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UCSD News: Computer Science, Neuroscience Faculty Win Sloan Research Fellowships
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- From: "Ramsey, Douglas" <>
- To: <>
- Subject: UCSD News: Computer Science, Neuroscience Faculty Win Sloan Research Fellowships
- Date: Tue, 28 Feb 2006 10:15:28 -0800
UCSD NEWS RELEASE
February 28, 2006
Media Contacts:
Doug Ramsey, Engineering, (858) 822-5825,
Kim McDonald, Science Communications, (858) 534-7572,
Doug Ramsey, Engineering, (858) 822-5825,
Kim McDonald, Science Communications, (858) 534-7572,
Sloan Foundation Awards
Prestigious Fellowships to Young UCSD Faculty in Computer Science and
Neuroscience
The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation has
awarded fellowships to 116 young faculty researchers, including two professors
at the University of California, San Diego. The prestigious Sloan Research
Fellowships are granted annually to young faculty who show “the most outstanding
promise of making fundamental contributions to new knowledge.”
The 2006 awards for UCSD went to
computer scientist Alin Deutsch and neuroscientist Lisa Boulanger. Other fields
benefiting from this year’s Sloan fellowships include chemistry, computational
and evolutionary molecular biology, economics, mathematics and
physics.
Lisa Boulanger joined UCSD in July
2004 as an assistant professor of biology in the Division of Biological
Sciences, but she is not new to the La Jolla campus: Boulanger received her
Ph.D. from UCSD in neurobiology in 1998. She received her bachelor’s degree in
marine biology from Boston University and her master’s degree in neurobiology
from Wesleyan University.
Alin Deutsch is an assistant
professor in the Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) department of UCSD’s
Jacobs School of Engineering. The Romanian-born academic received his Ph.D. from
the University of Pennsylvania in 2002 after earning his bachelor’s and master’s
degrees, respectively, from Bucharest Polytechnic University, and Germany’s
Technical University of Darmstadt.
Deutsch and
Databases
Professor Deutsch is a member of
CSE’s Database Group, and his research focuses on providing infrastructure for
publishing and consuming data on the Web, particularly by exploiting the
Extended Markup Language (XML). XML is the widely accepted standard for data
exchange among businesses on the Internet. It supports the integration of many
different types of data from many different sources. Deutsch has developed
computer algorithms to help a user query data without having to know exactly
where and in what format that data is stored.
“We have developed a system that
solves the problem of having to reformulate queries when you are dealing with an
organization’s proprietary data,” said Deutsch. “My ultimate goal is to make it
faster and easier to query collections of Web-distributed data sources that
combine XML and more traditional relational or semistructured
databases.”
Deutsch also builds high-level,
user-friendly tools to help data owners grasp the ramifications of granting
access to their data on the Web. In 2004 Deutsch was awarded a five-year NSF
CAREER grant for his work on XML middleware techniques for preserving privacy
when publishing databases. In June, he will co-chair WebDB 2006, the Ninth
International Workshop on the Web and Databases. At UCSD, he is affiliated with
the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology, and
the Center for Networked Systems, which recently began funding Deutsch’s project
to develop a Grid-based processor for XQuery, the World Wide Web Consortium’s
standard XML query language.
Boulanger and the
Brain
Professor Boulanger’s current
research at UCSD is focused on understanding the mechanistic relationships
between the nervous system and the immune system. It builds on a discovery that
she and colleagues made while she was a postdoctoral fellow at UC Berkeley and
Harvard Medical School that specific immune proteins also perform distinct,
non-immune functions in the brain.
These proteins—members of the major
histocompatibility complex class I—are known to play a key role in the adaptive
immune system, where they enable the body to identify and eliminate infected
cells. Boulanger and her colleagues found that they also “moonlight” in the
brain, where they are unexpectedly required for normal brain development as well
as adult brain modifications thought to underlie learning and
memory.
Boulanger and her UCSD students hope
to characterize further the role played in normal brain development and function
by major histocompatibility complex, class Iproteins. They also hope to
determine the molecular and cellular signaling used by these proteins in neurons
and to investigate how these proteins may be involved in specific neurological
disorders.
“The Sloan is a terrific fellowship,
in that it offers great flexibility in how the money can be used to support our
research,” says Boulanger. “We will probably use some of the award funds
to initiate new pilot studies that would be difficult or impossible to fund
through other mechanisms, enabling us to expand our research program into new,
unexplored topics.”
Sloan Research
Fellowships
Established in 1955, the Sloan
Research Fellowships program has grown in size and cost over the years, and but
its purpose remains the same: to stimulate fundamental research by early-career
scientists and scholars of outstanding promise. In most cases, the fellowships
go to academics during their first faculty appointments to help them set up
laboratories and establish their independent research projects.
The Sloan funds can be applied to a
wide variety of uses for which other, more restricted funds such as research
project grants cannot usually be employed. Financial assistance at this crucial
point, even in modest amounts, often pays handsome dividends later to society,
according to the Sloan Foundation.
More than 500 nominations
are scrutinized each year to arrive at a final selection of 116 Sloan Research
Fellows. Thirty-two fellows have gone on to become Nobel Laureates.
Note to Editors: High-res image of
Professor Alin Deutsch available on request to Engineering media contact
above.
###
- UCSD News: Computer Science, Neuroscience Faculty Win Sloan Research Fellowships, Ramsey, Douglas, 02/28/2006
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