distinguished professors symposium · 2020. 11. 6. · mark messier physics college of arts and...

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PROGRAM The most prestigious academic title at Indiana University is Distinguished Professor. This designation honors individuals whose research, scholarship, artistic, and literary accomplishments have transformed their fields. These new Distinguished Professors advance the legacy of academic excellence at Indiana University. DISTINGUISHED PROFESSORS SYMPOSIUM A FOUR-DAY VIRTUAL SERIES Wednesday October 21, 2020 1–2 p.m. Thursday October 22, 2020 3–4:30 p.m. Tuesday November 10, 2020 3:30–5 p.m. Wednesday November 11, 2020 1–2:30 p.m.

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  • P R O G R A M

    The most prestigious academic title at

    Indiana University is Distinguished Professor.

    This designation honors individuals whose

    research, scholarship, artistic, and literary

    accomplishments have transformed their fields.

    These new Distinguished Professors

    advance the legacy of academic excellence

    at Indiana University.

    D I S T I N G U I S H E D

    P R O F E S S O R S S Y M P O S I U M

    A F O U R - D A Y V I R T U A L S E R I E S

    W e d n e s d a y

    O c t o b e r 2 1 , 2 0 2 0

    1 – 2 p . m .

    T h u r s d a y

    O c t o b e r 2 2 , 2 0 2 0

    3 – 4 : 3 0 p . m .

    Tu e s d a y

    N o v e m b e r 1 0 , 2 0 2 0

    3 : 3 0 – 5 p . m .

    W e d n e s d a y

    N o v e m b e r 1 1 , 2 0 2 0

    1 – 2 : 3 0 p . m .

  • O c t o b e r 2 1 , 2 0 2 0

    Opening Remarks

    Michael A. McRobbiePresident, Indiana University

    Presentations

    Lisa Blomgren AmslerPublic and Environmental AffairsO’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs

    Lynda F. BonewaldAnatomy, Cell Biology and Physiology, Orthopaedic SurgerySchool of Medicine

    Filippo MenczerInformatics, Computer Science Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering

    Closing Remarks

    President McRobbie

    O c t o b e r 2 2 , 2 0 2 0

    Opening Remarks

    Michael A. McRobbiePresident, Indiana University

    Presentations

    Loren J. FieldMedicine, Physiology and Biophysics, PediatricsSchool of Medicine

    David P. GiedrocChemistryCollege of Arts and Sciences

    Roger InnesBiologyCollege of Arts and Sciences

    G. David RoodmanMedicine, Biochemistry and Molecular BiologySchool of Medicine

    Closing Remarks

    President McRobbie

    N o v e m b e r 1 0 , 2 0 2 0

    Opening Remarks

    Michael A. McRobbiePresident, Indiana University

    Presentations

    Ann E. ElsnerOptometrySchool of Optometry

    Mark MessierPhysicsCollege of Arts and Sciences

    Osamu James NakagawaPhotographyEskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design

    David R. Williams ChemistryCollege of Arts and Sciences

    Closing Remarks

    President McRobbie

    N o v e m b e r 1 1 , 2 0 2 0

    Opening Remarks

    Michael A. McRobbiePresident, Indiana University

    Presentations

    Charles Gardner GeyhLawMaurer School of Law

    Jeffrey L. GouldHistoryCollege of Arts and Sciences

    Chandan K. Sen SurgerySchool of Medicine

    Marietta SimpsonVoiceJacobs School of Music

    Closing Remarks

    President McRobbie

  • 4 5

    Lisa Blomgren Amsler

    Lisa Blomgren Amsler (formerly Lisa B. Bingham) is Keller-Runden Professor, Indiana University Paul H. O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs, and Saltman Senior Scholar, University of Nevada Las Vegas William S. Boyd School of Law. A graduate of Smith College (A.B. 1976, magna cum laude, high honors in ancient Greek and double major with philosophy), University of Connecticut School of Law (J.D. 1979, high honors), and former partner of Shipman & Goodwin (Hartford, Connecticut), her research addresses collaborative governance, dispute resolution, and dispute system design. Amsler coined the phrase “repeat player effect” in her 1997 article on mandatory or adhesive non-union employment arbitration, the first empirical research on this phenomenon, most recently cited by the United States Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit in Monster Energy v. City Beverages. She directed the United States Postal Service REDRESS National Evaluation Project on employment discrimination complaints, collecting longitudinal data on the world’s largest employment mediation program (1994–2006).

