CSDMS organization: Difference between revisions

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Adding Katherine Anarde as CoChair HD group
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===Guillermo Auad===
===Elowyn Yager===
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'''Member, Steering Committee'''<br>Guillermo Auad, Senior Research Coordinator<br>Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement<br>US Department of the Interior<br>Email: [mailto:Guillermo.Auad@bsee.gov Guillermo.Auad@bsee.gov]
'''Member, Steering Committee'''<br>Elowyn Yager, Professor<br>University of Idaho<br>Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering<br>Email: [mailto:eyager@uidaho.edu eyager@uidaho.edu]
|valign="top" |Guillermo is a senior research coordinator for the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement at the Department of the Interior. He earned his PhD in Oceanography at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, in 1995. He then became a faculty at Scripps and an adjunct Professor of Oceanography at Palomar College. While at Scripps’ Climate Research Division, he combined observational and modeling results to investigate dynamical and climatic problems on scales ranging from a few days for coastal processes to interdecadal variability for basin-scale phenomena. In 2008 Guillermo’s seminar on Climate Change aired on public television to a potential audience of 27 million households in the US. More recently, he was one of the US Government lead reviewers of the IPCC report, and a contributing author to the National Climate Assessment. Prior to his arrival at BSEE, Guillermo was a Senior Advisor at the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, where he focused on the management of different research projects, having spearheaded national and international partnerships. More recently he has focused on using socio-ecological systems to address management, policy and governance issues through resilience-thinking. Since 2013 he has been collaborating with the White House Office of Science Technology and Policy to improve the coordination of environmental research in the Arctic region. Guillermo has been part of the CSDMS Steering Committee since 2012.
|valign="top"| Elowyn is a Professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and a co-director of the Center for Ecohydraulics Research (CER) at the University of Idaho. She obtained her BS in Geology in 1998 from SUNY Buffalo and PhD in Geology in 2006 from UC Berkeley. Elowyn’s research primarily focuses on fluvial geomorphology including sediment transport, bedrock erosion, ecohydraulics, river morphodynamics, and nutrient transport. Her work combines numerical modeling, laboratory flume experiments, and field measurements to answer fundamental questions about process mechanics and applied questions about river management. Elowyn was appointed to the CSDMS Steering Committee during June of 2024.
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===Kadidia Thiero===
===Pedro Val===
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'''Member, Steering Committee'''<br>Kadidia Thiero<br>SOARS Program Lead, University Corporation for Atmospheric Research<br>Boulder, CO<br>Email: [mailto:thiero@ucar.edu thiero@ucar.edu]<br>
'''Member, Steering Committee'''<br>Pedro Val<br>Assistant Professor, Queens College, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences<br>New York, NY<br>Email: [mailto:pval@qc.cuny.edu pval@qc.cuny.edu]<br>
|valign="top" |Education Advocate, Kadidia Thiero leads and manages the Significant Opportunities in Atmospheric Research and Science (SOARS) Program and affiliated efforts aimed at increasing diversity in the atmospheric sciences. SOARS is designed to support students from backgrounds, traditionally under-represented in the geosciences, to enter and succeed in graduate school and STEM careers. Prior to SOARS, Ms. Thiero served as Outreach Coordinator for the NOAA Center for Atmospheric Sciences (NCAS); a multi-institution Cooperative Science Center, led by Howard University. She managed and supported all K-12 programs, and coordinated the undergraduate summer internship program (USIP); as well as NCAS’ national high school weather camp, CAREERS, in the summer.  Kadidia graduated from Howard University with a BA in Spanish Language and Literature; and received her MA in Latin American Studies from the Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. Kadidia accepted the responsibility to serve as a member of the CSDMS Steering Committee in April, 2020.
|valign="top" |Pedro is an Assistant Professor of Tectonics and Landscape Evolution at the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences at CUNY Queens College. His research focuses on landscape evolution in multiple spatial and temporal scales using cosmogenic nuclides and numerical models. Pedro investigates the topographic and river network response to tectonic, climatic, and lithologic changes. Pedro is also interested in how landscape evolution influences biodiversity and in the coevolution of landscape and life in the Amazon region.  
He accepted the responsibility to serve as a member of the CSDMS Steering Committee in June, 2024.
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===Boyana Norris===
===Jonathan Gilligan===
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'''Member, Steering Committee'''<br>Boyana Norris<br>University of Oregon<br>Department of Computer and Information Science<br><br>Email: [mailto:norris@cs.uoregon.edu norris@cs.uoregon.edu]<br>Tel: 541-346-4413<br>
'''Member, Steering Committee'''<br>Jonathan Gilligan<br>Vanderbilt University<br>Department of Earth & Environmental Sciences<br><br>Email: [mailto:jonathan.gilligan@vanderbilt.edu jonathan.gilligan@vanderbilt.edu]<br>Tel: 615-322-2976
|valign="top" |Boyana Norris received her Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2000. She joined Argonne National Laboratory as a postdoctoral researcher in 1999 and is currently a computer scientist in the Mathematics and Computer Science Division. She is actively involved in three main areas of research: scientific component software development, automatic differentiation (AD), and performance modeling and tools. She has been involved in the Common Component Architecture Forum since 1999, focusing on the development of components for adaptive linear system solution, as well as leading the component infrastructure usability effort and participating in component specification definition. In the area of automatic differentiation, the main focus is on the development of robust tools for the differentiation of C and C++ codes, and a modular design and implementation of automatic differentiation tools, enabling rapid AD algorithm development and reuse of differentiation strategies by front-ends for different programming languages. In the area of performance modeling and optimization, Boyana is performing research on performance bounds modeling and source analysis tools for estimating performance bounds of C and C++ code. She is also developing annotation-based empirical performance tuning tools, as well as component infrastructure for managing performance experiments and data. She has authored or co-authored over 50 publications and co-edited a volume on automatic differentiation. Boyana's interest in CSDMS centers on the application of component technology to (1) provide consistent interfaces to software developed within CSDMS and (2) ensure that the component software infrastructure and tools meet the needs of CSDMS researchers. Boyana accepted the responsibility to serve as a member of the CSDMS Steering Committee in September, 2009.
|valign="top"|Jonathan Gilligan is Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences, and Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Vanderbilt University. They are director of Vanderbilt’s interdisciplinary Grand Challenge Initiative on Climate and Society. Gilligan received their Ph.D. in Physics from Yale University. In 1994, Gilligan joined Vanderbilt’s Department of Physics and Astronomy, where they applied physics to material science, biology, and medicine, later becoming the Robert T. Lagemann Assistant Professor of Living State Physics. In 2003 they joined Vanderbilt’s newly-established Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, where they collaborate on interdisciplinary research into interactions between human behavior, society, and environmental change. They are principal investigator on a National Science Foundation grant to study how the adoption of clean energy, electric vehicles, and broadband telecommunications affects urban and rural communities in the Southeastern United States. Other recent research projects include studying the role of the private sector in regulating greenhouse gas emissions, studying water-conservation policies in U.S. cities, studying interactions between climate change, land use, and rural agricultural communities in Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, and applying machine-learning methods to studying gentrification and its impacts on inequalities in mobility and access to public transport. Jonathan accepted the responsibility to serve as a member of the CSDMS Steering Committee in June, 2024.
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!{{H13}}|Previous SC Members
!{{H13}}|Previous SC Members
!{{H13}}|Period served
!{{H13}}|Period served
|-
|Dr. Guillermo Auad
| 2013 - 2024
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|Dr. Kadidia Thiero
| 2019 - 2024
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|Dr. Boyana Norris
| 2007 - 2024
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|-
|Dr. Marcelo Garcia
|Dr. Marcelo Garcia

