NUS Faculty of
Science Provost's and Dean's Chair Professorships
NUS
Faculty of Science is proud to announce our inaugural Provost's
Chair and the Dean's Chairs to 4 faculty members. These Chairs
are for a 3-year term, and are bestowed in recognition of their
excellent academic contributions to the Faculty and international
recognition in their field of research.
Our
Provost's Chair recipients (for the term 1 July 2010 to 30
June 2013) are Professor BG Englert and Professor
Ding Jeak Ling.
Professor
Englert joined
NUS in 2002 as a Visiting Professor before accepting a Professorship
appointment in 2003. His research activities span more than
two decades and diverse topics in theoretical quantum physics.
He was part of the Center for Quantum Technology (CQT) team
that won the National Science Award in 2006.Professor Englert
is a passionate teacher and this can be reflected by the regular
nominations for teaching awards. His innovative approach in
teaching quantum mechanics is well received by students. Being
an experienced senior faculty member, he has contributed significantly
to the Department and the University in many areas, including
managing the graduate programme in Physics and setting up the
graduate programme for CQT.
Professor
Ding joined
NUS in 1982 as a Research Scientist. She progressed through
the ranks and was promoted to Professor in 2001. Professor
Ding's most significant contribution is the discovery of a
more basic mechanism for immunosurveillance in horseshoe crabs.
She discovered that bacteria and viruses can be neutralized
by a blast of highly reactive molecules (ROS) from mitochondria,
the main respiratory center in cells. She also demonstrated
that this mechanism operates in human cells. Professor Ding's
outstanding discoveries earned her the National Science and
Technology Award (1995), Far Eastern Economic Review Award
(2000) and NUS Outstanding Researcher Award (2001). She is
a fine example of a successful 'home-growth' scientist.
Our
Dean's Chair recipients (for the term 1 July 2010 to 30 June
2013) are Associate Professor Yao Shao Qin and Associate
Professor Christian Kurtsiefer.
A/Prof
Yao joined
NUS in 2001 as an Assistant Professor and was later promoted
to Associate Professor in 2006. He is considered the pioneer
of the emerging field 'Catalomics' - the interface between
chemistry and biology where the focus is to develop (chemical
and biological) strategies for high-throughput (in vitro and
in vivo) studies of enzymes at the organism level. For his
research achievements, he was awarded the 2008 ASAIHL (Association
of Southeast Asian Institutions of Higher learning)-Scopus
Young Scientist Award (Life Sciences category), the 2007 Outstanding
Scientist Award at the Faculty of Science of NUS, the 2006
Mr and Mrs Sun Chan Memorial Award (International), 2005 University
Young Researcher Award of NUS and the 2002 BMRC Young Investigator
from the Singapore Government. He is one of the world's foremost
authorities in microarray-based technologies, and a leading
expert in Chemical Biology and Chemical Proteomics.
A/Prof
Kurtsiefer joined
NUS in 2003 and rapidly established an internationally recognized
experimental research group on quantum optics. His active research
interest lies in photonic quantum information, one of the few
systems which allow one to experimentally investigate the predictions
of quantum information science. For his excellent research
achievements, he was part of the CQT team that won the National
Science Award in 2008 . He is one of the NUS pioneers who put
together the proposal for the RCE in quantum information.
Congratulations
to you all!
Prof
Andrew Wee, Dean of Science
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