    A National Academy of Public Administration Fellow, Amsler received awards for outstanding research from the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolution, Association for Conflict Resolution, American Society for Public Administration, International Association for Conflict Management, and Labor and Employment Relations Association. She co-edited three books (with Rosemary O’Leary) and published over 120 articles or book chapters. Her co-authored book, Dispute System Design: Preventing, Managing, and Resolving Conflict, will be published by Stanford University Press in May 2020.

    Lynda F. Bonewald

    Lynda F. Bonewald is the founding director of the Indiana Center for Musculoskeletal Health (ICMH), a center with over 100 members from 27 schools and four campuses. She received her Ph.D. in Immunology/Microbiology from the Medical University of South Carolina, was promoted from assistant professor to professor at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, and served as director of the Bone Biology Research Program and as vice chancellor for research at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. She is a past president of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research (ASBMR) and the Association of Biomolecular Resource Facilities. She has served as chair of the Board of Scientific Counselors for the NIH National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research and served on the Council for the NIH National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. She received the Basic Research in Biological Mineralization Award from the International Association for Dental Research, the RIB Award from the Orthopaedic Research Society’s Musculoskeletal Biology Workshop at Sun Valley, and the prestigious William F. Neuman Award from the ASBMR and is an American Association for the Advancement of Science Fellow.

    Bonewald has been continually funded by NIH for over 30 years and is best known for her work in the study of osteocytes; she is responsible for tools used by researchers globally to determine osteocyte biology and function. A leading expert on osteocytes, she is singularly responsible for the rapid advancement of the field of osteocyte biology. Bonewald has authored over 200 publications, 42 reviews, and four commentaries, having been cited more than 30,000 times. She holds nine patents. She is currently studying bone and muscle crosstalk with aging.

  • 6 7

    Ann E. Elsner

    Ann E. Elsner is a fourth-generation IU alumna who earned her B.A. in 1972 with departmental honors for undergraduate research. After receiving an M.A. and a Ph.D (1977) from the University of Oregon, she worked at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and Carnegie-Mellon University until 1987, when she relocated to Harvard University. There she started her own laboratory, which she moved to IU Bloomington in 2005 when she became a professor in the School of Optometry. She served as director of the Borish Center for Ophthalmic Research and as associate dean for research. For over three decades, she has been a principal investigator on grants from the National Institutes of Health and other agencies.

    Her research focuses on combating vision loss. By developing techniques in retinal imaging and visual function, she and her colleagues discovered several unexpected properties of normal and diseased tissues. She imaged structures that had never been seen in living tissues, using novel light sources and particularly near- infrared light. This work is published in over 100 papers and was honored in 2018 with the Edwin H. Land Medal from the Optical Society of America and the Society for Imaging Science and Technology. She is a fellow of the Optical Society of America, the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, and the American Academy of Optometry. She has extensive service as an editorial board member, a guest editor, a symposium organizer, and a reviewer for peer-reviewed articles and grant proposals.

    Loren J. Field

    Loren J. Field joined the Indiana University School of Medicine in 1990 and currently serves as a professor of medicine, physiology and biophysics, and pediatrics. In 1998, he became the director of the Cardiac Developmental Biology Group of the Wells Center for Pediatric Research. Field’s work has centered on the “Holy Grail” of cardiovascular research—understanding and developing novel strategies to promote cardiomyocyte renewal—with the ultimate aim of regenerating diseased hearts. His laboratory provided the first proof-of-concept data showing that genetic interventions can be used to enhance the rate of cardiomyocyte renewal. Collectively, his studies have shown that cardiomyocyte cell cycle activity can reverse experimentally induced myocardial injury with a concomitant functional improvement. He has also conducted groundbreaking research in the area of stem cell biology. With collaborators, Field established the potential utility of cardiomyocytes derived from the embryonic stem cells (ESC), or ESC-like cells, for intramyocardial engraftment.

