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Diversity in Science

Diversity in Science

Juan Restrepo in his classroom

Former musician, aspiring surfer, mathematician: Juan Restrepo, a life of diversity

By Katharine de Baun

Juan M. Restrepo, Mathematician

Some of the most interesting lives don’t move forward in a straight line. Mathematician Juan M. Restrepo thought he would spend his life as a professional musician, for example, until he stepped into an advanced math class and never looked back. Recently, he shared reflections on his life and work, including why a diverse, interdisciplinary approach is critical to his research.

You recently won the SIAM (Society of Industrial and Applied Math) Geosciences Career Prize for your outstanding contributions to the field of computational geoscience. Can you explain what computational geoscience is?

There are three ways to do science: theoretically, experimentally (this includes observation/field work) and computationally. Most scientific results now combine all three modalities. The award I received acknowledges the impact I’ve had in applied mathematics, specifically in developing new computational tools that make it feasible to pursue geoscience problems that were not amenable to existing computational tools. These tools allow us to tackle new and challenging questions in the field.

What are some of those new and challenging questions?

How to model and make predictions about massively complex systems like Earth’s climate or financial markets. Typically, in these systems, knowing something about each element in isolation is extremely helpful but doesn’t automatically lead to an understanding of the system as a whole. Complex systems have many degrees of freedom (as well as variables that cannot be precisely pinned down). So we are seeking ways to eke out a low dimensional representation of the system that either explains the basic mechanism behind the complex behavior, and/or enables us to capture the complexity with a smaller (usually finite-dimensional) number of degrees of freedom--all the while taking into account the consequences of uncertainties in the physics and its parameters.

I have also proposed new quantitative tools and techniques for improved forecasting, particularly in highly unstable systems like the weather and extreme or rare events like droughts and deluges. I have worked on statistical representations of high dimensional systems that then yield more manageable proxies of the full system. I have worked on tools that try to help us look into the near future and answer questions like “How warm is it getting?” or “What are the trends in today’s financial data?”

What makes this work so difficult?

For one, we don’t have a full understanding of a lot of things in isolation, let alone as interacting elements in larger systems. The types of problems I focus on have lots of small things that interact with each other and these, in turn, interact as groups in different ways.

To illustrate, I’ll use a problem that my student Dallas Foster, my collaborator Matthew Sottile and I are working on. The problem relates to how a collective group of ants react to certain environmental conditions. In a colony of tens of thousands of ants, the behavior of each ant requires a huge number of degrees of freedom to describe. One might think that understanding everything about each individual ant and understanding how each individual ant interacts would lead to answers on how a large collection of ants respond to their environment (never mind the fact that each individual ant would demand a whole library-worth of information). The traditional thing to do is to formulate a model for the large-scale behavior and forgo the small scale. But it turns out that there is only a very tiny number of problems for which one can generate a model of the group while ignoring small-scale interactions or individual agents. The collective ant case is representative of a myriad of problems where small scales cannot be ignored.

But it turns out that there is only a very tiny number of problems for which one can generate a model of the group while ignoring small-scale interactions or individual agents. The collective ant case is representative of a myriad of problems where small scales cannot be ignored.

In response to this type of problem, we are working on formulating a population model with a manageable number of degrees of freedom that reasonably describes the collective behavior, but does not ignore critical aspects of small-scale interactions of the ants or individual ants. The ‘dimension reduction’ we want to effect does not ignore critical small-scale interactions. Instead, the small-scale interactions are ‘upscaled’ so that they affect the collective, without requiring specific knowledge of the small scale. We will need to create a special type of statistics that allows us to ‘filter’ the small scale to get the collective effect of small-scale interactions at the larger scales of the group behavior.

You are so interdisciplinary – with multiple appointments across colleges in the Departments of Statistics, Electrical Engineering, Computer Science and Physical Oceanography. Is an interdisciplinary approach necessary to the questions you study?

A salient characteristic of my research output is that I tightly combine physics, mathematics, computation and data in the tools I develop. Hence, for me interdisciplinary exploration is necessary. A word of caution is in order, however. Although academia now considers interdisciplinary research a good thing, in practice, this modality of investigation is not suited for everyone. It can be career suicide for some, in fact.

Why? What are the dangers?

If you don’t achieve expertise in any particular subject, it can lead to not getting tenure, not getting grants, and not being perceived as “scholarly” enough. In academia, you are rewarded for developing mastery and this should be unique: this is what we call expertise. And without expertise, you risk not being consequential. Most commonly, without enough depth in a core discipline, you risk discovering something that's already known, or, worse yet, rediscovering something and doing a worse job at it.

So I advise my students to be aware of what their strengths are, what they’d like to work on, and then think strategically about how to get there. Some are more comfortable being specialists, and that’s fine. Applied mathematics, applied statistics and applied computer science are good homes for people with diverse interests, as they grapple with a variety of archetypical computational problems which are common to many engineering and science applications.

Interdisciplinary work makes perfect sense to me. But being interdisciplinary should not be considered synonymous with being diverse. The desire has never been stronger than it is today to tackle problems that cross disciplines and so there is a demand for people who have the ability and background to work across disciplines. But diversity in science has always been critical: we need diverse but expert ways to tackle problems, diverse but state-of-the-art techniques, etc. Diversity means working across disciplines, but it also means tackling problems with different specialized tools.

