Goldstein was elected a fellow of AAAS in 2013, received the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill IPIT award for clinical services in 2012, and was a recipient of one of the first seven nationally awarded Royal Society / Wolfson research merit awards in the UK for his work in human population genetics. New genes for epileptic encephalopathies as part of the Epi4K Consortium.Discovery of NGLY1 deficiency as a new syndrome in collaboration with Vandana Shashi, Anna Need, and others.Identification of ATP1A3 as the gene responsible for Alternating Hemiplegia of Childhood in collaboration with Erin Heinzen and others.The role of IL28B in response to treatment for Hepatitis C infection in collaboration with John McHutchison and others.The Goldstein group and collaborators have discovered a number of disease causing genes and syndromes, in particular in neurological and infectious diseases including: Goldstein's primary research interests include human genetic diversity, the genetics of disease, and pharmacogenetics. Borne Professor of Medical and Surgical Research at Columbia University Medical Center where he serves as the Director of Institute for Genomic Medicine. In 2005, Goldstein became the Richard and Pat Johnson Distinguished University Professor of Genetics, Microbiology, and Biology at Duke University. He served as the Wolfson Professor of Genetics, University College London from 1999 to 2005. Career įrom 1996 to 1999, Goldstein was a lecturer at University of Oxford. He then trained in theoretical population genetics at Stanford University (PhD 1994), where he worked with Marcus Feldman and Luca Cavalli Sforza. Goldstein received a Bachelors in biology from the University of California, Los Angeles.