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Notices

Aug. 17, 2000

Academic Opportunities

Proposals Sought

The Center for Statistics and the Social Sciences (CSSS) Seed Grants Program announces a new round of seed grants for the year 2000-1. The Seed Grants Program provides funding for promising research at the intersection of statistics and the social sciences. The goal is to stimulate scholarly initiative by encouraging faculty to explore new directions in research and scholarship that contributes at the cutting edge to the development of statistical methods for social scientific problems.

Although we encourage collaborative research across disciplines - particularly between statisticians and social scientists - such collaboration is not a formal requirement of the program. We are particularly interested in projects that show a high probability of leading to extramural funding. Thus, the funds will typically be used to pursue pilot studies, feasibility studies, or preliminary research that initiates a larger line of research.

A subsequent extramural grant that derives from seed grant funding would be administered through CSSS. Awards will be in the range of $10,000-20,000, and typically include one-month summary salary for a principal investigator and one quarter salary for a research assistant. We expect to make as many as 10 awards on an annual basis.

Eligibility: Only faculty holding the following ranks at the time of the award are eligible to apply: Professor, Associate Professor, Assistant Professor, Research Professor, Research Associate Professor, and Research Assistant Professor. Faculty with acting appointments at the time of the award are ineligible. Faculty who have received a CSSS award as PIs are ineligible to receive another until three years following the termination of the first. A PI may submit only one proposal per round. Co-PIs may submit more than one proposal, but no more than one of the proposals will be funded. A proposal that is not funded may be resubmitted in a later round only if it is substantially revised or if resubmission is recommended by the review committee.

Research project requirements: Research projects must use statistical methods to address a social scientific problem. Strong proposals will use innovative statistical methods to address cutting-edge social scientific research questions. Collaborative interdisciplinary research such as between a social scientist and a statistician is encouraged but not required. All personnel funded by the grant are expected to participate regularly in the CSSS Seminar Series, both by attending and by giving at least one seminar on the project topic. The proposal should indicate which member(s) of the research team will be the primary seminar participants.

External Support: Proposals that show promise for future extramural funding will be given preference. Indeed, PIs who plan to submit an extramural grant proposal based on their Seed Grant proposed project can increase their chances of receiving a Seed Grant Award by guaranteeing that they will submit an extramural proposal through CSSS immediately after the funding period.

In such cases, the review committee may grant awards conditional on the PI submitting an external grant within a year of the funding period. In general, support will not be given merely to extend or supplement existing funded research projects. Instead, proposals should seek to initiate new research ideas. An extramural proposal that derives from a project funded by the Seed Grants Program is expected to be administered through CSSS.

Application Form: A cover page and detailed instructions for preparing the four-page proposal can be found on the CSSS web site: http://www.csss.washington.edu/SeedGrants/

Deadline: The deadline for CSSS Seed Grant proposals is Sept. 25. Awards will be announced by Nov. 25. Submit proposals to Gayle Gray, Center for Statistics and the Social Sciences, B-308 Padelford Hall, University of Washington, Box 354322, Seattle, WA 98195.

Questions: Questions on preparing a proposal should be addressed to: Professor Ross L. Matsueda, Associate Director of CSSS, Department of Sociology, Box 353340, 616-2432, matsueda@u.washington.edu.

Other News

Blood Drive

Friday, Sept. 1, 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. and 1:45 - 7 p.m. in the Health Sciences Lobby.

Free Blood Pressure Screening

UW Hall Health Primary Care Center sponsors free blood pressure screening every Thursday from 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. in the Hall Health Primary Care Center and once a month in the following locations:

  • The HUB: Second Tuesday, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
  • Faculty Club: First Wednesday, 11 a.m. - 1 p.m.
  • Schmitz Hall: Second Wednesday, 11 a.m. - 1 p.m.
  • South Campus Center: Fourth Wednesday, 11 - 1 p.m.

    Degree Exams

    Members of the graduate faculty are invited to attend the following examinations. Chairpersons are denoted in parentheses.

    General Examinations

  • Kristine Marie Bovy, Anthropology, Ph.D. 1 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 19. 401 Denny. (Prof. Donald Grayson).

    Cathy Ferrand Bullock, Communications, Ph.D. 1:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 29. 126 Communications. (Prof. Keith Stamm).