How did you personally arrive at having so many disciplinary strengths?

How I arrived at having so many interests is a colorful story. Believe it or not, I used to be a professional musician. Tired of the long hours, bad conditions and low pay, I went back to school to take a break from work. Having concentrated on music and philosophy as an undergraduate, I thought it would be fun to do something completely different and chose engineering. I had nothing to lose since this was just a break and I planned to return to music anyway. My first mathematics class, in partial differential equations, was a turning point.

What happened? Did the professor recognize you in some way?

The professor was Michael Tabor at Columbia University. He often says I was his “best music student.” [Laughs] I wasn’t all that bad; I got an A-. Professor Tabor, who oddly enough later became my boss when I was faculty at the University of Arizona, strongly suggested I consider a career in applied math. He also loves music and I spent a fair bit of time in his office discussing science and music. My intention was to return to music after my foray in engineering, but I did not return to music. From engineering I eventually switched to physics and mathematics. I had more questions of the “how” and “why” variety than of the “what for.”

That’s quite a switch. As a physics major, how did you then become interested in computational geoscience as a field?

Geosciences appealed to me because in many of its challenging problems one is faced with the interplay of diverse physics across vast scales of space and time. A love of the outdoors probably plays a factor, too—I spend a lot of time in adventure traveling, skiing, climbing, trekking and biking.

Your work has focused substantially on oceans.

I love the ocean and was completely smitten by the idea that there were scientists who could understand some aspects of what makes the ocean so amazing, and were bold enough to think that someday we could understand the oceans as a whole.

Specifically, I’m fascinated with the role played by oceans on the transport of heat around the globe, and the destabilizing role played by perturbations of the thermally- and salt-driven circulation we presently enjoy. I’m also interested in the role ocean transport plays in the movement of greenhouse gases and the maintenance of ice snow caps and their reflectance of the Sun’s radiation.

I am also fascinated by waves. The focus of my Ph.D. research was in a rather special wave called a soliton. It has wonderful/rich underlying mathematical structure. Incidentally, there are folks here at Oregon State who are world experts in solitary waves, the family of waves in which solitons belongs. I’m also exploring the role that waves play in Earth’s climate and the interaction between ocean waves and currents. I’ve developed models for how specific types of sandbars form and used supercomputers to characterize the fundamental forces on sand particles as they are forced by shearing and wavy ocean flows.

Presently I am developing a model for ocean oil spills.

young Juan Restrepo standing on beach with surfboard

Restrepo in his surfing days

Speaking of waves, you used to be a surfer. Does that experience have anything to do with your interests now as a scientist?

When I was a postdoc in Chicago I crewed for several sailing teams. When I was at UCLA I decided to learn to surf. The first board I borrowed came back decorated with duct tape. I was terrible, but usually the first in, the last one out. The good surfers tolerated me, perhaps because they thought I made for good shark food.

But I was a good source of information: I tracked swells, tides and wind, and predicted the best time to get to the beach; I had a good idea of when waves were worth riding and understood how wind affected waves. Several of my nearshore scientific studies were inspired by these experiences: for example, my interest in how waves transport sand, pollutants and swimmers. One of my recent results explains why flotsam and jetsam parks itself outside of the break zone, a finding relevant to tracking pollution in the nearshore, also known as "sticky waters."

You are a strong advocate for diversity in science. Where does that passion/commitment come from?

Innovation is the most significant competitive, technological, cultural and economic asset this country has had. It may be argued that it is in peril presently.

Science thrives on innovation, and innovation is strongly correlated with diversity. Diversity is essential in collective adaptation, and thus essential to evolutionary biology. For similar reasons, it is also essential to science.

There are more practical reasons for encouraging diversity: for example, with regard to gender, it is patently stupid to ignore 50 percent of the potential workforce. Diversity leads to collective work adaptation. It also leads to a culture of learning and of listening.

Diversity makes organic sense to me: my background and my life history is a story of diversity. I grew up in a multi-ethnic neighborhood in big cities, in a family of artists who hailed from three continents. Diversity is essential to my work: I tend to work with people who contribute specialized skills and appreciate my creativity and ability to draw ideas from diverse disciplines.

What are your hopes for the future of computational geosciences as a method/field/set of inquiries and what are you working on now?

I am working with a team of statisticians, engineers, and social scientists to formulate adaptive response strategies to disasters. As usual, I am taking a "diverse" approach: in addition to instrumental data, we want to incorporate citizen cell phone reports to produce quantitative data that allows us to tell what's happening as the disaster is taking place in real time.

We need anthropologists to exploit social media and to interpret citizen data. We are using ideas of statistical physics to formulate cluster dynamics of populations responding to disasters. We are combining statistically physical models and data to develop fast algorithms that allow us to forecast and test options for future responses based on past disasters.

OSU is a perfect research environment for this project: it is supportive of diversity, and it builds upon many of our research strengths. It’s also locally relevant, given that we live in the Cascadia Zone, and globally significant because what we learn here will impact on disaster response elsewhere.

