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Awards
11 September 2002
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Richard Atkinson Atkinson’s research has dealt with problems of memory and cognition. His theory of human memory has been influential in shaping research in the field. It has helped to clarify the relationship between brain structures and psychological phenomena, explain the effects of drugs on memory, and formulate techniques that optimize the learning process. UC president since 1995, Atkinson was chancellor of UC San Diego for 15 years and director of the National Science Foundation. He was a longtime member of the psychology department at Stanford University and served for three years on the UCLA faculty. Neil Bartlett, Alexander Pines Professor Emeritus Neil Bartlett has won the Davy Medal, given each year for an important recent discovery in any branch of chemistry worldwide. Bartlett, who was inducted into the Society in 1973, is being recognized for his research “exploring the highest oxidation limits of the less oxidizable elements, primarily using elemental fluorine.” He will receive the medal in November at the Society’s Anni-versary Day meeting. Bartlett joined the Berkeley faculty in 1969 and retired in 1993. Alexander Pines, the Glenn T. Seaborg Professor of Chemistry, was elected a Foreign Member of the society, an honor awarded annually to only six individuals worldwide. Pines was recognized for his pioneering contributions to the development of nuclear magnetic-resonance spectroscopy. New fellows and foreign members were officially inducted at a Royal Society ceremony in London in July. Robert Bea Edmund Campion, Cindy Cox, Olly Wilson The awards are made annually to music writers “whose works have a unique prestige value for which adequate compensation would not otherwise be received, and to compensate those writers whose works are performed substantially in media not surveyed by ASCAP.” The society is the world’s largest performing rights organization, with over 140,000 composers, authors and publishers in the United States, representing music of every variety and style. John Canny, Mike Jordan Jordan was elected an Association Fellow for contributions to reasoning under uncertainty, machine learning, and human motor control. Canny received the association’s Classic Paper Award, given to the most influential paper from its third national conference, held in 1983. He was honored for contributions to the fields of robotics and machine perception. Leonard Duhl A professor of public health and city planning, Duhl was selected for his pioneering work related to healthy cities and healthy communities. Considered to be the intellectual father of the “healthy city” concept, he has radically changed thinking about urban health, having written about the concept of sick cities as early as 1952. He also is a pioneer in associating urban design with mental health. The Abraham Horwitz Award honors those whose lifetime careers in medicine or public health have impacted the lives and health of the peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean. Duhl will accept the award at a Pan American Health Organization conference on Sept. 25 in Washington, D.C. Graduate Division web team The web team includes Lisa Harrington, director of graduate communications and events; web administrator Arnold Yip; web developer Patrick McMahon; and former senior writer Elizabeth Babalis.
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