    Renowned for his commitment to the highest standards of scientific ethics and a rigorous approach to science, he has published 156 papers and delivered nearly 400 presentations and departmental seminars around the world. He is a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the New York Academy of Sciences. He has served as a visiting professor and reviewer in Germany, Switzerland, Israel, the United Kingdom, and Canada. Field has also served on the editorial boards of many significant scientific journals.

  • 8 9

    Charles Gardner Geyh

    Charles Gardner Geyh is the John F. Kimberling Professor of Law at the Indiana University Maurer School of Law. His work on judicial politics, ethics, independence, and selection has appeared in over 80 books, articles, book chapters, and other publications. He is the recipient of an Andrew Carnegie fellowship, which culminated in the publication of his most recent book, Who Is to Judge: The Perennial Debate Over Whether to Elect or Appoint America’s Judges (Oxford University Press 2019). He has testified before Congress numerous times, served as the academic reporter to four American Bar Association commissions, and consulted for federal, state, and foreign governments on matters of judicial ethics, discipline, impeachment, and independence.

    Geyh received his B.A. in Political Science from the University of Wisconsin in 1980 and graduated from the University of Wisconsin Law School in 1983. He then clerked for the Honorable Thomas A. Clark on the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, worked as an associate at the Washington, D.C., law firm of Covington & Burling, and served as counsel to the United States House of Representatives Committee on the Judiciary before beginning his teaching career in 1991. He joined the Indiana University law faculty in 1999 and has served as the law school’s associate dean for research. He is the recipient of three faculty fellowships; three Trustees’ Teaching Awards; the Wallace Teaching Award and the Gavel Award (for outstanding contribution to the graduating class) from the law school; and the Black Law Student Association’s Outstanding Interactive Professor Award.

    David P. Giedroc

    David P. Giedroc earned his B.S. (Biochemistry) from the Pennsylvania State University and obtained his Ph.D. (Biochemistry) under the supervision of J. David Puett at Vanderbilt University. He was an NIH postdoctoral fellow with the late Joseph E. Colman of Yale University and then established his own research group, first at Texas A&M University (1988–2007), and then at Indiana University, where he is currently Lilly Chemistry Alumni Professor in the Department of Chemistry.

    Giedroc studies the inorganic chemistry of bacterial cells and is a pioneer in our understanding of transition metal homeostasis, the process that governs the correct metalation status of approximately 30 percent of the proteome. He was the first to develop and implement a physicochemical framework for exploring this problem by incorporating concepts of thermodynamic linkage and dynamics-driven allostery. More recent discoveries are foundational to the emerging field of hydrogen sulfide signaling, and Giedroc continues to elucidate how new sulfur chemistry and cellular reactive sulfur species impact bacterial physiology relevant to infections. Giedroc was named a faculty fellow at Texas A&M University (2001–08) and at Indiana University is founding director of the NIH Chemistry-Biology Interface (CBI) Training Program in Quantitative and Chemistry Biology (QCB) (2010–present) and past department chair (2010–15). Giedroc is current chair of the board of Metallomics, a publication of the Royal Society of Chemistry (UK) and is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Royal Society of Chemistry, an OXIDE (Open Chemistry Collaborative in Diversity Equity) Diversity Catalyst Lecturer, and a fellow of the American Academy of Microbiology.

  • 10 11

    Jeffrey L. Gould

    Jeffrey L. Gould received his doctorate in history at Yale University. From 1995 to 2008, he was director of IU’s Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies.

    His first book, To Lead as Equals: Rural Protest and Political Consciousness in Chinandega, Nicaragua, 1912–1979, is a study of the peasant movement in Nicaragua. His second book, To Die in This Way: Nicaraguan Indian Communities and the Myth of Mestizaje, 1880–1965, challenged the myth of a mestizo Nicaragua. His 200 interviews with survivors of la matanza resulted in To Rise in Darkness: Revolution, Repression, and Memory in El Salvador, 1920–1932 (co-authored with Aldo Lauria), which challenged interpretations of the insurrection and subsequent massacres. Solidarity Under Siege: Solidarity and Discord in the Salvadoran Labor Movement, 1970–1990 deals with the labor mobilization in a Salvadoran shrimp port. Entre el Bosque y los Arboles: Utopías Menores en El Salvador, Nicaragua, y Uruguay [in press] uncovers minor utopias and their challenges to official and oppositional hierarchies.