Juan Restrepo standing in library

Mathematician earns career prize in geosciences

By Katharine de Baun

Juan Restrepo, professor in mathematics

Mathematician Juan Restrepo's impressive and extensive leadership in mathematical modeling and numerical simulation of oceanography and climate dynamics, which has had substantial impact in computational geosciences, has earned him the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM) Geosciences Career Prize.

The award recognizes an outstanding senior researcher who has made broad and distinguished contributions to the field of geosciences.

The prize will be awarded at the SIAM Conference on Mathematical and Computational Issues in the Geosciences, to be held September 11-14, 2017, at the University Erlangen-Nürnberg in Erlangen, Bavaria, Germany.

Restrepo is a professor of mathematics with courtesy appointments in Statistics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Physical Oceanography. He specializes in applied mathematics research and training and teaches numerical analysis, scientific computing, statistical mechanics and geophysical fluid dynamics.

Restrepo's primary research interests lie in uncertainty quantification, ocean dynamics, climate, oil/pollution transport and acoustics. Prior to coming to Oregon State in 2014, he was a mathematics professor at the University of Arizona with appointments in the Department of Physics and the Department of Atmospheric Sciences. He was also visiting faculty for 17 years at Los Alamos National Laboratory working on bio-related homeland security work, bone dynamics, voting theory and climate dynamics research.

He is a co-principal investigator of the National Science Foundation (NSF) Research Traineeship at OSU, which has received $3 million to implement the program. The proposal, “Risk and uncertainty quantification in marine science and policy,” prepares a new generation of natural resource scientists and managers to study, protect and manage ocean systems. The program encourages the development of bold and transformative models for graduate education in STEM fields.

A strong advocate for diversity in science, Restrepo has an impressive and extensive record of advising young scientists from underrepresented groups. He received his Ph.D. in physics from Pennsylvania State University. He also holds degrees in engineering acoustics, electrical engineering and music.

Galaxy in space

Free movie, dinner and discussion: Hidden Figures

By Srila Nayak

The College of Science will treat science students, faculty and staff to dinner and a movie followed by a lively discussion on Tuesday, January 31. The movie is “Hidden Figures,” the 2016 Oscar-nominated biographical film about pioneering yet little known female African-American mathematicians at NASA.

Based on the book Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win the Space Race by Margot Lee Sheerly, the film depicts the incredible and inspiring NASA careers of Katherine G. Johnson, Dorothy Vaughan and Mary Jackson who started working in the Jim Crow era. Johnson was a physicist and mathematician, who calculated flight trajectories for Project Mercury, the 1969 Apollo 11 flight to the moon and many other early NASA missions. Jackson went on to become NASA’s first black female engineer. Vaughan was the first African-American woman to supervise a staff at NASA.

The film shows how the three women overcame racial discrimination and other social obstacles to contribute in vital ways to NASA’s various missions at a time when black women and men were still being subjected to segregation and barred from higher education and high-skilled jobs.

After the movie, the College will host a pizza dinner and an hour-long discussion exploring issues raised by the film that go beyond NASA and the field of mathematics and connecting with many of the College’s initiatives around diversity, equity and inclusion.

If interested, faculty, students, faculty and staff can RSVP to Michael Lopez at LopeMich@oregonstate.edu

Movie: Carmike Cinema at 4:10 pm, January 31, 2017 (Tuesday). Please arrive 15 minutes early.

Discussion and Dinner: Kidder 128, 6:45 p.m.—7:45 p.m.

Javier Rojo in front of columned building

Internationally renowned statistician joins faculty

By Srila Nayak

Javier Rojo, inaugural Korvis Professor of Statistics

Javier Rojo will join the Department of Statistics at Oregon State University as the inaugural Korvis Professor of Statistics in January 2017. He currently serves as chair of the Department of Mathematics and Statistics at the University of Nevada at Reno where he holds the Seneca C. and Mary B. Weeks Endowed Chair in Statistics. As Chair, he provided the leadership and guidance to develop two new PhD proposals – one in Mathematics and one in Statistics and Data Science—that have been approved by the Board of Regents and are due to start during the Spring semester of 2017. He is also an adjunct professor at the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston and at the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering in Rice University.

“I am enthused over my imminent move to Oregon State University and the Statistics Department. The overall quality of the department is very good and the crop of young faculty is outstanding. The future of the department looks bright, and it is an honor and a pleasure to become part of their exciting future,” Rojo said.

Dr. Rojo has made significant research contributions in the areas of survival analysis, nonparametric function estimation, statistical decision theory, random matrices and dimension reduction techniques. He is an elected fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics, the American Statistical Association, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the International Statistical Institute.

Prior to moving to Reno, Rojo was professor of statistics at Rice University from 2001 to 2013. He started his academic career at the University of Texas, El Paso, as an assistant professor in 1984 in the mathematical sciences department, where he received tenure and rose to the ranks of full professorship. By the time he left 17 years later in 2001, Rojo had set up and served as the founding director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) funded Biostatistical Consulting Laboratory at El Paso, which today serves as a premier resource center for the statistical support of research in basic sciences, health sciences and other fields across campus and in the El Paso region.

“I am delighted at the historic nature of Dr. Rojo’s appointment as the first named professorship in the Department of Statistics,” said Sastry G. Pantula, dean of the College of Science.

