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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="52688" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/postdocs/posts/52688">
<Title>Resources: Faculty Portfolios</Title>
<Tagline>Sharing based on July 8, 2015 seminar</Tagline>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><div>The following resources were compiled to supplement the "Developing a Faculty Portfolio" seminar, designed for postdocs.  </div><em><div><em><br></em></div>Resources: </em><div><br></div><div>UC Berkeley - Academic Hiring: <a href="https://career.berkeley.edu/PhDs/PhDhiring" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">https://career.berkeley.edu/PhDs/PhDhiring</a></div><div><br></div><div>Perspective on how search committees think: <a href="https://dynamicecology.wordpress.com/2013/09/19/advice-how-north-american-faculty-position-search-committees-work/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">https://dynamicecology.wordpress.com/2013/09/19/advice-how-north-american-faculty-position-search-committees-work/</a></div><div><br></div><div>UCLA Faculty Diversity and Development: </div><div><a href="https://faculty.diversity.ucla.edu/resources-for/search-committees/search-toolkit" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">https://faculty.diversity.ucla.edu/resources-for/search-committees/search-toolkit</a></div><div><br></div><div>Rice University ADVANCE Program - Search committee insight: </div><div><a rel="nofollow external" class="bo">file:///C:/Users/Renetta/Downloads/Search%20Committees%20NIFP%202010.pdf</a></div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div><strong>FEATURE PAPER: Job Hunting: </strong></div><div><a href="http://www.ala.org/acrl/sites/ala.org.acrl/files/content/conferences/confsandpreconfs/national/2011/papers/job_hunting.pdf" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">http://www.ala.org/acrl/sites/ala.org.acrl/files/content/conferences/confsandpreconfs/national/2011/papers/job_hunting.pdf</a></div><div>(The feature thumbnail image for this post is in this paper.)</div><div>Example of an error: </div><div><em>" ... adding </em><em>the line “references on request” when specific references </em><em>and contact information were requested, providing </em><em>incorrect or outdated contact information for </em><em>the references."</em></div><div><em><br></em></div><div><em><br></em></div><div><em><br></em></div><div><span>Serving on a search committee: </span></div><div><a href="https://www.insidehighered.com/advice/2015/02/06/essay-what-abd-can-gain-serving-search-committee" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">https://www.insidehighered.com/advice/2015/02/06/essay-what-abd-can-gain-serving-search-committee</a></div><div><em> "</em><em>Departmental fit was the key to success."</em></div><div><em><br></em></div><div>Texas A&amp;M - Special report on the academic job search; what search committees wish you knew:</div><div><a href="http://anthropology.tamu.edu/images/Special_Report_Academic_Jobs.pdf" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">http://anthropology.tamu.edu/images/Special_Report_Academic_Jobs.pdf</a></div></div>
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<Summary>The following resources were compiled to supplement the "Developing a Faculty Portfolio" seminar, designed for postdocs.      Resources:     UC Berkeley - Academic...</Summary>
<Website>http://my.umbc.edu/groups/postdocs/events/33033</Website>
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<Tag>faculty</Tag>
<Tag>jobs</Tag>
<Tag>postdocs</Tag>
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<Sponsor>Office of Postdoctoral Affairs</Sponsor>
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<PostedAt>Tue, 07 Jul 2015 23:56:22 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="52687" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/postdocs/posts/52687">
<Title>Postdocs invited to the PROMISE Summer Success Institute</Title>
<Tagline>Saturday, August 15, 2015</Tagline>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">Postdocs are invited to attend the annual PROMISE Summer Success Institute at the Hotel at Arundel Preserve, Saturday, August 15, 2015. There will be a breakout session specifically for Postdocs, professors, and professionals (PP&amp;P), with mentor-coaches from North Carolina State University, Princeton, and other institutions. There will be a focus on preparing for a faculty career during this session. The website is here: <div><br></div><h5><a href="https://promiseagep.wordpress.com/2015/03/31/promise-summer-success-institute-ssi-august-15-2015/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">https://promiseagep.wordpress.com/2015/03/31/promise-summer-success-institute-ssi-august-15-2015/</a></h5><div><br></div><div>Please register. </div></div>
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<Summary>Postdocs are invited to attend the annual PROMISE Summer Success Institute at the Hotel at Arundel Preserve, Saturday, August 15, 2015. There will be a breakout session specifically for Postdocs,...</Summary>
