Laurie J. Scovell

Battelle

Papers

2

Total Citations

11

H-Index

2

About

Laurie J. Scovell is a researcher whose work sits at the intersection of laboratory automation, immunoassay development, and biological evaluation of therapeutic compounds. Operating primarily in the early 1990s, Scovell contributed to the emerging field of robotic and automated laboratory systems, most notably through the development of a robotic immunoassay system designed for the analysis of detergent enzymes — a methodological advancement that garnered 9 citations and reflected the growing interest in high-throughput, reproducible analytical techniques during that era. Complementing this work, Scovell also contributed to the automation of mammalian cell bioassays aimed at evaluating immunomodulator analogs with potential therapeutic applications, demonstrating a keen interest in bridging laboratory efficiency with drug discovery and immunological research. Though Scovell's published citation record is focused, the thematic cohesion of these contributions — marrying robotics with biological and biochemical assay systems — speaks to a forward-thinking approach that anticipated the large-scale automation now commonplace in pharmaceutical and biotechnology research environments. Scovell's work represents an early chapter in the story of laboratory automation's integration into life sciences research.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

2
H-Index
2
Papers
11
Total Citations
6
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
A robotic immunoassay system for detergent enzymes
9 citations · 1994
📈 Most Prolific Year: 1994 (2 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 10
🏛 Institutions: Battelle

Top Papers

  1. 1
  2. 2

Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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