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Rensselaer Research Leader Francine Berman Will Transition to New Effort To Aid Global Efforts on Data-Driven Innovation
Berman Will Continue To Serve as Tenured
Professor While Focusing on International Efforts in the Data
Community
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Vice President for Research
Francine Berman will transition from her current position to
expand her efforts within the research data community, while
remaining at the Institute as a tenured computer science
professor. An international leader in digital data, she will
help develop global initiatives to accelerate data-driven
innovation from her position as full professor in the
Rensselaer School of Science, effective July 1.
Berman transitions to her new role at a time when “Big
Data” and data-driven research are becoming a national
priority, and her expanded efforts in the data community
represent an exciting opportunity for her, and for the
Institute. Her ongoing efforts in the data community as well as
her recent appointment as co-chair of the National Academies
Board on Research Data and Information and her service as
former co-chair of the U.S. and United Kingdom Blue Ribbon Task
Force on Sustainable Digital Preservation and Access will add
strength to the Rensselaer Information Technologies and
Computational Science and Engineering signature research
thrust.
“Since joining Rensselaer in 2009, Dr. Berman has continued
to enhance our approach to interdisciplinary research that we
have built between research disciplines at all levels of the
institution, from undergraduates to endowed faculty, and with
our partnerships in government and industry,” said Rensselaer
President Shirley Ann Jackson. “Under Dr. Berman’s leadership,
the research productivity and research infrastructure of
Rensselaer has grown.”
Berman transitions at a time when new international
organizations are being formed, such as the DataWeb Forum, an
organization to facilitate the exchange and interoperation of
scientific data across disciplines and national boundaries.
This new forum is designed to give the broad global community
an opportunity to join in the discussion on the future of
scientific data.
“I am excited about emerging plans for the DataWeb Forum, an
IETF-style organization for the data community,” Berman said.
“This and other community efforts will provide needed
coordination for the data community and will help accelerate
data-driven innovation.”
One of the leading voices behind the creation of the DataWeb
Forum, Chris Greer of the Information Technology Lab at the
National Institute of Standards and Technology, welcomed
Berman’s decision to focus on data innovation.
“Fran Berman is already well known for her leadership as a
data evangelist in the U.S. We’re excited that she is
expanding her efforts to the international community,”
said Greer. “Harmonizing global science data
infrastructure in the way that networks are harmonized to
create the Internet can drive discovery, innovation, and
education across the U.S. and around the world.”
Prior to joining Rensselaer in 2009 and during her time at
the Institute, Berman has been a leader in her profession. In
addition to her past role on the international blue ribbon data
task force and her new role with the National Academies Board
on Research Data and Information, she has served on a broad
spectrum of national and international leadership groups. These
include: the National Science Foundation Engineering Advisory
Committee, the National Institutes of Health NIGMS Advisory
Committee, the Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology
Board of Trustees, and the Networking and Information
Technology Research and Development (NITRD) Review Working
Group of the U.S. President’s Council of Advisors on Science
and Technology (PCAST).
Berman is 2013 chair of the Information, Computing and
Communication Section (Section T) of the American Association
for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), and vice-chair of the
Anita Borg Institute Board of Trustees. For her
accomplishments, leadership, and vision, Berman was recognized
by the Library of Congress as a “Digital Preservation Pioneer,”
as one of the top women in technology by BusinessWeek
and Newsweek, and as one of the top technologists by
IEEE Spectrum.
Berman is a fellow of the Association of Computing
Machinery (ACM) and a fellow of the IEEE. In 2009, she was the
inaugural recipient of the ACM/IEEE-CS Ken Kennedy Award for
“influential leadership in the design, development, and
deployment of national-scale cyberinfrastructure.”
Prior to joining Rensselaer, Berman was professor in the
University of California-San Diego (UCSD) Department of
Computer Science and Engineering, and first holder of the High
Performance Computing Endowed Chair in the Jacobs School of
Engineering there. From 2001 to 2009, Berman served as director
of the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC), where she led a
staff of more than 250 interdisciplinary scientists, engineers,
and technologists. Berman is one of the two founding principal
investigators of the National Science Foundation’s TeraGrid
project, and also directed the National Partnership for
Advanced Computational Infrastructure (NPACI), a consortium of
41 research groups, institutions, and university partners with
the goal of building national infrastructure to support
research and education in science and engineering.
Berman is a native of California, and earned her bachelor’s
in mathematics in 1973 from the University of California, Los
Angeles. She went on to earn her master’s and doctorate in
mathematics from the University of Washington. She began her
teaching career at Purdue University in 1979, and joined UCSD
in 1984.
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Published
June 19,
2012 |
Contact: Mark Marchand
Phone: (518) 276-6098
E-mail: marchm3@rpi.edu |
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