Zinaida Good, PhD Parker Bridge Fellow and Instructor Biography Zinaida Good is an instructor and a PICI Bridge Fellow working at the interface between systems biology and cancer immunotherapy at Stanford University. Dr. Good’s research with Crystal L. Mackall, MD, and Sylvia K. Plevritis, PhD, focuses on investigating why CAR T-cell therapies succeed or fail in patients; they recently identified CAR T regulatory cells as a correlate of progression and reduced toxicity following CD19-CAR therapy for large B-cell lymphoma. Dr. Good’s work includes four first-author papers, 12 co-authored papers and two patent applications. Her academic potential has been recognized by prestigious postdoctoral fellowships — PICI Scholar 2018 and Stanford Cancer Institute 2020 — and she was named an Arthur and Sandra Irving Cancer Immunology Fellow in 2022. As a 2023 PICI Bridge Fellow, Dr. Good is preparing to launch an independent research program with a long-term goal of understanding and enhancing engineered cellular immunotherapies for patients with cancer. Dr. Good holds a PhD in computational and systems immunology from Stanford University, where she trained with Garry P. Nolan, PhD, and Sean C. Bendall, PhD. Her background is in immunology (BS and MS from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver) and oncology (she worked for two years in discovery oncology at Genentech). View Dr. Good’s YouTube Short. Education & Training Present: Stanford University, Stanford, CA, Instructor 2018-2023: Stanford University, Postdoc, Systems Biology / Immunology 2018: Stanford University, Stanford, CA, PhD, Computational & Systems Immunology 2012: UBC, Vancouver, BC, Canada, MS, Microbiology & Immunology 2008: UBC, Vancouver, BC, Canada, BS, Microbiology & Immunology Awards & Honors 2023: Parker Bridge Fellow 2022: Arthur and Sandra Irving Cancer Immunology Fellow 2022: NK and Irene Cheung Family Scholar, Keystone Symposia 2020: Stanford Cancer Institute Fellow (for 2020-2021) 2019: Best Q1 2019 Paper (1 of 3 papers selected), Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy 2019: Abstract Achievement Award, American Society of Hematology 2018: Keystone Symposia Scholarship 2017: Parker Scholar (for 2018-2020) 2017: CYTO Image Analysis Challenge finalist, International Society for Advancement of Cytometry 2016-2018: Stanford Biosciences Travel Grant (3 times), Stanford Biosciences Student Association 2016-2017: CYTO Student Travel Award (2 times), International Society for Advancement of Cytometry 2016: CYTO Exceptional Student Award finalist, International Society for Advancement of Cytometry 2012-2013: Featured Wikipedia Editor (2 times) 2011: 4th place in the ImmunoVancouver speed poster competition, Vancouver, BC, Canada 2011: 1st place in the DARPA Shredder Challenge: “All Your Shreds Are Belong to Us” team member 2009: 2nd place in the Life Sciences Institute junior poster competition, UBC, Vancouver, BC, Canada 2008: Graduate Entrance Scholarship, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada 2007: Delegate to WithinSight national leadership conference: awards from the University of British Columbia and Queen’s University (Canada) 2004-2008: Dean’s Honor List (8 times), University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada 2003: Ontario Scholar, ON, Canada 2003: 2nd place in a local Sir Isaac Newton Math contest, Newmarket, ON, Canada 2003: 1st place in a local Sir Isaac Newton Physics contest, Newmarket, ON, Canada 2002-2003: Headmaster’s Honor List (3 times), Pickering College, Newmarket, ON, Canada 2001: 3rd place in the Ural Regional English contest, Yekaterinburg, Russia 2001: 2nd place in the Ural Regional Math contest, Yekaterinburg, Russia