    Gould co-directed and co-produced the film Scars of Memory: El Salvador, 1932, with Carlos Henriquez. His next film, La Palabra en el Bosque, also with Henriquez, highlights the Christian Base Communities in El Salvador during the 1970s. His most recent film, Port Triumph, is rooted in the same research as Solidarity Under Siege.

    Gould received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2002. He was a member of the School of Historical Studies at the Institute for Advanced Study from 2012 to 2013 and a fellow at the Charles Warren Center, Harvard University, from 2016 to 2017. The Center for Advanced Latin American Studies, a consortium of German universities and the Universidad de Guadalajara, named him one of eight founding fellows in 2018.

    Roger Innes

    Roger Innes holds the Class of 1954 Professorship in Biology at Indiana University Bloomington and currently directs IU Bloomington’s Electron Microscopy Center. He received his Ph.D. in Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology at the University of Colorado Boulder and completed postdoctoral research at the University of California, Berkeley. Dr. Innes’s research focuses on the immune system in plants, with a particular interest in how plants detect pathogens and how detection is translated into an active immune response. His group was among the first to identify and clone plant disease resistance genes using the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. The products of these genes encode intracellular receptors that detect the presence of pathogens by detecting the damage they cause, a process analogous to how a burglar alarm senses an intruder by detecting a broken window. Through more than two decades of research on the molecular mechanisms by which these receptors are activated, the Innes laboratory has developed genetic-based methods to enhance disease resistance in crop plants, and thus significantly reduce farmer reliance on pesticides while increasing yields. These advances are urgently needed, especially in developing countries, where a warming climate is already threatening global food security.

    His published work has been cited more than 11,000 times and his research program has been supported by grants from the USDA, NIH, NSF, Department of Energy, Novartis, and the NovoNordisk Foundation for Biosustainability. He is an elected fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Academy of Microbiology. He serves as the president-elect of the International Society of Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions.

  • 12 13

    Filippo Menczer

    Filippo Menczer is a professor of informatics and computer science at Indiana University Bloomington and director of the Observatory on Social Media. He has courtesy appointments in cognitive science and physics. He holds a laurea degree in Physics from the Sapienza University of Rome and a Ph.D. in Computer Science and Cognitive Science from the University of California, San Diego. Dr. Menczer is an Association for Computer Machinery Distinguished Scientist, a fellow of the Center for Computer-Mediated Communication, a senior research fellow of IU’s Kinsey Institute, and a board member of the IU Network Science Institute. He previously served as division chair in the IU Bloomington School of Informatics and Computing, director of the Center for Complex Networks and Systems Research, visiting scientist at Yahoo Research, fellow of the Institute for Scientific Interchange Foundation in Torino, Italy, and fellow-at-large of the Santa Fe Institute. He has been the recipient of Fulbright, Rotary Foundation, and NATO fellowships, and a Career Award from the National Science Foundation.

    His research interests span web and data science, computational social science, science of science, and modeling of complex information networks. In the last 10 years, his lab has led efforts to study online misinformation spread and to develop tools to detect and counter social media manipulation. This work has been covered in many U.S. and international news sources, including the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Economist, Guardian, Atlantic, Science, Nature, NPR, PBS, CNN, BBC, and Reuters. Menczer received multiple service awards and currently serves as associate editor of the Network Science journal and on the editorial boards of EPJ Data Science and PeerJ Computer Science.

    Mark Messier

    Mark Messier is Rudy Professor of Physics in the College of Arts and Sciences at IU Bloomington. He completed his B.S. in Physics from MIT in 1993 and a Ph.D. in Physics from Boston University in 1999. His research focuses on the measurement of fundamental particles called neutrinos, which are central to several questions in particle physics and cosmology. Messier launched his career studying neutrinos with the Super-Kamiokande experiment in Japan; work for the experiment was cited in the award of the 2015 Nobel Prize. Messier then turned his attention to the capabilities of the particle accelerators at the Fermi National Laboratory outside of Chicago to study neutrinos. He has led the development of new technologies for neutrino detection. He is a founding member of the 200-person NOvA experiment and led the experiment for 12 years during proposal, construction, and data taking. He is currently a member of the DUNE experiment, which will make definitive measurements of differences between matter and antimatter neutrinos.

