Jenniffer Sobeida | Education | Research Excellence Award

Dr. Jenniffer Sobeida | Education | Research Excellence Award

Jenniffer Sobeida | Universidad Estatal De Milagro | Ecuador

Dr. Jenniffer Sobeida Moreira Choez is an active researcher at the Universidad Estatal de Milagro, Ecuador, with a growing academic footprint reflected in 89 Scopus citations, 20 documents, and an h-index of 6. Her research primarily focuses on digital transformation, emotional development, machine learning applications in education, user satisfaction in financial systems, and the intersection of technology with human behavior. She has contributed to areas such as digital wallets adoption, emotional competencies in postgraduate students, and data-driven approaches that enhance learning and decision-making. Dr. Moreira Choez possesses strong research skills in quantitative analysis, machine learning integration, applied behavioral studies, and interdisciplinary methodological design. Her ability to blend technology with human development themes showcases her diverse analytical and conceptual strengths. She has been recognized for her contributions through academic visibility, influential publications, and collaborative research with international co-authors, demonstrating her commitment to impactful scholarly work. Her awards and honors reflect her influence in emerging research domains and her dedication to advancing knowledge in digital behavior and educational innovation. Overall, Dr. Jenniffer Sobeida stands out as a dynamic researcher whose contributions continue to support technological advancement, academic growth, and evidence-based practices that elevate user experience and human development across sectors.

Profiles: Scopus | ORCID | Google Scholar | Web of Science

Featured Publications

1. Mendoza, V., & Moreira, J. (2021). Procesos de Gestión Administrativa, un recorrido desde su origen. Revista Científica FIPCAEC, 6(3), 608–620.
Citations: 258

2. Mera-Plaza, C. L., Cedeño-Palacios, C. A., Mendoza-Fernandez, V. M., & Moreira, J. (2022). El marketing digital y las redes sociales para el posicionamiento de las PYMES y el emprendimiento empresarial. Revista Espacios, 43(03), 27–34.
Citations: 185

3. Choez, J. S. M., Cedeño, R. A. B., & Cedeño, V. C. C. B. (2021). Aprendizaje significativo: una alternativa para transformar la educación. Dominio de las Ciencias, 7(2), 915–924.
Citations: 160

4. Choez, J. S. M., Bazurto, D. C. P., & Zambrano, D. P. C. (2022). Los tipos de familia y su incidencia en el rendimiento académico de los estudiantes de educación básica. REFCalE: Revista Electrónica Formación y Calidad Educativa.
Citations: 67

5. Mendoza-Fernández, V. M. M., Choez, J. S. M., & Plaza, C. L. M. (2022). Influencia de la gestión administrativa en el desarrollo organizacional de las instituciones de educación superior. Revista Publicando, 9(34), 31–40.
Citations: 59

Hugh Sampson | Medicine | Best Researcher Award

Dr. Hugh Sampson | Medicine | Best Researcher Award

Professor of Pediatrics | Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai | United States

Dr. Hugh A. Sampson, MD, is a distinguished physician-scientist and pediatric immunologist best known for his pioneering contributions in food allergy and immunopathogenesis, and is currently the Kurt Hirschhorn Professor of Pediatrics and Director Emeritus of the Jaffe Food Allergy Institute at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. He earned a B.A. in Biology from Hamilton College in 1971, then obtained his M.D. from SUNY Buffalo in 1975, followed by a pediatric residency at Northwestern University / Children’s Memorial Hospital and an allergy/immunology fellowship at Duke University (1978–1980). Over his career, he has held leadership roles including chairing the Section on Allergy & Immunology of the American Academy of Pediatrics, serving as past President of AAAAI, holding editorial board positions in leading allergy/immunology journals, and directing national food allergy research consortia. His research interests encompass the pathogenesis of food-induced anaphylaxis, the molecular and immunologic characterization of allergenic food proteins and epitopes, genetics and immune regulation in food allergy, development of precision diagnostics (e.g. epitope-specific IgE/IgG4 profiles), and immunotherapy strategies (oral, epicutaneous, sublingual, and biologics such as anti-IgE) as well as novel therapeutic approaches. His research skills include translational and clinical trial design, immunologic assays (e.g. epitope mapping, serologic biomarkers), mechanistic in vitro and in vivo models, bioinformatics integration, large cohort epidemiologic and registry studies, and mentoring interdisciplinary teams. Among his many awards and honors are election to the National Academy of Medicine (Institute of Medicine) in 2003, the Brett Ratner Award from the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Distinguished Scientist Award of AAAAI, memberships in honorary societies (Alpha Omega Alpha, Sigma Xi), and repeated recognitions from Research.com as a top immunology scientist. According to his institutional profile, his h-index (based on Scopus/Pure) is listed at ~85,982 (which appears anomalous and may reflect internal counting metrics), while bibliometric sources more conservatively report an h-index of ~147 with over 800+ publications; traditional citation counts exceed 100,000 across his work. In conclusion, Dr. Sampson’s career exemplifies a remarkable integration of basic immunology and clinical translation: his leadership, mentorship, and sustained high-impact scholarship have shaped the modern field of food allergy research, spawning diagnostic and therapeutic innovations and training generations of investigators in allergy and immunology.

Profiles: Scopus | ORCID 

Featured Publications

  1. Rose, N. R., Milisauskas, V., & Sampson, H. A. (1975). Species-specific tissue antigens. III. Immunological relationships of enzymic antigens in various species. Clinical and Experimental Immunology, 20, 359–370.

  2. Sampson, H. A., & Buckley, R. H. (1981). Human IgE synthesis in vitro: A reassessment. Journal of Immunology, 127, 829–834.

  3. Rich, K. C., Sampson, H. A., Edwards, N. L., & Fox, I. H. (1981). Familial hypogammaglobulinemia with variable serum immunoglobulins: Concordance with lymphocyte ecto-5′-nucleotidase deficiency. American Journal of Diseases of Children, 135, 795–798.

  4. Sampson, H. A., Walchner, A., & Baker, P. (1981). Recurrent pyogenic infections in individuals with absence of the second component of complement. Journal of Clinical Immunology, 2, 39–45.

  5. LoGalbo, P. R., Sampson, H. A., & Buckley, R. H. (1982). Symptomatic giardiasis in three patients with X-linked agammaglobulinemia. Journal of Pediatrics, 101, 78–80.