Savoie to Lead Radiology Informatics
Radiology Faculty Awarded $3.6 Million NIBIB Grant
Brett Byram, Ph.D.
Brett Byram, Ph.D., is a graduate of Vanderbilt University, and earned his Ph.D. in biomedical engineering from Duke University. Prior to joining the Vanderbilt faculty in 2013, he worked at Siemen’s Ultrasound Business Unit, Jorgen Jensen’s Center for Fast Ultrasound in Lyngby, Denmark, and at Duke University. Dr. Byram is the director of Biomedical Elasticity and Acoustic Measurement Laboratory (The BEAM Lab), which is part of the Vanderbilt Biomedical Engineering Department and Vanderbilt Institute of Surgery and Engineering (VISE) and is affiliated with the Vanderbilt University Institute of Imaging Science (VUIIS). He also holds a secondary faculty appointment in the Department of Radiology and Radiological Sciences. His primary research interests include medical ultrasound, signal processing, elasticity imaging, and ultrasonic imaging and beamforming.
Caitlin Moon, M.A., J.D.
Caitlin "Cat" Moon is the Director of Innovation Design for the Program in Law and Innovation (PoLI) at Vanderbilt Law School. In this role, she works with PoLI colleagues to design the curriculum for both the JD program and the PoLI Institute, which provides interactive training in legal innovation to practicing lawyers and legal professionals. She also co-founded and produces the Summit on Law and Innovation (SoLI), which brings together experts across legal, technology, and other disciplines in collaborative legal innovation projects.
Professor Moon currently teaches Legal Problem Solving, which is a course in human-centered design for law, as well as the Business of Law and Blockchain and Smart Contracts. In addition to her role at Vanderbilt, Professor Moon works with law firms, legal departments, and law schools globally to bring a human-centered design perspective to re-imagining the delivery of legal services and legal education. She regularly speaks and facilitates workshops across the United States and Europe on the application of human-centered design and creativity to realizing innovation in both the legal profession and legal education.
With a deep interest in the intersection of law and blockchain technology, Professor Moon founded Ledger.Law, a consultancy providing companies and law firms with counsel on blockchain related to regulation, policy, and legal structure.
Before joining Vanderbilt Law School's faculty and founding Ledger.Law, Professor Moon provided legal counsel and strategic guidance to start-up companies throughout her 20 years of legal practice in Nashville. Professor Moon also is a co-organizer of the Music City Legal Hackathon, sponsored by PoLI and part of the global Legal Hackers community, which brings together legal professionals, technologists, designers, and other professionals to create technology solutions to provide access to legal services.
Radiology Grand Rounds | Nov. 15, 2019
Moon Appointed Secondary Faculty in Radiology
Stephanie Spottswood, M.D., MSPH
Stephanie Spottswood, M.D., MSPH, is a Vanderbilt University Emerita Professor of Radiology. She practiced pediatric radiology at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt for 13 years, and served as the Department of Radiology’s first Associate Vice Chair for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion.
She received her undergraduate degree from the University of Michigan, Master of Science Degree in Public Health from the University of North Carolina, and her M.D. from the University of North Carolina. After completing her radiology residency at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in 1991, she completed her fellowship training in pediatric radiology at the Medical College of Virginia in 1992.
Dr. Spottswood is a diplomate of the American Board of Radiology and holds Certificates of Added Qualification in both nuclear radiology and pediatric radiology; as such, she is one of a few pediatric nuclear medicine specialists in the country. She has clinical and research interests in Pediatric Gastrointestinal Nuclear Scintigraphy.
In her role as the Department of Radiology’s Associate Vice Chair for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, she established programs to increase the representation of women and minority trainees in the Department of Radiology, and to promote a culturally diverse, inclusive and welcoming environment for trainees, faculty and staff, while facilitating the provision of culturally competent care to a diverse patient population. A diplomate of the Cook-Ross Everyday Bias Train-the-Trainer Workshop, she is one of the initial 13 Unconscious Bias trainers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, whose charge is to train faculty, trainees and staff at the institution in unconscious bias. Dr. Spottswood is widely recognized for her role in the professional development of women. She is co-author of two peer-reviewed articles on the subject of female faculty career development: A Female Faculty Development Program for Radiology, JACR 2016; 13(6): 716-718; and A Leadership Intervention to Further the Training of Female Faculty (LIFT-OFF) in Radiology, Acad Radiol 2017; 24:709–716.
Her passion is mentorship of younger women and underrepresented minorities, to provide guidance for achieving success in the academic medical and medical educational environment. She received the 2016 Margaret Cuninggim Women’s Center Mentoring Award, as well as Faculty Achievement Awards from the Vanderbilt University Minority Faculty organization in 2012, 2014 and 2015. In 2017, she received the Levi Watkins, Jr Faculty Award for her work in Diversity and Inclusion. In 2017, Dr. Spottswood developed goals for the Society for Pediatric Radiology’s (SPR) diversity initiative, and became the inaugural Co-Chair of the SPR’s Committee on Diversity and Inclusion.
Dr. Spottswood retired from clinical practice in 2018, but maintains close ties with the Vanderbilt community as a mentor, teacher, and unconscious bias trainer. She also continues to speak on topics of diversity and inclusion regionally, nationally and internationally.