Sentences with phrase «creative scientists at»

The NIH Director's New Innovator award is designed specifically to support a small group of creative scientists at an early stage of their career with an emphasis on innovative, high - impact projects, according to the NIH website.

Not exact matches

«The general message to big brands and agencies from Silicon Valley and all the digital networks is leave the creative people at home, show up with the data scientists,» he said.
He is Chief Data Scientist at the Creative Destruction Lab, Senior Editor at Marketing Science, and a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research.
Not like great artists, scientists and dissidents, great entrepreneurs - once successful - have proven to be very creative at playing against fiscal law and labor ethics.
As the progressive secularization of the Western world went on, fewer and fewer scientists were thinking of theology as they were doing their science and at times their most creative science.
Present at the meeting will be local scientist and educator Dr. Leonisa Ardizzone, who will explore the math, engineering and physics of the playground with creative ideas for the youth.
«Confidentiality of scientists» email communications and prepublication drafts is necessary to ensure the uninhibited and creative collaboration among scientists that is at the heart of the scientific endeavor; to protect scientists from undue burdens; and to encourage scientists to enter into controversial yet important fields,» said the defense fund in its amicus brief.
The satisfaction of older scientists Conventional wisdom and at least a few scholarly articles suggest that scientists do their most creative work when they're still young.
While many life scientists react to the growing complexity of the field by focusing narrowly, tenOever is an example of how doing creative science means finding new connections outside your original research niche, says Maniatis, who is now the incoming chair of the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons.
Inspired by World Maker Fair, we at New Scientist felt the urge to join the fun and get creative.
«A person's science background is a huge asset, but to succeed in advocacy — the ability to communicate a passionate belief in the value of sound science — requires a creative communicator,» says Cheryl Schaffer, director of finance and administration at the Washington, D.C. - based Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS).
«In order to be creative in problem - solving, you might need to go your own way,» says coauthor Jesse Shore, an information systems scientist at Boston University.
«At the macro (policy) level, I think it's important to offer a wider array of opportunities, than traditional academia, for scientists to do interesting and important work (industry and government)-- and to help doctoral students become aware of and train for these outlets for their creative work,» Amabile writes.
«We've looked for the usual suspects in the usual places and found no solid signals, so we've started searching in some creative new ways,» said Julie McEnery, Fermi project scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
ANOTHER scientist with creative ideas at the University of Waikato is Nick Kim, an analytical chemist.
While astronomers have been mired in plans for an exotic array of space - based telescopes, a small, creative team of scientists and engineers based at Princeton University has come out of intellectual left field with a new idea that could cut years from NASA's schedule and cost far less than anyone had believed possible.
An outstanding scientist, he had spent almost his entire career at Stanford, where he was renowned as irreverent, creative and unpretentious and as a leader, scholar and teacher with high values and standards.
«We've looked for the usual suspects in the usual places and found no solid signals, so we've started searching in some creative new ways,» Julie McEnery, Fermi project scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, said in a statement outlining the findings of three recent studies.
Trevor Corson is an adjunct professor in the creative writing graduate program at Columbia University and his book, The Secret Life of Lobsters: How Fishermen and Scientists Are Unraveling the Mysteries of Our Favorite Crustacean, was included in the Best American Science Writing edited by Oliver Sacks.
A multinational study of data from 130,000 people shows that inherited risk factors for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder also predict participation in the arts and creative professions REYKJAVIK, Iceland, 8 June 2015 — A study led by scientists at deCODE genetics...
Being both a scientist and a creative at heart, I love that cooking allows me to combine both.
(and please believe me when I say «mad scientist», I don't look at myself as a character or anything like that... «mad scientist» just happens to perfectly describe my personality when I get into the gym... slightly insane, creative and always thinking of new ways to do things).
If we want to produce the scientists and engineers of tomorrow, we need to inspire young people by putting creative experimentation at the heart of the science curriculum.
Think Tank: This one is a favorite of mine, a witty, McGyver - ish tale of a scientist who was recruited into military R&D at a young age and now regrets the destruction his inventions caused — so he wreaks revenge in creative ways that only a «slacker genius» can.
Currently she teaches creative writing at Boston College and lives outside of Boston with her husband, Kenneth Kimmell, President of the Union of Concerned Scientists, and their two daughters.
We discuss, among other topics, about photography in the Middle East with Peggy Sue Amison, artistic director at East Wing; net art and networked cultures with Josephine Bosma, Amsterdam - based journalist and critic; urban digital art and criticality in the media city with curator and researcher Tanya Toft; art and technology with curator Chris Romero; the politics of surveillance and international security with political scientist David Barnard - Wills; art and architecture with Maaike Lauwaert, visual arts curator at Stroom, an independent centre for art and architecture in the Netherlands; the intersections of art, law and science with curator and cultural manager Daniela Silvestrin; the architecture of sacred places with curator Jumana Ghouth; the historical legacy of feminism today with Betty Tompkins and Marilyn Minter; hacktivism and net culture with curator and researcher Tatiana Bazzichelli; culture, place and memory with Norie Neumark, director of the Centre for Creative Arts in Melbourne; anthropology and the tactical use of post-digital technologies with artist and philosopher Mitra Azar; or feminism and the digital arts with curator Tina Sauerländer.
They go on to cite UC Davis Professor of Psychology Keith Simonton, who found that many of the world's most famous creative people — like composer Wolfgang Mozart and scientist Charles Darwin don't give up at the first sign of failure.
And coming up this winter is a residency at the Banff Centre, a kind of creative think tank that brings together artists, scientists, and businesspeople.
Education has always been at the heart of Cape Farewell and the partnership between creatives, scientists and educators began on the very first art / science expedition in 2003.
Follow me as I escape into this creative world of fabrics, patterns and sewing, far away from graphs and formulas at my day job as a Research Scientist.
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