“As a research statistician and a highly engaged teacher, Dr. Rojo has few equals. His commitment to enhancing diversity through mentoring and providing transformative research experiences to students will help us move toward our strategic goals," added Pantula.

“I am confident that he will advance and enrich the academic environment and student learning immeasurably within the department, in the College and throughout Oregon State University.”

Rojo’s hiring is part of ambitious changes and innovations within the statistics department. This fall, the Department of Statistics launched an online Master of Science and a Graduate Certificate in Data Analytics. The first of their kind in Oregon, the programs will draw upon OSU’s expertise in data science. Rojo is one of several science faculty hired in recent years to advance research in the mathematical, biological, statistical and computational sciences at OSU geared toward building the next generation of leaders in science.

“I am pleased to have Javier join our department. He is an internationally respected statistician who has received numerous honors and awards for his research and service to society. His commitment to enhancing diversity and student success is exemplary in the field of statistics,” said Virginia Lesser, Head of the Department of Statistics.

A highly dedicated teacher and scientific mentor, Rojo has had extraordinary success in recruiting, training and guiding underrepresented minority and economically disadvantaged students toward advanced degrees in mathematics and statistics.

Since 2003, he has been directing the Rice University Summer Institute of Statistics (RUSIS) which started as a Research Experiences for Undergraduate (REU) program at Rice University. It is famous for being the country’s first REU Program in the field of statistics. Rojo transferred the REU program to the University of Nevada at Reno when he moved there two years ago, where it is called RUSIS@UNR. The program has been funded and supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National Security Agency (NSA) for the last 14 years.

RUSIS@UNR conducts a 10-week intensive summer program for the study of statistics and its applications for a cohort of 12-15 students every year. Under Rojo’s guidance the program has been phenomenally successful: after 10 years the REU program reported that 85% of the undergraduates who attended the Summer Institute were admitted to Ph.D. programs around the country, with roughly 61% of students from underrepresented populations and 53% female.

This was achieved “through intensive statistics courses, close supervision of research projects, and visits to various research institutes and agencies in the area,” according to Rojo, who is responsible for the students’ computational training and research projects.

Owing to Rojo’s sustained efforts and leadership, the American Mathematical Society (AMS) selected RUSIS@UNR for its award “Programs that make a difference” in 2014. The RUSIS program was commended for serving “as a model program for others to emulate,” and praised for “its high level of commitment and successful efforts to improve diversity in the profession of mathematics in the United States.”

Rojo also received the Don Owen Award from the American Statistical Association in 2010. The award is presented to a statistician who embodies the three-fold accomplishments of excellence in research, statistical consultation and service to the statistical community.

Rojo’s commitment toward increasing student diversity and helping low-income, minority and first-generation students excel in mathematics and statistics has deep roots in his personal life. Born to working-class Mexican parents, Rojo—a first generation college student—completed his schooling in Ciudad Juárez. One of five children, Rojo worked "as a painter, a railway worker and a gas station attendant in high school" to help pay for some of his expenses, he writes in a SACNAS (Society for Advancement of Chicanos/Hispanics and Native Americans in Science) biography project.

Having excelled in mathematics at school, Rojo attended the University of Texas, El Paso, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematics. He earned a master’s degree in statistics from Stanford University and a Ph.D. in statistics from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1984.

Rojo has collaborated extensively with statisticians in Mexico, specifically with faculty at the Center for Mathematical Research, and has organized several international conferences in his home country. He was a member of the NSF Division of Mathematical Sciences Committee of Visitors in 2013 where he chaired two subcommittees. He served in the NSF Division of Mathematical Sciences COV in 2016. He was appointed to the scientific advisory committee of the Mathematical Biology Institute at Ohio State University and the Statistical and Applied Mathematical Sciences Institute.

Rojo is the author of more than 75 research articles in top-ranked statistics journals and has edited four books, including the Selected Works of E.L. Lehmann by Springer-Verlag. He served as editor of the Journal of Nonparametric Statistics (2007-2010) and organizes and chairs The Lehmann Symposia in honor of renowned statistician Erich L. Lehmann, who was Rojo’s doctoral advisor at UC Berkeley.

Kanti Mardia presenting in LINC

Welcoming hundreds of statisticians to campus

Kanti Mardia, Department of Statistics, University of Leeds and University of Oxford

The College of Science extends a warm and hearty welcome to the 200 participants of the 2016 International Indian Statistical Association (IISA) Conference August 18-21. The conference kicked off with a lively and convivial wine and cheese reception at the Hilton Garden Inn Thursday evening.

Earlier in the day, graduate students from OSU and other universities participated in four short pre-conference short courses taught by visiting statisticians from Columbia University, Northwestern University, the University of California at Los Angeles and SAS Institute.

With a theme of “Statistical and Data Sciences: A Key to Healthy People, Planet and Prosperity,” the conference offers attendees more than 50 panel discussions on statistical innovation and applications in areas, ranging from big data to genomics, climate science, public health and biomedical science. Featuring talks by many award-winning and distinguished statisticians from varied professions, the conference is a unique, landmark event in the field of statistical sciences in Oregon.

