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Leah H. JamiesonCandidate for 2006 IEEE President-ElectPurdue University +1 765 494 4966
This page is the candidate’s personal web site and does not
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Biography Jamieson is co-founder and
Director of the Engineering Projects in Community Service – EPICS – program
(http://epics.ecn.purdue.edu and
http://epicsnational.ecn.purdue.edu). EPICS is an engineering design program
that operates in a service-learning context. Under the EPICS program, teams
of undergraduates earn academic credit for multi-year, multidisciplinary
projects that solve engineering- and technology-based problems for community
service and education organizations. Initiated at Purdue in 1995, EPICS
programs have been created at sixteen additional universities. EPICS co-founders
Leah H. Jamieson and Edward J. Coyle and co-director William C. Oakes were
awarded the U.S. National Academy of Engineering’s 2005 Bernard M.
Gordon Prize for Innovation in Engineering and Technology Education “for
innovations in the education of tomorrow’s engineering leaders by
developing and disseminating the Engineering Projects in Community Service
(EPICS) program.” Jamieson’s activities related to EPICS have
also been recognized by the 1997 Chester F. Carlson Award for Innovation
in Engineering Education from the American Society for Engineering Education
(with Edward J. Coyle) and the IEEE Education Society's 2000 Harriet B.
Rigas “Outstanding Woman Engineering Educator'” Award. She
was one of the first seven recipients of the NSF Director’s Award
for Distinguished Teaching Scholars (2001), was inducted into Purdue’s
Book of Great Teachers (2003), and was named 2002 Indiana Professor of
the Year by the Carnegie Foundation and the Council for the Advancement
and Support of Education. EPICS was featured in the PBS documentary Communities
Building Community, produced by WFYI Indianapolis in 2003. In 2005, Jamieson
was elected to the U.S. National Academy of Engineering, “for innovations
in integrating engineering education and community service.” Jamieson’s research interests include speech analysis and recognition; the design and analysis of parallel processing algorithms; and the application of parallel processing to the areas of digital speech, image, and signal processing. She has authored over 160 journal and conference papers in these areas and has co-edited books on Algorithmically Specialized Parallel Computers (Academic Press, 1985) and The Characteristics of Parallel Algorithms (M.I.T. Press, 1987). She was elected a Fellow of the IEEE in 1993 “for contributions to the design and characterization of parallel algorithms for speech, image, and signal processing applications.” She has been an IEEE Signal Processing Society Distinguished Lecturer and an IEEE Computer Society Distinguished Visitor. Jamieson has been an active volunteer in the 365,000-member Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). She is past president of the IEEE Signal Processing Society, was 2003 IEEE Vice-President for Technical Activities, is 2005 IEEE Vice-President for Publication Services and Products, chairs IEEE's New Technology Directions Committee, and serves as a member of the IEEE Board of Directors and Executive Committee (2003 and 2005). She is a candidate for 2007 IEEE President, in a general election to be held in 2005. She has served as an Associate Editor for the IEEE Transactions on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing (1986-87) and the IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems (1991-94) and as a member of the editorial board for the Proceedings of the IEEE (2000-01). She was awarded an IEEE Third Millennium Medal (2000) and the IEEE Signal Processing Society’s 2003 Meritorious Service Award. Jamieson has served on the Advisory Committee for the NSF Directorate for Computer and Information Science and Engineering (CISE) (1998-2000). She has been an elected member (1998-2001, 2001-07) and Secretary (1999-2001) of the Board of Directors of the Computing Research Association (CRA) and was program co-chair for the 2002 CRA Snowbird Conference. She serves on the external advisory boards for the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at Northwestern University and for the Electrical Engineering Department at Princeton University. Jamieson is a past co-chair (1996-99) of the Computing Research Association’s Committee on the Status in of Women in Computing Research (CRA-W) and has been an active participant in CRA-W’s mentoring programs and workshops. She served on the 1997 Presidential Task Force on Women’s Issues at Purdue and as co-convener of the Committee on the Status of Women at Purdue (1999-2000). She is founding chair of the Women Faculty in Engineering Committee at Purdue. In 1997-98, she was facilitator/moderator for a series of workshops for science and engineering faculty on gender equity and classroom climate, funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and conducted by Purdue’s Women in Engineering Programs, Women in Science Programs, and Division of Theatre. The series led to the publication of a videotape and resource guide for faculty classroom climate workshops on gender equity. Jamieson has been awarded Purdue's Helen B. Schleman Gold Medallion for efforts on behalf of women students and the Violet B. Haas Award from Purdue’s Council on the Status of Women. She gave a keynote address at the 2002 Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing and was one of 18 women profiled in the Careers Booklet Women in Computer Science published in 1996 by CRA’s Committee on the Status in of Women in Computing Research. |
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