<Website>https://promiseagep.wordpress.com/2015/03/31/promise-summer-success-institute-ssi-august-15-2015/</Website>
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<Tag>postdocs</Tag>
<Tag>promise</Tag>
<Tag>ssi</Tag>
<Group token="postdocs">Office of Postdoctoral Affairs</Group>
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<Sponsor>Office of Postdoctoral Affairs</Sponsor>
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<PostedAt>Tue, 07 Jul 2015 23:15:00 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="52683" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/postdocs/posts/52683">
<Title>Preparing Faculty Portfolios - Wednesday, July 8, 10 AM</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">Please plan to attend this short session, designed to provide information to prepare you for next steps in your career.<div><br></div><div><a href="http://my.umbc.edu/groups/postdocs/events/33033" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">http://my.umbc.edu/groups/postdocs/events/33033</a></div></div>
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<Summary>Please plan to attend this short session, designed to provide information to prepare you for next steps in your career.    http://my.umbc.edu/groups/postdocs/events/33033</Summary>
<Website>http://my.umbc.edu/groups/postdocs/events/33033</Website>
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<Group token="postdocs">Office of Postdoctoral Affairs</Group>
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<Sponsor>Office of Postdoctoral Affairs</Sponsor>
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<PostedAt>Tue, 07 Jul 2015 16:02:58 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="52659" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/postdocs/posts/52659">
<Title>Curtis Menyuk, CSEE, Wins Humboldt Research Award</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><p>Curtis Menyuk, computer science and electrical engineering, won the prestigious Humboldt Research Award. The award is granted by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation to scholars who have made a significant contributions to their discipline and plan to continue cutting-edge research.</p><p>Menyuk’s research concentrates on optical and photonic systems, including optical fiber communications and switching, solid state device simulations, and nonlinear optics. In 2013, he received the IEEE Photonics Society Streifer Award, another major international award. Menyuk said, “I was delighted and very honored receive this award.  It is really a tribute to UMBC and the members of my research group, past and present, since the award recognizes the 30 years of work that my group has carried out at UMBC.  The link that this award will create between UMBC and the Max-Planck Institute for Light in Erlangen, Germany — one of the world’s leading institutes in optics and photonics — will be of great benefit to UMBC’s students and other researchers.”</p><p><em>This story is reposted from </em><span><em><a href="https://umbcinsights.wordpress.com/2015/04/10/curtis-menyuk-csee-wins-humboldt-research-award/">https://umbcinsights.wordpress.com/2015/04/10/curtis-menyuk-csee-wins-humboldt-research-award/</a></em></span></p></div>
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<Summary>Curtis Menyuk, computer science and electrical engineering, won the prestigious Humboldt Research Award. The award is granted by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation to scholars who have made a...</Summary>
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<Group token="research">Archived RCA News</Group>
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<Sponsor>Office of the Vice President for Research</Sponsor>
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<PostedAt>Mon, 06 Jul 2015 11:28:42 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="52623" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/postdocs/posts/52623">
<Title>Institutional Biosafety Committee (IBC)</Title>
<Tagline>What you need to know when using biohazardous materials</Tagline>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><p><span>The
    University of Maryland, Baltimore County Institutional Biosafety Committee
    (IBC) has been approved by the </span><a href="http://osp.od.nih.gov/office-biotechnology-activities" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><span>NIH Office of Biotechnology Activities. </span></a>The IBC is responsible for ensuring
    that all recombinant DNA <span>or
    synthetic nucleic acid molecules</span>research as well as research with
    transgenic animals and biohazardous materials (such as bacterium, fungi, algae,
    potential infectious agents and select agents) conducted at UMBC and sponsored
    by external/internal funding be performed in compliance with the <a href="http://osp.od.nih.gov/sites/default/files/NIH_Guidelines.html" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">NIH
    Guidelines</a> and with proper concern for the safety
    of research personnel, the environment, and the surrounding communities.</p>
    
