| DBSP Home | DBSP Faculty Roster | DBSP Research Strengths |
| Grant Announcements | Achievements & Activities | Residency & Training Programs |
Roster
DBSP
Departments
VMRCVM![]() |
Thomas P. Caruso, MA, PhDDirector, Research Initiatives |
Dr. Caruso is building a research and development program in comparative genomics and biomedical informatics that will integrate basic and applied research with development and commercialization.
In addition to the comparative genomics, pharmacogenetics and biomedical informatics research program he is developing, Dr. Caruso also heads the Nonviolent Communicationsm (NVC) Research Workgroup (http://www.cnvc.org/nvc-research.htm) and collaborates with the Department of Sociology in the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences:
Dr. Thomas P. Caruso has been Director of Research Initiatives at the VA-MD Regional College of Veterinary Medicine at Virginia Tech for more than two years, has twenty years of experience in business and research program development, project management, financial planning and analysis, information systems design and development, and business process reengineering, plus a Masters Degree in Management from MIT and a Ph.D. in pharmacology from the University of Minnesota. In his job as Director of Research Initiatives, Dr. Caruso has led initiatives to win NIH funding for biodefense, graduate and post-doctoral training programs, and animal and laboratory facilities. Also, as adjunct professor with the Department of Biomedical Sciences and Pathobiology, Dr. Caruso has been developing his own research program in clinical and biomedical informatics and comparative genomics research (see below), giving lectures in an undergraduate pharmacology course, and serving on the University Intellectual Property Committee. Before his current position, Dr. Caruso was Program Development Manager at Virginia Tech for three years, and prior to that he was Industry Program Development Manager for four years. Prior to working at Virginia Tech, Dr. Caruso was Vice President of Marketing for a small software company. Prior to this he was Project Leader, Planning and Information Systems for the Financial Systems Division of National Computer Systems for five years. Between graduating from MIT and this position with NCS, he worked for four years as a consultant to small businesses and venture capital firms, developing companies in the telecommunications, health care, and software industries.