Mousumi Banerjee, Shanthi Sethuraman, John Eltinge, Susmita Datta, Ram Tiwari, Lisa Lupinacci, Sastry Pantula presenting in a panel in the LINC

Sastry G. Pantula, Dean, OSU College of Science (far right); Lisa Lupinacci, VP of Late Development Statistics, Merck; Ram Tiwari – Director, Division of Biostatistics, FDA; Susmita Datta, Professor of Biostatistics, University of Florida; John Eltinge, Associate Commissioner for Survey Methods Research, US Bureau of Labor Statistics; Shanthi Sethuraman, Sr. Director of Global Statistical Science for Diabetes, Eli Lilly; Mousumi Banerjee, Director of Biostatistics, University of Michigan.

Hosted by OSU's Department of Statistics, the IISA Conference has attracted statisticians worldwide, including participants from Japan, China, the United Kingdom, Nigeria and Egypt, across academia, industry, government and research institutes who will discuss the latest statistical developments and challenges in data sciences and related fields.

Read more about the 2016 IISA conference.

Below are highlights from the welcome reception.

The man who knew infinity movie poster

Free movie, dinner and discussion: The man who knew infinity

The man who knew infinity screening

The College of Science will treat mathematics, physics and statistics students and faculty to an evening of movie, dinner and a Skype discussion with OSU alumnus (BS & MS '60) and world famous mathematician, Dr. George Andrews on Thursday, May 26. The group will watch "The Man Who Knew Infinity" the recently released biographical drama film on the life of Indian mathematical genius, Srinivasa Ramanujan at Darkside Cinema at 3:30 pm.

The film portrays the relationship between Ramanujan and University of Cambridge number theorist G.H. Hardy in the early 1900s and Ramanujan's experiences with English racism during his visit to Trinity College.

After the movie, the College of Science will host a 45-minute Skype discussion with professor Andrews, who is the Evan Pugh Professor of Mathematics at Pennsylvania State University and a member of the National Academy of Sciences. Among his many towering mathematical achievements, Andrews is perhaps best known for his work on Ramanujan's "Lost Notebook" as it is called in the mathematical community.

A few months before he passed away, Ramanujan had spoken about his new work on theta functions which physicists use in their study of the heat equation. However, he didn't leave behind any published work on the subject and nothing more was known about his contributions to this branch of mathematics until Andrews' amazing find.

Andrews discovered Ramanujan's "Lost Notebook" in a library of Trinity College, Cambridge in 1975. Excitedly leafing through the 100-odd loose pages, Andrews found they contained 600 equations in all—revolutionary mathematical findings on mock theta functions—of which only a fifth had been independently discovered in the years after Ramanujan's death in 1920. In the decades following his discovery, Andrew has co-authored several books that provide proofs of most of the theorems listed in "the Lost Notebook."

Delicious pizza will be served during the discussion. The movie and discussion will give students a renewed appreciation of the human dimensions of mathematics and a fascinating peek at the history and legacy of twentieth-century mathematics.

Mathematics, physics and statistics students and faculty can click here to RSVP today

Source: http://www.pnas.org/content/102/13/4663.full

Richard Tapia in front of grey backdrop

Renowned mathematician uses math to enhance his personal life

Richard Tapia, professor in mathematics at Rice University

The College of Science welcomes renowned mathematician Richard Tapia who will present a public science lecture entitled, "Using Mathematics to Enhance My Personal Life," for faculty and students. The event will be held May 11 at 3:00 pm in Snell International Forum at 2150 SW Jefferson Way on campus. REGISTER here. Dr. Tapia is a University Professor in Rice University’s Computational and Applied Mathematics Department, the university’s highest academic title awarded to only seven faculty in its history.

For many years, Dr. Tapia was involved in BMX bicycle racing as a supportive father for his son. He will kick off his talk using several lively videos to identify and illustrate what he calls the "Curse of Lane 8" or "The Fair Lane Assignment Problem in BMX Bicycle Racing." Next, he will use his mathematical training to formulate the issue as a mathematical problem and then solve the problem using a computer while describing the solution technique.

In the second part of this talk, Dr. Tapia will show and describe how he made a riveting video with the help of a dual art and math undergraduate at Rice University that ended up accompanying him as he showed his 1970 Chevelle Malibu SS at car shows across the country. Both the car and video are named, “Heavy Metal.” Check out an interview of Dr. Tapia at the Detroit Autorama 2008.

1970 Chevelle in front of grey backdrop

Dr. Tapia’s 1970 Chevelle SS, “Heavy Metal”

The video depicts the late 1960’s and early 1970’s, an era marked by muscle cars, heavy metal music and social rebellion. The psychedelic images in the video were constructed entirely using mathematics. Numerical simulations of fluid in and around the car were developed using numerical methods to solve the Navier-Stokes partial differential equations that govern fluid flow.

By being creative with the mathematical parameters and solution techniques, Tapia and the student created some highly striking and interesting images and patterns. Using video, they were able to demonstrate that mathematics can take us places where physics can’t.

Dr. Tapia is the 2011 awardee of the National Medal of Science, the highest honor bestowed by the U.S. government on scientists and engineers. He has received the National Science Board’s Vannevar Bush Award, has been elected to the National Academy of Engineering--the first Hispanic to receive these honors, and has served on the National Science Board from 1996-2002.