    <p> </p>
    
    <address><span>Below are important items to consider when working
    with the IBC:</span></address>
    
    <address><span> </span></address>
    
    <address><span>Prior to working with any of the materials
    mentioned above, an investigator </span>must submit an application form to the IBC and
    follow committee approval before any research begins.  <span>Information
    on IBC procedures application forms can be accessed using the following link: (</span><a href="http://research.umbc.edu/biosafety-institutional-biosafety-committee/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><span>http://research.umbc.edu/biosafety-institutional-biosafety-committee/</span></a><span>).</span></address>
    
    <p> </p>
    
    <p>It is also the
    responsibility of the investigator to ensure that the staff listed on the
    protocol have sufficient knowledge and are sufficiently trained and documented
    to safely perform the responsibilities for which they have been assigned.  Information on biosafety training and
    training registration can be accessed using the following link: (<a href="http://research.umbc.edu/education-training/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><span>http://research.umbc.edu/education-training/</span></a>).<span></span></p>
    
    <address>The UMBC IBC meets quarterly or as required by the
    IBC Chair.  Submission of IBC applications to<span> </span><a href="mailto:compliance@umbc.edu" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><span>compliance@umbc.edu</span></a><span> </span>by the below deadlines will
    ensure a more efficient review of your registration.  The meeting schedule for the 2015-16 academic
    year is as follows:</address>
    
    <p> </p>
    
    <p>The IBC will
    meet:       
                 
           Applications must be submitted to ORPC no later
    than:</p>
    
    <p> </p>
    
    <p>September
    16, 2015                                     
    <strong>August 1, 2015</strong></p>
    
    <p>December
    9, 2015                                         <strong>November
    1, 2015</strong></p>
    
    <p>March 16,
    2016                                            
     <strong>February 1, 2016</strong></p>
    
    <p>June 15, 2016                                                 <strong>May
    1, 2016</strong></p>
    
    <p> </p>
    
    <p>For further information and assistance in preparing IBC
    applications, please contact us at 5-2737 or <a href="mailto:compliance@umbc.edu" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">compliance@umbc.edu</a>.</p>
    
