Online News a true peer-to-peer communication vehicle that everyone in LITS feels comfortable using.

Please take a few minutes to take this important survey HERE.

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LITS recent headlines and upcoming events

Headlines & Events graphic banner


Recent LITS headlines:

Upcoming LITS events:

(go HERE for more information for each event)

  • August 19First Day of Classes
  • August 20IT Briefing: 10:15 am – noon, Zoom Link
  • September 4WHSCL Seminar Series: “Making Reproducibility Practical” 2:00 pm, Zoom Link TBD
  • Sept 4 – Oct 4AJC Decatur Book Festival: Link
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LITS Online News survey: We need your input

Campus and Community Relations (CCR) would like to invite you to complete an online survey about the LITS Online News, your weekly internal newsletter. We have not conducted a survey since 2018, and this year’s is particularly important because we are in the process of updating the overall format of the newsletter to more modern WordPress offerings.

Our goal is to make the LITS Online News a true peer-to-peer communication vehicle that everyone in LITS feels comfortable using.

Please take a few minutes to take this important survey HERE.

Completed surveys are due by the close of business of August 14.

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Joan Wenders, Director of the Project Management Office and Portfolio for LITS

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“The diverse backgrounds of the people on my team are amazing.” – Joan Wenders

Joan Wenders takes over as the new director of the Project Management Office and Portfolio for LITS after spending 29 years at Assurant (which has undergone a few name changes via acquisitions and mergers). Joan started as a health underwriter, then became an IT manager in the late ’90s. She subsequently moved into project and program management. She became a senior project manager, doing IT integration work. Her last title was vice president of program and portfolio management.

After taking an early retirement from Assurant, Joan sought a new career that was more mission focused. “I wanted to feel like I was doing something to benefit others, rather than just making money.” This position at Emory was the job she wanted more than any other.

Born in West Allis, Wisconsin, Joan earned a bachelor’s degree in anthropology from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She moved to Georgia in 2004, and her daughter earned undergraduate and graduate degrees from the University of Georgia.

Joan loves to run, work out and play with her dogs. She enjoys audio books on audible.com, reading, and things like the New York Times and Dr. Who.

“The diverse backgrounds of the people on my team are amazing,” says Joan. “Their previous experience and pockets of expertise has been impressive. They’ve been welcoming and made time for me.”

You can reach her at joan [dot] marie [dot] wenders [at] emory [dot] edu.

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