  • Ru Chen, Pathology, Ph.D. 10 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 30. K076 Health Sciences. (Prof. Peter Rabinovitch).
  • Laurence Eng-Chee Cheng, Immunology, Ph.D. 11 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 30. H562 Health Sciences. (Prof. Philip Greenberg).
  • Ki Mo Chung, Chemical Engineering, Ph.D. 2 p.m. Monday, Aug. 21. 203 Benson. (Prof. James Seferis).
  • Daniel Richard Einstein, Bioengineering, Ph.D. 12:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 21. Harris Hydraulics. (Profs. Karyn Kunzelman and Per Reinhall).
  • Patrick James Fox, Physics, Ph.D. 10:30 a.m. Monday, Aug. 28. C520 Physics/Astronomy. (Prof. Ann Nelson).
  • Byron Daniel Gates, Chemistry, Ph.D. 10:30 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 28. 339 Chemistry. (Prof. Younan Xia).
  • Erin Gail Harper, Public Health and Community Medicine - Pathobiology, Ph.D. 2 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 29. C-2M FHCRC. (Prof. William Carter).
  • Kristen Nicole Jaax, Bioengineering, Ph.D. 10 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 6. 003 EE1. (Prof. Blake Hannaford).
  • Michelle Miriam Larocque, Education, Ph.D. 11 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 26. 102T Miller. (Prof. Douglas Cheney).
  • Shawn Elizabeth Larson, Fisheries, Ph.D. 10 a.m. Friday, Aug. 18. 129 Fisheries. (Prof. Paul Bentzen).
  • Meredith Anne Li-Vollmer, Communications, Ph.D. 10 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 28. 126 Communications. (Prof. Gerald Baldasty).
  • Heather Christy Mefford, Genetics, Ph.D. 2 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 30. K350 Health Sciences. (Prof. Barbara Trask).
  • Sehat Nauli, Biochemistry, Ph.D. 10 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 29. J412 Health Sciences. (Prof. David Baker).
  • David John Nuckley, Bioengineering, Ph.D. 2:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 18. K069 Health Sciences. (Prof. Randal Ching).
  • Michael David Peck, Social Work, Ph.D. 1 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 12. 116 Social Work. (Prof. Rosemary Ryan).
  • Joshua Abram Redstone, Computer Science and Engineering, Ph.D. 9 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 6. 322 Sieg. (Profs. Susan Eggers and Henry Levy).
  • Margaret Ann Spratt, Communications, Ph.D. 10:30 a.m. Friday, Sept. 29. 126 Communications. (Prof. Gerald Baldasty).

    Final Examinations

  • James Chapman Beck, Zoology, Ph.D. 1:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 21. 114 Kincaid. “Localization and activity of pedal peptide within the central nervous system of the gastropod mollusc Tritonia diomedea.” (Profs. A.O. Dennis Willows and Mark Cooper).
  • Donald Alan Bergstrom, Pathology, Ph.D. 4 p.m. Monday, Aug. 28. Pelton Auditorium, FHCRC. “Orchestration of skeletal myogenesis by the myogenic bHLH family of transcription factors.” (Prof. Stephen Tapscott).
  • Georgios Chrysanthakopoulos, Electrical Engineering, Ph.D. 1 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 6. 203 EE/CSE. “A fuzzy logic autonomous agent applied as a supervisory controller.” (Prof. Robert Marks).
  • David Matthew Chudzik, Biochemistry, Ph.D. 1:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 31. K069 Health Sciences. “X-ray crystallographic studies of two trypanosomatid aldolases.” (Prof. Wim Hol).
  • Manisha Desai, Public Health and Community Medicine - Biostatistics, Ph.D. 10 a.m. Thursday, Aug. 24. F643 Health Sciences. “Mixture models for genetic changes in cancer cells.” (Prof. Mary Emond).
  • Yao-Hsin Huang, Mechanical Engineering, Ph.D. 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 29. 259 Mechanical Engineering. “Some fundamental issues of constrained layer damping treatments.” (Prof. Per Reinhall).
  • Randolph Lowell Jackson, Education, Ph.D. 10:30 a.m. Monday, Sept. 25. 201 Miller. “Collaboration and learning within tele-immersive virtual environments.” (Prof. William Winn).
  • Kevin L Krisciunas, Astronomy, Ph.D. 2 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 5. C520 Physics/Astronomy. “RR lyrae stars and type Ia supernovae: Discovery and calibration of astronomical standard candles.” (Prof. Christopher Stubbs).
  • Jennifer S Lona, Linguistics, Ph.D. 1:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 21. 228 Communications. “Negation and clausal structure.” (Prof. Karen Zagona).
  • Wei Qiu, Pharmacy - Pharmaceutics, Ph.D. 10 a.m. Monday, Sept. 18. K069 Health Sciences. “In vitro and in vivo methods for predictions of CYP2C9 kinetic parameters for Phenytoin and Tolbutamide.” (Prof. Rene Levy).
  • Sylvia Heike Rieger, Germanics, Ph.D. 10 a.m. Friday, Aug. 18. 308 Denny. “Janusbilder: Der diskurs um “Frauen” und “Juden” in der burgerlichen offentlichkeit des Deutschen Kaiserreichs.” (Prof. Richard Gray).
  • Chau Thuy Thach, Public Health and Community Medicine - Biostatistics, Ph.D. 10 a.m. Friday, Sept. 1. F643 Health Sciences. “Self-designing group sequential clinical trials.” (Prof. Lloyd Fisher).
  • Andres Villaveces, Public Health and Community Medicine - Epidemiology, Ph.D. 9 a.m. Friday, Aug. 25. Harborview Injury Prevention and Research Center. “Effect of alcohol-related laws on deaths due to motor vehicle and motorcycle crashes in the United States.” (Prof. Peter Cummings).
  • Phillip Wong, Immunology, Ph.D. 3 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 31. T747 Health Sciences. “Changing TCR recognition requirements at discrete stages of intrathymic CD4+ T cell development.” (Prof. Alexander Rudensky).