|
  |
Speaker Biographies |
Noha Adly, Director of Information and
Communication Technology Department and International School of Information
Science, research center, at the Bibliotheca Alexandrina. She obtained her
Ph.D. from
Cambridge University
,
UK
, and is an Associate Professor at
Alexandria University
,
Egypt
. Her research includes
distributed systems, database systems, and digital libraries.
June 7, 2007 type="tight"/>
|
June 7, 2007ow:1'>
Daniel E. Atkins,
Director, Office of Cyberinfrastructure, National
Science Foundation, retains academic positions in the
School
of
Information
and Department of
Electrical and Computer Engineering,
University
of
Michigan
.
He served as chair, NSF's Blue-Ribbon Advisory Panel on Cyberinfrastructure,
and director, NSF EXPRES Project.
|
James Boyle, William Neal Reynolds Professor of Law,
Duke
University
,
and co-founder of Center for the Study of the Public Domain, is a member of
the Creative Commons Board and one of the principal organizers of Science
Commons. He writes an online column for Financial Times and won the 2003
World Technology Network Award for Law.
|
Lynne J. Brindley, Chief Executive, British Library, was
pro-vice-chancellor for communications and IT, University Librarian,
University of Leeds, librarian & director of Information Services, London
School of Economics, director of Library & Information Services and PVC
for IT, Aston University, a Principal Consultant at KPMG, specializing in IS and
knowledge management strategy, and she is a visiting Professor at City and Leeds
universities.
|
John Seely Brown, author, Digital Age, was Chief Scientist of Xerox
Corporation and directed its
Palo Alto
Research
Center
and now a senior fellow at the
Annenberg
Center
for
Communication; inducted into the Industry Hall of Fame. He is widely
known as a renaissance man of the digital age, exploring to combine high tech
with soft touch in order to induce a culture of learning.
|

James Johnson Duderstadt, founder, Millennium Project, is
President Emeritus and University
Professor of Science and Engineering,
University
of
Michigan
.
His teaching and research include nuclear science and engineering, applied
physics, computer simulation, and science policy; served as chair of the
National Science Board.
|
Paul Ginsparg, professor of Physics and
Information Science, Cornell University, started the e-print arXiv in 1991 at Los Alamos National Laboratory, is an
American Physical Society fellow and MacArthur fellow, has served on many advisory boards, publication oversight and other
committees, has written many articles and given many public presentations.
|
Charles Henry, Vice Provost and
University Librarian at
Rice
University
, since 1996.
He is responsible for library services and programs, including the Digital
Library Initiative and the
Digital
media
Center
,
and works with many centers and institutes on campus. He is a trustee of the
Digital Library Federation, and chair of the Advisory Committee,
International University
Bremen
,
for its
Information
Resource
Center
.
Recently he was awarded a two year research grant from the Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation for the study of emerging academic disciplines.
|
Brewster Kahle, founder, director, digital librarian of non-profit Internet
Archive. He helped start Thinking Machines, founded Wide Area Information
Servers, Internet strategist AOL, and co-founded Alexa Internet, providing search services to most web browsers, and member of
American
Academy
of Arts and Sciences.
|
Michael A. Keller, Stanford's University Librarian, Director of Academic
Information Resources, Founder and Publisher of HighWire Press, and Publisher of the University Press, graduated from
Hamilton
College
, and worked previously at
Cornell, UC/Berkeley, and Yale. He is a founder and past president of the
Digital Library Federation. He has a global consulting practice on
informatics, facilities, & publishing.
|
Donald Kennedy, Editor-in-Chief, Science. President, emeritus, and Professor,
emeritus,
Stanford
University
. Former commissioner of the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration. He is a member of
the National Academy of Sciences,
American
Academy
of Art and
Sciences, and American Philosophical Society.
|
Steve Kessel, senior vice president,
Worldwide Digital Media, Amazon.com, oversees development of programs such as
Search Inside the Book, Amazon Shorts, and Amazon Upgrade. Kessel has served as vice President of Amazon's books,
music and DVD businesses for North America and
Asia
.
|
Neal Lane, Malcolm Gillis
University Professor, Rice University, holds appointments as Senior Fellow,
James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, professor, Department of
Physics and Astronomy. He served as
Assistant to the President for Science and Technology, Director, White House
Office of Science and Technology Policy, Director, National Science
Foundation, and member, National Science Board.
|
David Leebron was appointed seventh
president of
Rice
University
in 2004 and
professor of political science. He attended
Harvard
Law
School
and served on
the faculty of New York University School of Law and Columbia University
School of Law, where he became dean and the Lucy G. Moses Professor of Law.
|
Deanna B. Marcum, Associate
Librarian for Library Services for the Library of Congress. She is
responsible for integrating the emerging digital resources into the
traditional artifactual library–the first step
toward building a national digital library for the 21st century.
|
Susan K. McIntosh, Director, Scientia Institute, Professor of
Anthropology
Rice
University
. Her archaeological research focuses on the
origins of complex societies in the
Senegal
and
Niger River
Valleys
of
West Africa
. She has worked in digital initiatives to
expand access to archaeological information for
Africa
and is currently interested in exploring how archaeological monographs and
excavation reports could be enhanced and re-conceptualized by digital
publishing.
|
Michael S. Turner, Rauner Distinguished Service
Professor in the Kavli Institute for Cosmological
Physics at The
University
of
Chicago
. He served
as Assistant Director for Mathematical and Physical Sciences at the National
Science Foundation from 2003 to 2006. His research pioneered the application
of elementary-particle theory to cosmology and astrophysics.
|
Harold E. Varmus, president,
Memorial
Sloan-Kettering
Cancer
Center
, former director
of the NIH, co-founder and chair of PLoS, and
co-recipient of a Nobel Prize for studies of the genetic basis of cancer.
|
William Wulf, president of the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) since 1997. The
NAE and National Academy of Sciences operate under a congressional charter to
provide advice to government on issues of science and engineering. Dr. Wulf is on leave from the
University
of
Virginia
,
where he is a University Professor. His research spans computer architecture,
computer security, programming languages, and optimizing compilers.
|
Funded by the De Lange Endowment, established by
C. M. and Demaris Hudspeth in memory of Demaris’ parents, Albert and Demaris De Lange.
Hosted by Rice University via the Fondren Library and the
Computer Information and Technology Institute |
|