The IGERT Awards for 1998


 
PI NAME INSTITUTION PROPOSAL TITLE
Steven H. Strogatz Cornell University Program in Nonlinear Systems
Michael Tabor University of Arizona Multidisciplinary Training at the Interface of Biology, Mathematics and Physics

Steven H. Strogatz

 This Integrative Graduate Education and Research Training (IGERT) award will support the establishment of a multidisciplinary graduate training program in Nonlinear Systems that emphasizes common mathematical and theoretical ideas that find expression in the analysis of natural and engineering systems. This activity is a joint effort of thirty-six scientists and engineers from the Departments of Aerospace Engineering, Agricultural and Biological Engineering, Applied and Engineering Physics, Biometry, Chemical Engineering, Economics, Electrical Engineering, Geological Sciences, Management, Mathematics, Mechanical Engineering, Neurobiology and Behavior, Operations Research and Industrial Engineering, Physics, Physiology, and Theoretical and Applied Mechanics at Cornell University. Joining them are scientists, engineers, and business scholars from Morgan Stanley, SUNY Health Science Center, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Georgia Institute of Technology, Hewlett-Packard, and the Boyce-Thompson Institute. Members of this group of scholars have established research collaborations; their collective expertise will provide the intellectual underpinning for the training of a diverse cadre of some sixty graduate students over the five-year tenure of the award. Doctoral students in this IGERT activity will be admitted to one of Cornell's existing Graduate Fields and will take an integrated two-semester course in nonlinear science that includes both deterministic and stochastic mathematical methods, and explore applications in various disciplines. These students must also complete the Ph.D. requirements in their respective fields, take a minor in a different field, attend weekly colloquia and seminars, and complete a summer internship in a laboratory, hospital, Wall Street firm, or industrial setting as appropriate. The goal of the program is to educate students to be fluent in several disciplines and theoretical methodologies, all of which bear on the theme of nonlinear phenomena. IGERT is a new, NSF-wide program intended to facilitate the establishment of innovative, research-based graduate programs that will train a diverse group of scientists and engineers to be well-prepared to take advantage of a broad spectrum of career options. IGERT provides doctoral institutions with an opportunity to develop new, well-focussed multidisciplinary graduate programs that transcend organizational boundaries and unite faculty from several departments or institutions to establish a highly interactive, collaborative environment for both training and research. In this first year of the program, support will be provided to seventeen institutions for new or nascent programs that collectively span all areas of science and engineering supported by NSF.

Michael Tabor

 This Integrative Graduate Education and Research Training (IGERT) award will support the establishment of a broadly-based graduate training program at the interface of the biological, mathematical and physical sciences. The program, a joint effort of 21 faculty drawn from 9 departments and 2 national laboratories, will emphasize collaborative research on problems where the joining of mathematical and physical modeling with hands-on laboratory experimentation holds great promise. Particular areas of interest include arthropod evolution and population biology, cardiovascular physiology, image analysis, bacterial motion, physics of cell structures, and olfaction. Students enrolled in any of seven existing Ph.D. programs, will participate in a combination of existing and new courses, including a new three semester biomathematics seminar that will combine literature research, faculty-student group discussions and seminars by outside experts to explore topical problems. A new, biological physics laboratory course covering Brownian motion, membranes, biopolymers, chemotaxis and fluid dynamics will be required of all students. Students will be recruited through existing departmentally-based strategies, as well as special efforts sponsored directly by the graduate college. IGERT is a new, NSF-wide program whose goal is to sponsor the establishment of innovative, research-based graduate programs that will train a diverse group of new scientists and engineers to be well-prepared for varied careers in the private and public sectors. IGERT provides an opportunity for the development of new, well-focused multidisciplinary programs that bridge traditional organizational barriers, uniting faculty from several departments or institutions to establish a highly-interactive collaborative environment for both training and research. In its first year, the program will provide support to 17 institutions for new or nascent programs that collectively span all areas of science, engineering and mathematics eligible for support by the NSF.
 
 

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