Latest revision as of 08:59, 8 July 2024

CSDMS Executive Committee

The Executive Committee (executive committee chair, steering committee chair and the working group chairs) is the primary decision-making body of the CSDMS, and meets twice a year to provide guidance to the Integration Facility, approve the annual project management plan, advise on major activities, review partnerships, and address other day-to-day issues that arise in the running of the CSDMS. The Executive Committee also develops the By-Laws and Operational Procedures, to be approved by the Steering Committee. The Executive Committee develops and implements the 5-year Strategic Plan.

The Executive Committee further:

  1. Reviews proposals from Working Groups for development that are within the priorities of the Annual Science Plan and CSDMS mission;
  2. Ensures that CSDMS develops and maintains the capability to support collaborative proposals;
  3. Reviews the ongoing CSDMS business operations through regular meetings, teleconferences, AccessGrid sessions, electronic mail, etc.
  4. Ensures scientific progress in multiple areas of landscape-basin evolution (LBE) by providing the computational infrastructure needed for improved modeling;
  5. Ensures the connection of LBE research with related scientific thrusts of scientific computing and Geoinformatics through the establishment of strategic partnerships, and
  6. Ensures transparency of governance and intellectual involvement of community via reasonable criteria for partner membership and a mechanism that allows community input.



CSDMS Steering Committee

The CSDMS Steering Committee (SC) is comprised of 9 members: 8 selected by the EC to represent the spectrum of relevant Earth science and computational disciplines, and 1 selected by Partner Membership. The cognizant NSF program officer or his/her designate, and the Executive Director or his/her designate, serve as ex officio members of the SC. During SC meetings, there may be occasions when these ex officio members would exclude themselves from discussions.

The Steering Committee meets once a year to assess the competing objectives and needs of the CSDMS; will comment on the progress of CSDMS in terms of science (including the development of working groups and partner memberships), management, outreach, and education; and will comment on and advise on revisions to the 5-year strategic plan. The Steering Committee will provide a report to the Executive Director at the close of its meeting, to which s/he will respond within two weeks.