Two Health Sciences Researchers Are Among Pitt’s New American Academy of Arts and Sciences Members

April 24, 2024

The American Academy of Arts and Sciences announced the election of its new members, and five inductees from the University of Pittsburgh are among the distinguished honorees. Two of the five—Yuan Chang and Patrick S. Moore—are Pitt Health Sciences faculty members.

The academy is a beacon of excellence and leadership across a wide range of disciplines with a mission to unite leaders and innovators from every field of human endeavor. Its current membership includes more than 250 Nobel and Pulitzer Prize winners, and American Academy of Arts and Sciences has honored leaders like Benjamin Franklin, Martin Luther King Jr., Madeleine Albright and Jonas Salk, Pitt legend and leader of the creation of the polio vaccine.

The Pitt leaders and scholars joining the prestigious list are: 

  • Chancellor Joan Gabel, 19th leader of the University, vice chair of the Council on Competitiveness, chair of the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities Council of Presidents and board member of the American Council on Education and Fulbright Council for International Exchange of Scholars. 
  • Jeffrey L. Brodsky, Avinoff Professor of Biological Sciences, who leads the Center for Protein Conformational Diseases. His research, in part, focuses on understanding how drugs and genetic approaches can correct defects in protein architecture. 
  • Elizabeth Arkush, an anthropology professor and archaeologist who has been conducting research in the Peruvian Andes since 1999. She examines war and violence and their connections to political authority, community and ideology. 
  • Yuan Chang is the Distinguished Professor of Pathology, American Cancer Society research professor and UPMC Professor of Cancer Virology. She coleads the Chang-Moore Lab and Cancer Virology Program with Moore, her husband. The lab identified two of the seven known human tumor viruses: Kaposi’s sarcoma-associated herpesvirus and Merkel cell polyomavirus, which is associated with one of the most aggressive skin cancers found in humans. 
  • Patrick S. Moore is the Distinguished Professor of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, American Cancer Society research professor and Pittsburgh Foundation Professor of Innovative Cancer Research. He coleads the Chang-Moore Lab and Cancer Virology Program with Chang, his wife. 

The inductees will be honored in September during ceremonies in Cambridge, Massachusetts.