Françoise Soussaline

Françoise Soussaline (née Yerouchalmi) is a French biophysicist and businesswoman, a specialist in cell imaging.

She studied physics at the Pierre and Marie Curie University and completed a PhD in molecular spectroscopy in 1973. She began her career as a researcher at Inserm, where she was involved in the development of the first digital scanner in nuclear medicine. She then joined the Frédéric-Joliot hospital department of the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission where she developed Positron emission tomography locally as part of a second thesis in biophysics completed in 1984 at the University of Paris-Sud under the direction of Nobel Prize winner Georges Charpak. She became associate professor in Physics and Medical Biophysics at the Pierre and Marie Curie University and the University of Paris-Sud.[1]

In 1985, she founded the company IMSTAR, which designs, develops and markets automated imaging systems for life-sciences research and diagnostic tests for genetic disorders and cancers.[1][2]

Between 2007 and 2009, she was vice-president of the fr:Pôles de compétitivité en Île-de-France fr:Medicen (Medicen [business] competition clusters in the Île-de-France region). She is also a member of the supervisory board of the Paris Region Innovation Centre.[1][3]

She is an active supporter of equality for women in science. She has been part of the association fr:Femmes et Sciences since its creation in 2000 and promotes science as a career choice amongst girls in secondary schools.[1]

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