    As a dedicated educator, he has lectured on principles of neutrino detection at summer schools around the world and participated in multiple panels on career development and equity and diversity issues in physics. Messier is a recipient of the 2016 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics and is an elected fellow of the American Physical Society. He is a frequent panelist and consultant for the National Science Foundation and Department of Energy and has served on several international panels charged with planning the global neutrino research program.

  • 14 15

    Osamu James Nakagawa

    Osamu James Nakagawa was born in New York City in 1962 and raised in Tokyo. He returned to the United States and moved to Houston, Texas, at the age of 15. He received a Bachelor of Arts from the University of St. Thomas Houston in 1986 and a Master of Fine Arts from the University of Houston in 1993. Currently, Mr. Nakagawa is the Ruth N. Halls Professor of Photography at Indiana University, where he directs the Center for Integrative Photographic Studies.

    Nakagawa is the recipient of a 2009 Guggenheim Fellowship, the 2010 Higashikawa New Photographer Award, and the 2015 Sagamihara Photographer of the Year Award in Japan. Nakagawa’s work has been exhibited internationally, including From the Cave, Tokyo Photographic Art Museum; 2019 Kyotographie, Eclipse + Kai: Osamu James Nakagawa, Gallery Sugata; Photography to End All Photography, Brandts Museum, Denmark; OKINAWA TRILOGY: Osamu James Nakagawa, Kyoto University of Art and Design; War/Photography, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; After Photoshop: Manipulated Photography in the Digital Age, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and others.

    His work is included in numerous collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art; the George Eastman Museum; the Tokyo Photographic Art Museum; the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; Sakima Art Museum, Okinawa; The Museum of Contemporary Photography at Columbia College Chicago; and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. Nakagawa’s work appears in many international publications. Recently, his work was published in A World History of Photography (5th edition) by Naomi Rosenblum. Nakagawa’s monograph GAMA Caves is available from Akaaka Art Publisher in Tokyo, Japan.

    G. David Roodman

    G. David Roodman joined the IU School of Medicine as director of the Hematology/Oncology Division in the Department of Medicine in 2011. His research focuses on how cell to cell interactions among hematopoietic cells and cells in the bone marrow microenvironment control normal and malignant hematopoiesis and diseases affecting bone remodeling. In particular, his laboratory has undertaken studies of the molecular pathways involved in the pathogenesis and progression of myeloma bone disease, and how cell to cell interactions between tumor cells, bone-resorbing cells, and bone-building cells, as well as other cells in the bone microenvironment, lead to increased bone destruction and suppressed bone formation. These changes in bone remodeling further increase tumor cell growth, survival, and chemoresistance. His laboratory has identified multiple factors driving bone destruction in myeloma and the important role that the marrow microenvironment plays in tumor growth and bone destruction in myeloma patients. Most recently, Dr. Roodman’s lab identified several novel inhibitors of osteoblast differentiation that are induced or produced by myeloma cells and important contributions of osteocytes (the most numerous cells in bone) on tumor growth and bone destruction in myeloma.

    Dr. Roodman has authored more than 450 peer reviewed publications and book chapters and is a member of the American Society for Clinical Investigation and the American Academy of Pediatrics, and is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. His laboratory has been funded by the NIH and the VA Merit Review Program since 1981.

  • 16 17

    Chandan K. Sen

    Chandan K. Sen is J. Stanley Battersby Chair and Professor of Surgery and director of the Indiana Center for Regenerative Medicine and Engineering (ICRME). At IU, he serves as associate vice president of research. At the IU School of Medicine, he serves as associate dean of research. At Indiana University Health, Dr. Sen is the executive director of the Comprehensive Wound Center. Dr. Sen is recognized as a Lilly INCITE scholar. After completing his Master of Science in Human Physiology from the University of Calcutta, Dr. Sen received his Ph.D. in Physiology from the University of Eastern Finland. Dr. Sen trained as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of California, Berkeley’s Department of Molecular and Cell Biology. His first faculty appointment was in the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. In 2000, Dr. Sen moved to The Ohio State University where he was tenured John H. and Mildred C. Lumley Professor of Surgery, executive director of the Ohio State University Comprehensive Wound Center, and director of the university’s Center for Regenerative Medicine and Cell-Based Therapies.

