Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute President Shirley Ann Jackson to Speak at the Royal Academy of Engineering and Participate in 2013 World Economic Forum
Rensselaer Professor Jim Hendler – globally recognized
Web expert – also to present at WEF in Davos
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute President Shirley Ann
Jackson will deliver the annual ERA Foundation International
Lecture at the Royal Academy of Engineering in London on
January 22, 2013. She then travels to Davos, Switzerland to
participate in the 2013 World Economic Forum Annual
Meeting.
In the speech to the Royal Academy of Engineering titled
“The New Polytechnic: Collaboration and Leadership Across
Disciplines and Sectors to Address Urgent Global Challenges,”
President Jackson will urge a new way of working to harness the
power of science and technology – particularly in the arenas of
“Big Data,” high performance computing, and web science –
to find answers to the intersecting challenges of energy, food,
water, health, and national security, climate change, and
natural resource allocation, which are fundamental to our daily
lives and to the long term viability of the planet.
President Jackson, and World Wide Web expert and Rensselaer
Professor Jim Hendler will then join global leaders in
government, business, academe, media, and the arts who will
convene at the World Economic Forum 2013 Annual Meeting in
Davos, Switzerland. This year’s meeting, focusing on
“Resilient Dynamism,” will be held
Jan. 23 to 27.
President Jackson, a member of the WEF Science Advisory
Committee and the WEF-USA Board, will moderate a January 24th
session on “Global Supply Chain Resilience,” focusing on new
approaches in risk management.
Professor Hendler, head of the Computer Science Department
and a senior constellation professor in the Tetherless World
Constellation at Rensselaer, will participate in an IdeasLab
titled “Cyber Resiliency,” and on a panel titled “Science: The
Next Revolution.”
The World Economic Forum describes itself as “an independent
international organization committed to improving the state of
the world by engaging business, political, academic and other
leaders of society to shape global, regional and industry
agendas.” Discussions during this year’s meeting – themed
Resilient Dynamism, – will focus on (1) Leading
through Adversity: Building Resilient Institutions, Improving
Decision-Making, Strengthening Personal Resilience, (2)
Restoring Economic Dynamism: Achieving Inclusive Prosperity,
Rebuilding Economic Confidence, Unleashing Entrepreneurial
Innovation, and (3) Strengthening Societal Resilience:
Reinforcing Critical Systems, Sustaining Natural Resources,
Establishing Shared Norms
In an announcement of the meeting agenda, Klaus Schwab,
Founder and Executive Chairman, World Economic Forum said: “To
be resilient is to adapt to changing contexts, withstand sudden
shocks and recover from them while still pursuing critical
goals. We face a new reality of sudden shocks and prolonged
global economic malaise, particularly in major economies
experiencing economic austerity. Future growth in this new
context requires dynamism – bold vision and even bolder action.
Either attribute – resilience or dynamism – alone is
insufficient, as leadership in 2013 will require both; thus,
the theme of ‘Resilient Dynamism’.”
President Jackson said: "We gather at an important
inflection point both in the United States and around the
world. New technologies and other new tools make it more
possible and more essential for universities, businesses, and
governments, along with NGOs, to collaborate in new ways to
chart a sustainable path forward. Scientific discovery and
technological innovation are at the core of the solutions to
many of the great challenges and opportunities of our
time. Universities play a significant, though perhaps
under–recognized, role in generating the ideas and sparking the
innovations that drive the global economy and sustain our
security. The World Economic Forum’s annual meeting offers an
unparalleled opportunity to set the goals and enhance the
interconnections that can help strengthen our various and
collective institutions as we work to meet the challenges and
tap the opportunities before us.”
A theoretical physicist, Dr. Jackson has held senior
leadership positions in government, industry, research, and
academe. Her research and policy focus includes global energy
security and the national capacity for innovation, including
addressing what she has dubbed the “Quiet Crisis” of looming
gaps in the science, technology, and engineering workforce and
reduced support for basic research. Dr. Jackson was chairman of
the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission from1995 to 1999, and
currently is a member of the President’s Council of Advisors on
Science and Technology (PCAST), co-chairs the President's
Innovation and Technology Advisory Committee (PITAC), and is a
member of the U.S. Department of State International Security
Advisory Board (ISAB). She is a member of the British Royal
Academy of Engineering, the U.S. National Academy of
Engineering, the American Philosophical Society, and a Fellow
of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American
Physical Society, and the American Association for the
Advancement of Science (AAAS). She is a Regent of the
Smithsonian Institution, and a member of the Board of the
Council on Foreign Relations and The Brookings Institution. She
is a vice-chair of the Council on Competitiveness and
co-chaired its Energy Security, Innovation and Sustainability
initiative. She also is a member of the Board of
Directors of global companies including IBM and FedEx.
Professor Hendler, whose research seeks to expand the
utility of the World Wide Web, serves as an “Internet Web
Expert” for the U.S. government, providing guidance to the
Data.gov project. Hendler said, “When thinking about resiliency
and the Web one needs to understand that it is a
socio-technical construct — a technical network of computers
that affects a social network of people – two very different
networks. Currently we have a disconnect that needs to be
bridged to make the Web a safer place, as well as to understand
the societal effects of the Web.”
Professor Hendler is widely recognized as one of the
inventors of the semantic web; an extension of the World Wide
Web that enables computers to interpret the meaning and context
of words and numbers. This technology is being used to bring
informative databases to the Web in more searchable and usable
ways, according to Hendler. He earned a bachelor’s in computer
science and artificial intelligence from Yale University, a
master’s in cognitive psychology and human factors engineering
from Southern Methodist University, and a master’s and
doctorate in computer science and artificial intelligence from
Brown University. He is a fellow of the American Association
for Artificial Intelligence, the British Computer Society, the
IEEE, and the American Association for the Advancement of
Science. In 2002, Hendler was awarded a U.S. Air Force
Exceptional Civilian Service Medal.
About Rensselaer
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, founded in 1824, is the
nation’s oldest technological research university. The
university offers bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degrees in
engineering, the sciences, information technology,
architecture, management, and the humanities and social
sciences. Institute programs serve undergraduates, graduate
students, and working professionals around the world.
Rensselaer faculty are known for pre-eminence in research
conducted in a wide range of fields, with particular emphasis
in biotechnology, nanotechnology, computation and information
technology, the media arts and technology, and energy and the
environment. The Institute is well known for its success in the
transfer of technology from the laboratory to the marketplace
so that new discoveries and inventions benefit human life,
protect the environment, and strengthen economic
development.
For more information about Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
go to: http://www.rpi.edu/
For information about the Royal Academy of Engineering go
to: http://www.raeng.org.uk/
For information about the Royal Academy of Engineering’s
2013 ERA Foundation International Lecture go to:
http://www.raeng.org.uk/events/pdf/ERA_InternationalLecture2013.pdf
For information about the World Economic Forum’s 2013 Annual
Meeting go to: http://www.weforum.org/
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Published
January 21,
2013 |
Contact: Theresa Bourgeois
Phone: (518) 276-2840
E-mail: bourgt@rpi.edu |
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