Geoscience Reference
In-Depth Information
Liddle was named vice president of new-systems business development. Previ-
ously, he held various research and development positions in Xerox Corpora-
tion's Palo Alto Research Center. Dr. Liddle has served as director of numerous
public and private companies and as chair of the board of trustees of the Santa
Fe Institute. He has served on the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
Information Science and Technology Committee and has participated in several
National Research Council committees, including as chair of the Computer Sci-
ence and Telecommunications Board, member of the Committee on Innovation
in Information Technology, and chair of the Committee to Study Wireless Tech-
nology Prospects and Policy. He has been named a senior fellow of the Royal
College of Art and elected as a director of the New York Times Company. Dr.
Liddle earned a PhD in electrical engineering from the University of Toledo.
Jana B. Milford is a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of
Colorado. She previously served as a senior staff member with the Environ-
mental Defense Fund. Her research addresses technical, legal, and policy aspects
of air pollution. Her primary technical focus is modeling the chemistry and
transport of ozone, secondary organic aerosols, and other photochemical air pol-
lutants. Her research includes application of formal sensitivity and uncertainty
analysis and optimization techniques to chemistry and transport models and use
of these models in making decisions. She is also interested in application and
evaluation of statistical and mass-balance techniques for identifying sources of
air pollution on the basis of chemically speciated measurements, including out-
door, indoor, and personal exposure measurements. She has served on several
National Research Council committees, including the Committee on Air Quality
Management in the United States, and is currently a member of the Board on
Environmental Studies and Toxicology. Dr. Milford obtained a PhD from the
Department of Engineering and Public Policy of Carnegie Mellon University
and a JD from the University of Colorado School of Law.
M. Granger Morgan is a professor and head of the Department of Engineering
and Public Policy and University and Lord Chair Professor in Engineering at
Carnegie Mellon University. In addition, he holds academic appointments in the
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and in the H. John Heinz
III College. His research addresses problems in science, technology, and public
policy with a particular focus on energy, environmental systems, climate
change, and risk analysis. Much of his work has involved the development and
demonstration of methods of characterizing and treating uncertainty in quantita-
tive policy analysis. At Carnegie Mellon, Dr. Morgan directs the National Sci-
ence Foundation Climate Decision Making Center and is codirector of the Car-
negie Mellon Electricity Industry Center. He serves as chair of the Scientific and
Technical Council for the International Risk Governance Council. In the recent
past, he served as chair of the US Environmental Protection Agency Science
Advisory Board and as chair of the Electric Power Research Institute Advisory
Council. He is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of
Search WWH ::




Custom Search