    <p> </p>
    
    <p> </p>
    
    <p> </p></div>
]]>
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<Summary>The University of Maryland, Baltimore County Institutional Biosafety Committee (IBC) has been approved by the NIH Office of Biotechnology Activities. The IBC is responsible for ensuring that all...</Summary>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="52618" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/postdocs/posts/52618">
<Title>Export Control update - FBI travel guidance</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><span>The FBI recently released travel guidance for faculty and students planning to</span><span> travel outside the U.S. or  to study abroad.  This guidance is aimed at</span><span> protecting academic research and to ensure the safety of students and faculty while traveling. For more information, please click on </span><span><a href="http://research.umbc.edu/export-control-and-travel-2/#travelguide" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">http://research.umbc.edu/export-control-and-travel-2/#travelguide</a> or contact the ORPC at <a href="mailto:compliance@umbc.edu." rel="nofollow external" class="bo">compliance@umbc.edu.</a></span></div>
]]>
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<Summary>The FBI recently released travel guidance for faculty and students planning to travel outside the U.S. or  to study abroad.  This guidance is aimed at protecting academic research and to ensure...</Summary>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="52474" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/postdocs/posts/52474">
<Title>High performance computing REU Site program sets new records</Title>
<Tagline>Students from across US work w/ high profile clients at UMBC</Tagline>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><div>UMBC's unique undergraduate research summer program in high performance computing just hit a new record: enrolling 33 students from across the nation with funding over $350,000. Supported by the NSF, NSA, and DoD—in response to national needs—this eight-week <a href="http://hpcreu.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) Site program</a> combines training in scientific, statistical, and parallel computing with research in math and statistics applications. </div><div><span><br></span><div>Matthias Gobbert, mathematics, and Nagaraj Neerchal, statistics, serve as program directors, with Bradford Peercy, mathematics, and Kofi Adragni, as co-PIs.</div><div><br></div><div>The program began in summer 2010 with eight participating students. This summer's participants include eight Meyerhoff Scholars from UMBC, plus students from universities like George Washington, UNC Chapel Hill, Bucknell, Penn State, Rutgers and Washington University in St. Louis.</div></div><div><span><br></span></div>
    <div class="embed-container"><iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/FO38SdaPNdQ" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen="webkitAllowFullScreen" mozallowfullscreen="mozallowfullscreen" allowFullScreen="allowFullScreen">[Video]</iframe></div><div><br></div><span>Students work in teams on projects brought in by high caliber researchers from academia and industry, including clients like the University of Maryland School of Medicine, NIH, U.S. Census Bureau, and ParaTools, Inc. Their work includes using a 240-node supercomputer worth $1.5 million.</span></div>
]]>
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<Summary>UMBC's unique undergraduate research summer program in high performance computing just hit a new record: enrolling 33 students from across the nation with funding over $350,000. Supported by the...</Summary>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="52416" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/postdocs/posts/52416">
<Title>The Sum of the Parts</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><div><p><em>By Andrew Myers</em></p><p>From the Apple Watch to Fitbit, the rage in technology these days is all about wearable, touchable devices. Tech gurus and cutting-edge engineers talk of a day when all the many electronic devices that surround us will be networked together in a magical electrical collaboration that will change how we live our daily lives. Many of these devices, if not all, will be controlled by touch.</p><p><a href="https://umbcmagazine.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/sp15_lt-sum-parts_first.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="https://umbcmagazine.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/sp15_lt-sum-parts_first.jpg?w=470" alt="sp15_LT-Sum-Parts_first" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a><br></p><p>Some have taken to calling this vision the “Internet of Things,” but others have begun to believe even that grandiose thinking may be too narrow. The “Internet of Everything” is more accurate, they say.</p><p>Unfortunately, for millions of people who are paralyzed or challenged by neuromuscular diseases, that vision of an “everything” Internet may be largely (and literally) out of reach.</p><p>The myriad touch-based interfaces that are filling, and will continue to fill, our world will be lost on them. And so, too, will the ability to control their lives and, perhaps, the dream of an independent life.</p><p>Buz Chmielewski is one of those people. At seventeen, a surfing accident confined him to a wheelchair. His legs no longer worked, but Chmielewski retained some movement in his arms and hands.</p><p>Putting that “Internet of Everything” into play for Chmielewski and others like him is what motivates a team of UMBC engineers working together as the ECLIPSE Cluster.</p><p>“Ironically, these are exactly the people who need these devices most of all, but they won’t be able to access or control the electronics that surround them if they can’t use a touch device,” says <strong>Nilanjan Banerjee</strong>, an assistant professor of computer science and electrical engineering at UMBC. “We’re trying to give them that control of their lives.”