Home » Geoffrey Wadey

Geoffrey Wadey

Education: BSc, Chemistry, UConn 2023, BSc, Molecular and Cell Biology, UConn 2023

From: Woodbridge, Connecticut

Outside of Lab: I enjoy dart-throwing. While I was at UConn, I participated in several amateur/semi-pro league tournaments, and even won a few. I enjoy going to art museums and I really like works from Spanish painters. This admiration was inspired by a visit to a special exhibition which had several of Diego Velázquez’s paintings when I was in high school. My other interests are reading, listening to music, watching movies, and playing video games.

Research In David Lab: Determining the role of MUTY in autoimmune inflammatory diseases

Undergrad research: During my undergraduate studies, I worked in Dr. Nicholas Leadbeater’s lab at UCONN developing new synthetic methods using oxoammonium salts and studying the reactivity of oxoammonium salts.

RSS Science Daily News

  • Cough medicine turned brain protector? Ambroxol may slow Parkinson’s dementia July 6, 2025
    Ambroxol, long used for coughs in Europe, stabilized symptoms and brain-damage markers in Parkinson’s dementia patients over 12 months, whereas placebo patients worsened. Those with high-risk genes even saw cognitive gains, hinting at real disease-modifying power.
  • Multisensory VR forest reboots your brain and lifts mood—study confirms July 6, 2025
    Immersing stressed volunteers in a 360° virtual Douglas-fir forest complete with sights, sounds and scents boosted their mood, sharpened short-term memory and deepened their feeling of nature-connectedness—especially when all three senses were engaged. Researchers suggest such multisensory VR “forest baths” could brighten clinics, waiting rooms and dense city spaces, offering a potent mental refresh where […]
  • Pregnancy’s 100-million-year secret: Inside the placenta’s evolutionary power play July 6, 2025
    A group of scientists studying pregnancy across six different mammals—from humans to marsupials—uncovered how certain cells at the mother-baby boundary have been working together for over 100 million years. By mapping gene activity in these cells, they found that pregnancy isn’t just a battle between mother and fetus, but often a carefully coordinated partnership. These […]
  • New tech tracks blood sodium without a single needle July 6, 2025
    Scientists have pioneered a new way to monitor sodium levels in the blood—without drawing a single drop. By combining terahertz radiation and optoacoustic detection, they created a non-invasive system that tracks sodium in real time, even through skin. The approach bypasses traditional barriers like water interference and opens up potential for fast, safe diagnostics in […]
  • Defying physics: This rare crystal cools itself using pure magnetism July 6, 2025
    Deep in Chile’s Atacama Desert, scientists studied a green crystal called atacamite—and discovered it can cool itself dramatically when placed in a magnetic field. Unlike a regular fridge, this effect doesn’t rely on gases or compressors. Instead, it’s tied to the crystal’s unusual inner structure, where tiny magnetic forces get tangled in a kind of […]

Contact:

Dr. Sheila S. David
ssdavid@ucdavis.edu
(530)-752-4280

Department of Chemistry
One Shields Ave.
Davis, CA 95616