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MATTHEW DAVENPORT, PhD

PROGRAM MANAGER, BIOSCIENCES AND INFORMATICS

THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY APPLIED PHYSICS LABORATORY

Co-Chair, AOAC Stakeholder Panel on Agent Detection Assays

Matt is a Program Manager in Biosciences and Informatics at the Johns Hopkins University

Applied Physics Laboratory (JHU/APL) to include projects in personalized genomics, the

Microbiome, and functional biology. Matt also works in the areas of human performance and

austere medicine with military communities. Prior to JHU/APL, Matt was a Program Manager in

the Department of Homeland Security Science and Technology Directorate (DHS S&T) where he

established the DHS Public Safety Actionable Assay (PSAA) program and the Stakeholder Panel

for Agent Detection Assays (SPADA) to develop voluntary consensus standards for the

validation of biothreat detection technologies used by first responders and private-sector end

users. In addition to the PSAA program, Matt coordinated a number of bioinformatics efforts

including: the development of new databases and software to identify signatures that can be

used to specifically detect biothreat agents; sequencing strains of biothreats and their genetic

near-neighbors; and application of next generation sequencing to biothreat detection. He also

served on numerous interagency committees and co-chaired a working group under the

National Science and Technology Council that produced

A National Strategy for CBRNE

Standards

.

Matt joined DHS S&T as a Science and Technology Policy Fellow from the American Association

for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) where he worked in the same areas of biological

countermeasures. Prior to DHS, he was a postdoctoral fellow at both The Johns Hopkins

University School of Medicine and the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center studying the

biochemical mechanisms that control replication of the human genome and the repair of

genome when it becomes damaged. Matt earned his doctorate from the Department of

Microbiology and Immunology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a B.S. in

microbiology from North Carolina State University.