    Dr. Sen’s primary areas of research interest include tissue injury, repair, regeneration, and infection. His group has pioneered the tissue nanotransfection (TNT) technology in regenerative medicine. TNT received an Edison Award for Innovation in 2018. Dr. Sen’s work has also led to electroceutical management of tissue infection. In 2016, this technology received the Frost & Sullivan New Product Innovation Award. Dr. Sen has published over 300 peer reviewed publications and a dozen books which are currently cited over 33,000 times in the literature. He has a current H-index of 95.

    Marietta Simpson

    Marietta Simpson, known for her deeply expressive, beautiful mezzo-soprano voice, has sung with every major orchestra in the United States and under many of the world’s greatest conductors including Kurt Masur, Raymond Leppard, Lorin Maazel, Neville Marriner, André Previn, Simon Rattle, James Conlon, Helmuth Rilling, Patrick Summers, Daniel Barenboim, and Robert Shaw, with whom she made her Carnegie Hall debut. She has also sung with many of the major European orchestras including the Philharmonic orchestras of London, Prague, Berlin, and Vienna. Some of the great operatic stages of the world she has appeared on include La Fenice, La Scala, Glyndebourne, Royal Opera House Covent Garden, and Bregenz, and in the United States with companies such as Houston Grand Opera, LA Opera, New York City Opera, Glimmerglass, Washington National Opera, Augusta Opera, Mobile Opera, and Opera Philadelphia.

    Simpson has an extensive discography and has collaborated on several Grammy-nominated recordings. In 2006, she received recognition for her solo role in the Grammy Award–winning recording of William Bolcom’s Songs of Innocence and Experience. Her many television appearances include the Emmy Award–winning Strange Fruit and Emmy-nominated Musical Threads: A Musical Journey (produced by WFYI), both with guitarist Dr. Tyron Cooper. Her recently released, highly successful solo CD Crooked Stick: Songs in a Strange Land was filmed by WTIU for national release in spring of 2020.

    The recipient of many awards, in 2019 she was selected as a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She was named Rudy Professor of Music in 2015.

  • 18 19

    David R. Williams

    David R. Williams is the Harry G. Day Chair in Chemistry at Indiana University Bloomington. Upon completion of his B.S. degree (St. Lawrence University, 1970), he attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for graduate studies under the mentorship of Professor George Büchi (Ph.D. 1976). Dr. Williams was awarded a National Institutes of Health fellowship for postdoctoral training at Harvard University with Professor E. J. Corey (Nobel laureate), and subsequently with Professor R. B. Woodward (Nobel laureate). He accepted a position as assistant professor at Indiana University in 1980 and was promoted to the rank of professor in 1987.

    Dr. Williams’s research interests lie in the development of synthesis methodology for efficient strategies to advance molecular complexity. The Williams laboratories have made significant applications of these broadly adopted strategies with elegant applications toward biologically active natural products.

    Dr. Williams has been recognized for his teaching and research as a recipient of the Sloan Foundation Fellowship, the Edward Leete Award of the American Chemical Society (2005), and the ACS Ernest Guenther Award in the Chemistry of Natural Products (2018). At IU, he has received the Tracy M. Sonneborn Award (2002), the Distinguished Faculty Research Lecturer Award (2007–08), the Teaching Excellence Recognition Award (2000), and the Trustees Teaching Award (2014). He is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.

    David has authored 170 publications, and more than 140 graduate students and postdoctoral researchers have completed advanced studies in his labs.