In 1990, the National Research Council named Tapia one of the 20 most influential leaders in minority mathematics education in the country. Later that year, he received the Hispanic Engineer National Achievement Award for Education from Hispanic Engineer.

Internationally recognized for his research in the computational and mathematical sciences, Dr. Tapia is also Director of Rice University’s Center for Excellence and Equity in Education. He has also been featured in a video promoting the Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science (SACNAS).

"Professor Tapia and late professor Blackwell are two folks whom I admire, first for their excellence in mathematics and statistics, and second for their leadership in enhancing diversity--two of our College's core values," said Sastry G. Pantula, dean of the College of Science.

"The Blackwell-Tapia conferences, named after these two leaders, have a great impact on building diverse leaders in science. The OSU community is in for a treat. We can all learn a lot from Dr. Tapia's experiences."

The renowned mathematician holds honorary doctorates from Carnegie Mellon University, Colorado School of Mines, University of Nevada, and Claremont Graduate University. He also has two professional conferences named in his honor: the Richard Tapia Celebration of Diversity in Computing Conference and the Blackwell-Tapia Mathematics Conference.

Dr. Tapia presents the Mathematics Department’s 31st annual Lonseth Lecture May 10 at 4:00 pm in LaSells Stewart Center, Construction & Engineering Hall, following the annual Mathematics Awards ceremony at 3:30 pm. This scientific talk, “The Remarkable Journey of Isoperimetric Problem: From Euler to Steiner to Weierstrass,” will offer an overview of the history of the impactful isoperimetric problem. A reception will follow the events.

3D model of red blood cells

Biohealth science's connection to quantitative sciences

By Srila Nayak

BioHealth

Redefining quantitative and biohealth sciences

Faculty and researchers in the College of Science are interpreting and advancing biohealth sciences in innovative new ways by applying the natural sciences, such as mathematics, statistics and chemistry. In recent times, researches in biology and medicine have been guided by biomolecular analysis technologies, mathematics and computations, and scientists are using these tools to address a spectrum of biological questions about diseases, from how they spread to risk factors.

In the last few years, our College has experienced an impressive spurt of transdisciplinary research in the quantitative and biohealth sciences. Ongoing studies and research advances range from analyzing genetic data on epidemics and inventing disease-detecting biosensors to developing statistical methods to better understand neuron connectivity and the transmission of signals in the brain. Through collaborative research across our campus, our faculty are paving the way for innovative biohealth science research which broadens the training of students across scientific disciplines.

Biological systems and mathematical models

Connections between biology and the mathematical sciences are fueling innovation and expansion in those disciplines. Statistician Sharmodeep Bhattacharyya explains how interpreting data from various experimental sources can generate new insights and solutions in the areas of neuroscience and genomics.

“Statistical methods, with their inherent objective of analyzing the uncertainty of a system help identify key interesting factors in the deluge of interesting data," said Bhattacharyya. "Such jobs can range from identifying a key set of genes affecting a disease for a specific group of people (like in precision medicine) or identifying the interaction between key regions of the brain for people who have a set of genes that causes a neurological disease."

Bhattacharyya has developed new statistical methods to analyze Electro-Cortico Graph (ECoG) array data from human and rat brains to identify connections involving speech and hearing.

Mathematician Vrushali Bokil’s research demonstrates how mathematical modeling, analysis and numerical simulations can illuminate insights in complex biological systems and how the health sciences, in turn, can spark new mathematical ideas. She collaborates with a mix of biologists and mathematicians across the country as well as in the UK, France and Germany on a project funded by NIMBioS (the National Institute of Mathematical and Biological Synthesis).

The project will allow Bokil and her colleagues to generate novel mathematical and statistical methods involving multiple hosts and multiple pathogens and that operate across a range of spatiotemporal scales, and to analyze the effects of climate change and human activities on the emergence of new plant viruses. Bokil points to the increasing use of mathematics to model complicated biological systems.

“It is exciting to be at the interface of biology and math,” said Bokil. “I write down a system of equations that models the physical or biological system. While the mathematical modeling and numerical simulations are fascinating in and of themselves, the added value of feeding back into biological applications is very rewarding.”

Benjamin Dalziel, an assistant professor in Integrative Biology, is part of a growing breed of biologists who are turning the biological sciences into a more quantitative field. Dalziel is a population biologist who uses mathematical tools to answer questions about the spread of infectious diseases, such as influenza and measles in populations and cities.

Dalziel, who also has an appointment in the mathematics department, maps hotspots of pathogen activity and diversification, and develops mathematical models to explain the patterns he finds. A current project explores whether there are systematic differences among cities with respect to their epidemic risk.

“I find the connections between mathematical modeling and biology very interesting. After developing a model, we ask, 'Is this happening in nature and how do we test it?' And if nature is doing something different, 'What did we get wrong with the model?' Sometimes there is a lot you have to do with the model besides [reviewing the] data to understand its behavior and to get it to interface with the real world," said Dalziel, who is developing a new mathematics course specifically for the life sciences.