</p><p>Indeed, the numbers of those who need such help navigating new technologies are bigger than most would imagine. In the United States alone, some 1.5 million people are hospitalized yearly just from spinal injuries, strokes, and traumatic brain injuries.</p><p>So the researchers who make up the ECLIPSE Cluster are designing and building devices that will provide greater facility of use of electronics and other technology.   They are collaborating with willing partners like Chmielewski and other researchers – including those at the University of Maryland, Baltimore – to find out if they work and how they can be improved.</p><p>With his fellow professors of engineering <strong>Ryan Robucci</strong> and <strong>Chintan Patel</strong>, and a group of eager students, Banerjee is imagining ways that the highly connected world of tomorrow and designing products today that could vastly improve the lives of people like Chmielewski.</p><h3>MANUFACTURING TOUCH</h3><p>The touchscreens and touch-based wearables at the heart of technological innovation don’t work very well for people with motor control issues.</p><p>Touchscreens are too rigid and too fragile for many of these users on a day-to-day basis and they are too sensitive to inadvertent motions to be practical for people with motor control problems.</p><p>“We’re working on touchless gestural devices that use sensors similar to what is used in your smartphone to control household electronics,” says Banerjee. “But in our case, the hand or arm only needs to be in the vicinity of the pad, not actually on it, for the sensor to detect the motion.”</p><p><a href="https://umbcmagazine.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/sp15_lt-sum-parts_touch1.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="https://umbcmagazine.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/sp15_lt-sum-parts_touch1.jpg?w=470" alt="sp15_LT-Sum-Parts_touch" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a><br></p><p>So why not use flexible fabric-based touch interfaces? The ECLIPSE researchers observe that while this technology solves the first two issues, it raises a third one. These interfaces require direct and repeated contact with the fabric, which can cause abrasions from the constant rubbing, often without notice to users who may lack sensation in the extremities.</p><p>“These abrasions can become severe, so we really wanted a device that did not require the user to make physical contact,” Robucci says.</p><p>Working closely with Sandy McComb Waller, an associate professor of physical therapy and rehabilitation science at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, the ECLIPSE Cluster has designed and developed a fabric integrated with sensors that can read a person’s slightest gesture.</p><p>The ECLIPSE device is unassuming in appearance. It looks like a simple patch of fabric about the size of an electric heating pad. Woven into the fabric, however, is a grid of electrically conductive threads that can sense the changing electrical charge when a human hand or finger passes close by.</p><p>In engineering terms, these are known as capacitive sensors. They work in a way similar to the touchscreen technologies in smartphone and tablet computers, but they don’t require the user to physically touch the screen.</p><p>“In this case, close is more than good enough,” Banerjee says.</p><p>Such controllers might one day be integrated into bed sheets, pillows, wheelchair pads, or clothing. Their potential uses? Manipulate light switches, televisions, thermostats, or even make a 911 call. Virtually any electronic device, even a computer, could be controlled from this one device.</p><h3>TRAINING THE DEVICE</h3><p>The flexible fabrics hold many advantages over their glass-screened cousins. First off, they conform to practically any surface without any loss of sensitivity. A user could wear it over a knee one day, on a forearm the next, and the device would work the same. No rigid glass touchscreen could ever be so versatile.</p><p><a href="https://umbcmagazine.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/sp15_lt-sum-parts_training.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="https://umbcmagazine.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/sp15_lt-sum-parts_training.jpg?w=470" alt="sp15_LT-Sum-Parts_training" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a><br></p><p>Second, the ECLIPSE device is trainable. “We started out with predefined gestures, but the people we are designing for have limited range of motion and most have limited motor control, so they didn’t like it. It was too difficult for everyone to learn the same motions,” Robucci says.</p><p>Instead, the ECLIPSE team recalibrated. They began designing algorithms that help the users record their own gestures and to tell the computer what the gestures mean.</p><p>“Sometimes, a user is capable of only a finger twitch, but we can even map those motions to specific instructions. People will be able to control the devices around them with the slightest of movements,” Banerjee says.</p><p>Best of all, perhaps, the ECLIPSE sensors are ultra-low power and extremely affordable, costing just 5 to ten cents per device to produce.</p><p>Down the road, Banerjee talks of forward-looking applications that will help not only those with physical challenges, but just about everyone on the planet.</p><p>“You could imagine putting these sensors in car seats, where a driver might be falling asleep at the wheel or distracted looking at a smartphone. Our capacitors can be embedded to detect whole body motion: Is the driver facing the road? Is he is on a phone? Is she falling asleep?” Banerjee explains. “Instead of an Internet of Everything, we’ll have an Internet of Everyone.”</p><p>Banerjee adds that these or similar systems based on similar technologies also could be deployed in life-saving situations, such as in cribs to detect breathing patterns that could prevent Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), a mysterious killer in which infants simply stop breathing in their sleep.