    David B. Allison, 2018Lisa Blomgren Amsler,

    2020Philip D. Appleman, 1982Morris H. Aprison,* 1978William McD. Armstrong,*

    1984Martina Arroyo, 1997David B. Audretsch, 2008Joan K. Austin, 1999David N. Baker,* 1987Willis R. Barnstone, 1994Carl E. Bauer, 2018Richard Bauman, 1991Christopher Beckwith, 2017John Bodnar, 2014Peter Bondanella,* 1993Katy Börner, 2016Oscar G. Brockett,* 1976Eduardo S. Brondizio, 2019Marion E. Broome, 2006Hal E. Broxmeyer, 2004Yves Brun, 2017J. Peter Burkholder, 2006David B. Burr, 2013Jerome R. Busemeyer, 2018Robert F. Byrnes,* 1967Robert W. Campbell,* 1987Edward G. Carmines, 2013Janet S. Carpenter, 2015Fred H. Cate, 2003Kenneth G. Caulton, 1993Victoria L. Champion, 2001C. Conrad Cherry, 1991Malcolm Chisholm,* 1985Jamsheed K. Choksy, 2015Thomas D. Clark,* 1968Keith Clay, 2013Ralph E. Clelland,* 1958David E. Clemmer, 2014Arnaldo Cohen, 2019Bruce M. Cole,* 1988P. Michael Conneally,* 1988Ernest R. Davidson, 1986Ralph L. Day,* 1979Linda Dégh,* 1982Lynda F. Delph, 2017Richard D. DiMarchi, 2012E. Talbot Donaldson,* 1976John P. Donohue,* 1989Richard M. Dorson,* 1971Glanville Downey,* 1973Michael J. Econs, 2019Howard J. Edenberg, 2010Alma Eikerman,* 1976Lawrence H. Einhorn, 1987Ann E. Elsner, 2020Philip Farkas,* 1980Eileen Farrell,* 1978Harvey Feigenbaum, 1980

    I U D I S T I N G U I S H E D P R O F E S S O R S , 1 9 5 7 – 2 0 2 0

    Robert Hugh Ferrell,* 1974Loren J. Field, 2020Charles Fisch,* 1975Ciprian Ilie Foias, 1983Robert B. Forney,* 1977Tatiana Foroud, 2017Sidney Foster,* 1976Geoffrey C. Fox, 2011Horst Frenz,* 1969Miriam Fried, 2005George J. Gaber,* 1981Sumit Ganguly, 2018Howard Gest,* 1978Charles Gardner Geyh, 2020Bernardino F. Ghetti, 1997David Giedroc, 2020Josef Gingold,* 1965Steven M. Girvin, 1992Robert L. Goldstone, 2017H. Scott Gordon,* 1981Steven A. Gottlieb, 2009Jeffrey L. Gould, 2020Edward Grant, 1983Merrill Grayson,* 1981Kirsten A. Grønbjerg, 2019Susan D. Gubar, 1990Franco Gulli,* 1986Frank R.N. Gurd,* 1979Jerome Hall,* 1957Paul R. Halmos,* 1970Roger P. Hangarter, 2016Gail G. Hanson, 1997Robert A. Harris, 2001Margaret Harshaw,* 1975Anna Granville Hatcher,* 1970Felix Haurowitz,* 1958John M. Hayes,* 1990Eliot S. Hearst,* 1984Hubert Crouse Heffner,* 1961Charles B. Heiser Jr.,* 1979Gary Hieftje, 1985Ronald A. Hites, 1989Václav Hlavatý,* 1962Douglas R. Hofstadter, 2007Larry E. Humes, 2010Charles S. Hyneman,* 1961Roger Innes, 2020Alexander R. Its, 2003Barbara Jelavich,* 1984C. Conrad Johnston Jr., 1997James H. Justus,* 1988David Kaser,* 1986Nets Katz, 2013Thomas C. Kaufman, 1993Walter Kaufmann,* 1975Ellen D. Ketterson, 2006Eugene C. Klatte, 1979Emil J. Konopinski,* 1962V. Alan Kostelecky, 2006Annie Lang, 2012

  • 20

    Michael J. Larsen, 2011John Prior Lewis,* 1964Ting-Kai Li,* 1985Curtis M. Lively, 2011Elisabeth A. Lloyd, 2019Patrick J. Loehrer, 2018J. Scott Long, 2010Randy Long, 2017Michael Lynch, 2005Allan H. MacDonald, 1992Kenneth P. Mackie, 2019Dean D. Maglinte, 2010Philip Douglas Magnus, 1987Gerald Mahan, 1982Terence J. Martin,* 1985Thomas J. Mathiesen, 1996Angela B. McBride, 1992Clement J. McDonald, 1992Susann H. McDonald, 1989Filippo Menczer, 2020Mark Messier, 2020Roscoe E. Miller,* 1976Sharon M. Moe, 2019Bruce A. Molitoris, 2016Emilio F. Moran, 2007Herbert J. Muller,* 1959Mark Louis Musa,* 1983Osamu James Nakagawa,