Innovative disease imaging

A major application of analytical chemistry and its quantitative aspects to biology involves the creation of tools that directly aid in the diagnosis of cancer, heart disease, strokes and other serious ailments.

Chemistry assistant professor Sean M. Burrows runs a busy lab comprising undergraduates and doctoral students and their research is focused on innovating technologies to visualize biomarkers of disease. They pioneer novel, colorful fluorescent biosensor designs—analytical devices that relate biological molecules to a fluorescent signal—for visualizing and quantifying microRNAs, which are small non-coding RNA molecules that have a role in a plethora of gene regulatory events.

MicroRNAs hold great potential to yield information about the beginning stages of a disease and cell/tissue activity. Burrows and his team are trying to develop highly efficient fluorescent technologies for basic research and clinical use.

“Basically the idea is to design an imaging technology that will give us more information on the molecular interactions within the cell,” explains Borrows. “[For example], can we create an instrument that greatly advances the information content in terms of the numbers of colors we can look at in a cell? With the current technology, you could see one or two colors from the cell. But if we can look at 10 or more different colors, that will tell us much more about a biological mechanism," adds Burrows.

In an exciting breakthrough, the Burrows group designed a more efficient fluorescent biosensor for better signal interpretation from microRNA biosensors. The innovation has attracted significant attention in the field and was favorably reviewed in an article on the field of emerging microRNA biosensors in Analytical Chemistry.

However, existing imaging technology to learn about the underlying details of cellular mechanisms, such as the super resolution microscopy, is expensive. Burrows is keen to develop a cheaper alternative that can be used in a regular microscope.

“We can then open the door for more researchers to get more information from the cells they are interested in studying. This, in turn, will enable more transformative breakthroughs to understand disease progression and ultimately find cures.”

This figure shows that the biosensors can enter a cell’s cytoplasm and nucleus to find where microRNA expression occurs within the cell. Green shows the cytoplasm and the dark green spot is the nucleus. Red indicates the biosensor. The circle and the red nucleus indicate where the biosensor has entered the cytoplasm and nucleus, respectively.

Talithia Williams receiving award from Sastry Pantula

Infinite Possibilities Conference held at Oregon State University

By Srila Nayak

Photography by Hannah O'Leary

Dean Pantula and Talithia Williams

OSU Mathematics Ph.D student Kalei Titcomb, a first generation college graduate, says she rarely sees women like herself in mathematics. Titcomb was the only native Hawaiian in her mathematics classes at Pacific University where she received her undergraduate degree.

Recently, she participated in the biennial 10th Infinite Possibilities Conference (IPC) held at Oregon State University (OSU) on March 1-3. This one of a kind national academic event focused on empowering, educating, celebrating and promoting the careers of underrepresented minority women in mathematical and statistical sciences.

"It is nice, especially, to have a conference where we all come out in these numbers, so that other people in our position will see and think, wow, look at how many of us are there! We all can do this and take to heart the message that no particular discipline is reserved for any particular race or nationality," said Titcomb.

The conference attracted more than 230 diverse participants from 19 states, Mexico and Puerto Rico. The Departments of Statistics and Mathematics at OSU proudly co-hosted IPC 2015, which has received generous support from the National Science Foundation, the National Security Agency and Oregon State University. IPC is a program of Building Diversity in Science (BDIS), a nonprofit organization that encourages diverse students to enter STEM disciplines. The model for the annual conference is joint hosting between a University Partner and the nonprofit.

IPC was started in 2005 by Tanya Moore and a few of her former Spelman College mathematics professors and classmates. Moore, a biostatistician who works as education policy adviser in San Francisco, excelled as a mathematics major in Spelman—a historically black college for women—but struggled to connect with her peers and professors in her graduate program at Johns Hopkins University. She eventually transferred to the University of California at Berkeley.

Moore says that her "challenging and instructive experiences in graduate school, combined with the understanding that math provides a path to many careers" led her to form the IPC after completing a doctorate in biostatistics from UC-Berkeley.

It appears that initiatives such as the IPC are needed now more than ever. A 2015 statistical study by the National Science Foundation shows that representation of African-Americans, Hispanics and Native Americans in math-intensive fields is lower than in other STEM fields. In 2012, only 5.4% of bachelor’s degrees in mathematics and statistics were awarded to underrepresented minority women.

"We are committed to supporting and enhancing diversity in mathematics and science at OSU."

"I am thrilled to welcome the IPC to campus, which has done so much in the last decade to mentor, empower and increase participation of minority women in the mathematical and statistical sciences," said Sastry G. Pantula, dean of the College of Science. "It is truly a pleasure to celebrate the successes of women of color in mathematical and statistical sciences at OSU."

Pantula, who successfully lobbied to bring the IPC to Oregon State this year, also helped host the 2007 IPC at North Carolina State University when he was chair of its statistics department. IPC 2015 presents a unique opportunity to female students in mathematics and statistics at OSU.

“There is a remarkable enthusiasm about the Infinite Possibilities Conference among the OSU students I know who attended the conference. It is rewarding to contribute to the organization of a conference driven by such enthusiasm,” says Mina Ossiander, mathematics professor and co-chair of the local IPC organizing committee with Lan Xue, a statistics professor.