</p><h3>GETTING END RESULTS</h3><p>Things are beginning to blossom for ECLIPSE, especially as researchers and funders outside the close-knit UMBC community to begin take note of their work and invest in it.</p><p>Last August, the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health placed a big bet on their work, seeding the group with a $650,000, three-year grant to fuel their research. TEDCO, a program sponsored by the State of Maryland to facilitate transfer and commercialization of technology flowing out from the state’s research labs, soon followed with an additional $150,000. Microsoft Research and its “Lab of Things” rapid prototyping program are also supporters of the ECLIPSE work.</p><p>Robucci says that one key to the success of the ECLIPSE Cluster and its researchers are their focus – and capacity – to see the big picture and make it happen within their own lab. Banerjee is the software expert. Robucci focuses on analog to digital signal processing that turns the real world into data a computer can understand. And Patel is a chipmaker – an expert in very large-scale integrated circuits. The goal of ECLIPSE is to build end-to-end cyber-physical systems.</p><p>“We’re working on complete systems here, not on individual components,” observes Robucci, “so we have to be able to imagine the end result – the product – and then work at all levels…to design and optimize the components and algorithms to make it a reality.”</p><p><a href="https://umbcmagazine.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/sp15_lt-sum-parts_last.jpg" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img src="https://umbcmagazine.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/sp15_lt-sum-parts_last.jpg?w=470" alt="sp15_LT-Sum-Parts_last" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a><br></p><p>Though ECLIPSE began as a loose affiliation of like-minded engineers, it is quickly growing into something more – an incubator of ideas and solutions to some of the most challenging questions of the day.</p><p>“If you’re working alone you often think, ‘Can I do this? Is this possible?’ and then you have to find the answers on your own,” Robucci says, “but at ECLIPSE we’re sort of all-inclusive. If you ask the same question, someone else has the answer, ‘Yeah, we could do that.’”</p><p>Banerjee agrees: “I couldn’t do it alone, and neither could Ryan or Chintan. Each of us brings unique and important expertise to the equation and the sum is greater than the parts. It’s as if you added three individuals together and you end up as four.”</p></div><div><br></div>(Reposted from <a href="https://umbcmagazine.wordpress.com/2015/04/19/the-sum-of-the-parts/">https://umbcmagazine.wordpress.com/2015/04/19/the-sum-of-the-parts/</a>)</div>
]]>
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<Summary>By Andrew Myers  From the Apple Watch to Fitbit, the rage in technology these days is all about wearable, touchable devices. Tech gurus and cutting-edge engineers talk of a day when all the many...</Summary>
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<Sponsor>Office of the Vice President for Research</Sponsor>
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<Title>Turning the Tides</Title>
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<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><div><p>Even as a teenager, Lorraine Remer was fascinated by weather, tides and currents. At UMBC, she has made a career forging those key elements of climate into compelling research and a new business.</p><p>Remer, who is now a research faculty member in physics and at UMBC’s Joint Center for Earth Systems Technology (JCET), recalls jumping at the chance to participate in the Mariners – a branch of the Girl Scouts launched in the early 1930’s focused on the sea and maritime sciences.</p><p>Eventually Remer’s interest in these forces and their effect on our environment led her to enroll in the atmospheric science program at the University of California, Davis, where she first obtained a B.S. and then her Ph.D. in the discipline. “I was looking for an environmental science that was hard science,” she says.</p><p>Discovering the precise mathematical language to create weather maps or accurate pictures of the sky also impressed Remer. “The fact that you could represent what was going on in the atmosphere with math equations was just amazing,” Remer recalls.</p><p>Math’s simplicity is a boon that allows scientists to describe very complex things succinctly, she observes: “It takes a lot of words to describe the movement of a fluid, but I can write an equation and do it very simply. It’s elegant.”</p><p>Her continuing interest in the interactions between air and sea led Remer to the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego to research and obtain a master’s degree in that field as well.</p><p>In 1991, Remer was hired at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, working as the protégé of legendary NASA scientist Yoram Kaufman.</p><p>Remer’s interest in the effects of aerosols on climate mirrored those of Kaufman, and she worked with him on algorithm development for the aerosol products on the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) sensors carried on the Terra and Aqua satellites. The MODIS sensors provide key environmental data on the health of our climate.</p><p>Kaufman’s untimely death in 2006 was one factor in Remer’s decision to leave government service and take a position with UMBC at JCET in 2011. Another factor was her desire to become more involved in the entrepreneurial side of research. Remer’s first job in the private sector was at a Sacramento-based company called Atmospheric Research and Technology, and she had always been impressed by the example of Ed Berry, who successfully started the company at the height of a recession in the 1980s and actually created jobs with research.