    2020Robin P. Newhouse, 2017Paul Newman, 2002William R. Newman, 2009Roger Gerhard Newton,* 1978Timothy R. Noble, 2004Robert M. Nosofsky, 2006Milos V. Novotny, 1999John I. Nurnberger Jr., 2015John I. Nurnberger Sr.,* 1972Peter J. Ortoleva, 1996Elinor Ostrom,* 2010Norman R. Pace Jr., 1992Jeffrey D. Palmer, 1996William R. Parker,* 1958Charles S. Parmenter, 1988James L. Perry, 2009Bernice A. Pescosolido, 2007Harvey Phillips,* 1979Craig S. Pikaard, 2015Catherine A. Pilachowski,

    2019David B. Pisoni, 2012Robert E. Pollock,* 1984Rudolph O. Pozzatti, 1972John R. Preer,* 1977Menahem Pressler, 1975Frank W. Putnam,* 1974Rudolf A. Raff,* 2002Krishnan Raghavachari, 2014Douglas K. Rex, 2009Marcus C.M. Rhoades,* 1967Loren H. Rieseberg, 2004James C. Riley, 2002James O. Ritchey,* 1959Stanley Ritchie, 2016

    *Deceased

    Peter J. Roach, 2008G. David Roodman, 2020Mark Roseman, 2018Nicola Rossi-Lemeni,* 1991William R. Roush, 1995Eugene E. Rousseau, 1988Anthony G. San Pietro,* 1975Scott Russell Sanders, 1996Karl Frederick Schuessler,*

    1976Thomas A. Sebeok,* 1967Gyorgy Sebok,* 1985Oskar Seidlin,* 1974Ewald E. Selkurt,* 1976Chandan K. Sen, 2020William G. Shafer,* 1971Anantha Shekhar, 2017Richard M. Shiffrin, 2002Harris B. Shumacker Jr.,*

    1970Marietta Simpson, 2020Denis Sinor,* 1975George W. Sledge Jr., 2012Eliot R. Smith, 2016Linda B. Smith, 2008Olaf Sporns, 2014Nicolas Spulber,* 1974János Starker,* 1965Joseph E. Steinmetz, 2006George K. Stookey, 1998Gerald Strauss,* 1983Sheldon Stryker,* 1985Roger Meyer Temam, 2014David P. Thelen, 2004William R. Thompson, 2011Hans B. Thorelli,* 1964James T. Townsend, 2008Giorgio Tozzi,* 2001Pravin K. Trivedi, 2009Robert C. Turner,* 1961Samrat Upadhyay, 2019Henry Babcock Veatch,* 1961Violette Verdy,* 2005Victor E. Viola, 1990Charles F. Voegelin,* 1967Michael J. Wade, 2008André Watts, 2017David H. Weaver, 2011George Weber,* 1990Michael A. Weiss, 2019Richard S. Westfall,* 1976Herbert S. White, 1991Richard R. Wilk, 2015David R. Williams, 2020Kenneth P. Williams,* 1957George Wilton Wilson,* 1978Robert L. Winkler, 1980Mervin C. Yoder Jr., 2013Virginia Zeani, 1994Douglas P. Zipes, 1994Kevin Zumbrun, 2015

    Originally scheduled for spring 2020,

    these events were postponed because of

    the COVID-19 pandemic.

    DISTINGUISHED PROFESSORS SYMPOSIUMDISTINGUISHED PROFESSORS SYMPOSIUMA FOUR-DAY VIRTUAL SERIESPROGRAMOctober 21, 2020October 22, 2020November 10, 2020November 11, 2020Lisa Blomgren Amsler Lynda F. Bonewald Ann E. ElsnerLoren J. FieldCharles Gardner GeyhDavid P. GiedrocJeffrey L. GouldRoger Innes Filippo Menczer Mark MessierOsamu James NakagawaG. David Roodman Chandan K. Sen Marietta SimpsonDavid R. Williams IU DISTINGUISHED PROFESSORS, 1957–2020