Numerous studies have shown that a lack of peers, professors and role models who look like them discourage minorities from enrolling in mathematics and science programs. In order to give opportunities to learn from role models and encourage networking, the IPC brought together undergraduates, graduates and high school students as well as an impressive cohort of high-achieving women of color statisticians and mathematicians working across the country in academia, industry and top-level scientific bodies.

You never see anything quite like it. In general, because women of color are under-represented in mathematical fields, until everyone comes together, we may not even know we are there for each other,” says Lily Khadjavi, mathematics professor at Loyola Marymount University and a member of the IPC Advisory Board. “For students—frankly for everyone, at every stage of one’s career—a lack of mentors and role models can be a particular issue.”

IPC 2015 offered a short course on biostatistics for conference participants on March 1. The conference included a rich mix of research talks on mathematics, professional development workshops and panels on race/gender in the context of mathematics. IPC aims to spark interest among high school students in careers in the mathematical sciences as well as instill greater awareness in undergraduate and graduate students about issues uniquely faced by women of color in STEM disciplines.

Memorial union at sunset

2015 Infinite Possibilities Conference comes to campus

2015 Infinite Possibilities Conference on campus

African-American, Hispanic/Latina, and Native American women have been historically underrepresented in the mathematical and statistical sciences. In 2012, less than 2% of the doctoral degrees in the field were awarded to American women from underrepresented minority groups. The Departments of Statistics and Mathematics are proud to co-host the 5th Infinite Possibilities Conference (IPC) March 1-3, 2015, together with OSU and with Building Diversity in Science—a nonprofit organization that encourages diverse students to enter STEM disciplines.

Registration is now open. Click here to register.

With a mission of educating and empowering women, IPC is a national conference that strives to create new frontiers by building on the undaunted spirit of women in the mathematical and statistical sciences. This conference is made possible in part by the generous support of the National Science Foundation, the National Security Agency and Oregon State University.

"IPC was a pivotal moment for my deciding to pursue a doctoral degree. It not only gave me experience in presenting my work, but it also inspired and motivated me to continue my research to complete my master's and discover my reasons for earning a PhD.” - Graduate student, IPC participant

IPC selected OSU to host its 2015 conference site because of the University and the College’s strong commitment to enhancing diversity and promoting excellence among women in mathematics and statistics. As OSU President Ed Ray puts it, “Excellence through unity in diversity.”

The conference attracts underrepresented minority women in these fields, including junior faculty as well as undergraduate and graduate students. Attendees have the unique opportunity to interact with established women mathematicians and statisticians within a professional conference environment.

An undergraduate majoring in mathematics with an emphasis in statistics who attended IPC has this to say about the innovative conference:

“While there a smattering of workshops and conferences created to address race/ethnicity or gender in the context of mathematics, IPC is the only program specially designed to address both.”

This year’s conference highlights include:

  • Professional development workshop series
  • Panel discussion on graduate studies in mathematics and statistics
  • Research talks given by professionals
  • Student poster sessions
  • Special activities for high school students
  • Roundtable discussions on experiences with mathematics and statistics
  • Dr. Etta Z. Falconer Award banquet highlighting individual recipient's achievements in mathematics and statistics

Conference speakers and agenda

All sessions will be held in the CH2M HILL Alumni Center at Oregon State University. Click here for the conference flyer.

Events

March 1

A special short course in biostatistics will be held March 1. This event is organized by the Mathematical Biosciences Institute.

March 3

The Dr. Etta Z. Falconer Award Banquet will be held on Tuesday evening, March 3.

Invited Banquet Speaker

Dr. Deborah Jackson, National Science Foundation

Keynote Speakers

Dr. Erika Camacho, Arizona State University

Dr. Talithia Williams, Harvey Mudd College

Special Workshop

Dr. Kerry Ann Rockquemore, National Center for Faculty Diversity

A PhD candidate in biostatistics who attended a past conference remarked, “I came back from IPC rejuvenated, re-encouraged and with a renewed confidence in completing my dissertation.” A professor who attended the conference called the conference “an educational experience that helped me grow as a mentor.”

The College of Science’s new Vernier Program for Mentoring and Diversity in Science will lend support to the conference, augmenting dollars from federal agencies and industry. The program focuses on building leadership in science among women, underrepresented minorities, and first-generation college students with strong potential.

IPC strives to increase and support diversity in the mathematics and statistics communities by creating a paradigm shift in the way people think about a mathematician or statistician and the roles they play in society. The conference addresses a need among participants by offering workshops that specifically address race/ethnicity or gender within the context of mathematics and statistics.

In the book How College Works, authors Daniel Chambliss and Christopher Takacs, examine the importance of students’ social networks (who they know and how well), the campus community as a whole and what it means to “belong” to it as well as clusters of students or “micro-communities” that form around particular organizations, dorms, and sports. They found that students with a few close friends, a faculty mentor and a broader network of acquaintances were far more likely to have a rewarding college experience. Notably, these students also tended to be more academically engaged, especially when they developed a mentoring relationship with a professor.

In short, “We don’t earn a degree. We have experiences.”

Join us and experience Science@OSU and its commitment to advance harmony, excellence and diversity. Visit IPC online to learn more or get involved.

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