</p><p>Joining JCET has allowed Remer to follow in Berry’s footsteps and do something that had been on her mind for a long time – start a company. Her business, AirPhoton, was started with co-founder and fellow UMBC researcher Vanderlei Martins, professor of physics. Not only does it design aerosol sampling instruments, but it also provides customized instrument design, satellite data analysis, and remote sensing algorithm development.</p><p>Remer’s work at UMBC isn’t all business, however. Her research interests at JCET remain rooted in her early love of climate science. She is particularly interested in the interplay between man-made land surface changes and particles in the atmosphere.</p><p>“I think it’s really interesting,” she muses, “the effect people have – and have had – on this planet.”</p><p><em>– Nicole Ruediger</em></p></div><div><br></div>(Reposted from <a href="https://umbcmagazine.wordpress.com/umbc-magazine-spring-2015/discovery-spring-2015/#anchortides">https://umbcmagazine.wordpress.com/umbc-magazine-spring-2015/discovery-spring-2015/#anchortides</a>)</div>
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<Summary>Even as a teenager, Lorraine Remer was fascinated by weather, tides and currents. At UMBC, she has made a career forging those key elements of climate into compelling research and a new business....</Summary>
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<Sponsor>Office of the Vice President for Research</Sponsor>
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<PostedAt>Wed, 24 Jun 2015 13:52:10 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="52414" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/postdocs/posts/52414">
<Title>A Continuum of Care</Title>
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<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><h6>UMBC Center for Aging Studies researchers receive $1.4 million grant for work to enhance the well-being of older adults.</h6><h6><br></h6><p>There are nearly 5,000 adult day care centers in the United States, but estimates from several health organizations make the case there should be at least double that number. Why is there such demand for these facilities and how are they different from other assisted living centers for older adults?</p><p><strong>Robert Rubinstein</strong> and a team of researchers from UMBC’s <strong>Center for Aging Studies</strong> (CAS) recently received a $1.4 million grant from the National Institute on Aging for the study “Adult Day Services (Adult Day Care): Cultural Contexts and Programming Effects.” Rubinstein, professor of sociology and anthropology, director of the Center for Aging Studies, and principal investigator for the study, says the goal is to understand how adult day services (ADS) programming affects clients’ health and well-being, something that hasn’t been examined closely before.</p><p>“If you imagine care for older people on a continuum, is it better for somebody to stay alone in their home all day, or is it better for them to go out to some kind of group that does activities?” Rubinstein says.</p><span>Adult day care centers are facilities that provide services for adults who need assistance during the day so they are able to continue living at home. There are three models of care provided at ADS centers: medical, social, and mixed care, with everything ranging from an on-site nurse taking blood pressure and administering lipid screenings to gaming activities for clients.</span><p>The Center for Aging Studies plans to study six ADS facilities throughout Maryland to better understand the daily life of clients and their families, to inform service providers, consumers, policymakers, and health care professionals of the benefits and concerns that affect quality of life and care in ADS centers.</p><p>“It’s apparent…if you even spend ten minutes in one of these facilities, the people there for the most part love it and it really brings them out of their shells. Part of that social relationship that they have with other people really is a cognitive function to get their minds active and invested in something,” Rubinstein observes.</p><p>The CAS team of researchers is using ethnographic research methods to observe and interact with clients and staff at adult day care centers to gain an understanding of what takes place on a daily basis. A second phase of the research will involve more formal interviews with a set of guiding questions to further understand the benefits and effects of programming and decision-making at ADS centers for clients, families, and staff.</p><p>The ADS project, which is a four-year study, is one of more than 20 multi-year studies, totaling over $20 million in funding, that the Center for Aging Studies has conducted since 1997. Recent projects include “Autonomy in Assisted Living” and “The Subjective Experience of Diabetes among Urban Older Adults.” Faculty and staff conduct this interdisciplinary research through close collaboration with graduate and undergraduate students who are committed to furthering a comprehensive approach to the study of aging.</p><p>A major overarching goal of the center is to demystify aging and help people realize that older adulthood is an important stage of life. Rubinstein reflects, “For me, the reason I do this work is that it’s so important that we come to know older people<em>as people</em> because there’s so much unconscious discrimination.” This ongoing challenge motivates Rubinstein and the new generation of aging researchers he is training through his center’s ongoing work.</p><p>(5/14/2015)</p><p>(Reposted from <a href="http://umbc.edu/window/aging_studies_research">http://umbc.edu/window/aging_studies_research</a>)</p></div>
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<Summary>UMBC Center for Aging Studies researchers receive $1.4 million grant for work to enhance the well-being of older adults.     There are nearly 5,000 adult day care centers in the United States, but...</Summary>
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<Sponsor>Office of the Vice President for Research</Sponsor>
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