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Viviana Risca

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Viviana Risca
Born1982/1983 (age 43–44)
Bucharest, Romania
🏳️ CitizenshipUnited States
🏫 Education
💼 Occupation
  • Geneticist
  • assistant professor
👔 EmployerRockefeller University

Viviana Ioana Risca (born 1982 or 1983) is a Romanian-American geneticist who is an assistant professor at Rockefeller University.

Early life and education

File:Trithemius-Johannes-Steganographia-Johannes-Saurius,-1608.-Digitized-photographic-reproduction-provided-by-the-Herzog-August-Bibliothek.jpg
Risca was inspired to study molecular biology after reading Steganographia in high school.

Viviana Ioana Risca was born in 1982 or 1983 in Bucharest. She emigrated to the United States in 1992, where she grew up in the suburbs of New York City. As a freshman in high school, Risca co-authored Hiding messages in DNA microdots with Catherine Taylor Cleveland and Carter Bancroft; the article was published in Nature.[1]

In 2000, she won the $100,000 first place prize in the Regeneron Science Talent Search for her project "DNA-Based Steganography", in which she encoded a cryptic message in a strand of DNA, with the help of Carter Bancroft. Later that year she was named part of the USA Today All-American Academic Team and graduated from Paul D. Schreiber Senior High School.[2][3][4][5]

Risca received a Bachelor of Science in physics from Stanford University in 2004 and a PhD in biophysics from the University of California, Berkeley in 2012.[5]

Career

Risca became an assistant professor at the Rockefeller University in 2019. Her laboratory investigates the structure and mechanisms of chromatin, including how the change of structure of chromatin affects responses to cancer treatments.[6]

Awards and honors

Selected publications

  • An improved ATAC-seq protocol reduces background and enables interrogation of frozen tissues (Nature Methods, 2017)
  • Hiding messages in DNA microdots (Nature, 1996)

References

  1. "Hiding Messages in DNA microdots". Google Scholar. Retrieved 2025-06-30.
  2. Tapellini, Donna (March 16, 2000). "Teen Science Is Serious Business". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved 2025-06-30.
  3. "Young scientists win big in Intel competition". New Haven Register. March 16, 2000. Retrieved June 30, 2025.
  4. Holloway, Lynette (2000-01-25). "Search for Science Talent Homes In on Long Island". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on May 27, 2015. Retrieved 2025-06-30.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 "Viviana Risca". The Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans. Retrieved 2025-06-30.
  6. "Viviana I. Risca". Rockefeller University. Retrieved 2025-06-30.
  7. "Viviana Risca | Office of Postdoctoral Affairs". postdocs.stanford.edu. Retrieved 2025-06-30.



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