IN THIS COLUMN
- Prem Devanbu, College of Engineering
- John Harvey, College of Engineering
- Isaya Kisekka, College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences and College of Engineering
- Zhongli Pan, College of Engineering
- Megan Dennis, School of Medicine
- Sabbie Miller, College of Engineering
- Brett Poulin, College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
Two awards announced recently for ٺƵ’ Prem Devanbu help define his legacy as a computer scientist.
First, he is among the recipients of 2022 Alexander von Humboldt Research Awards, given by Germany’s Alexander von Humboldt Foundation to world-renowned researchers from all disciplines whose fundamental discoveries, theories and findings have had a lasting effect on their fields.
Second, he and his co-authors received the Most Influential Paper Award from the 2022 International Conference on Software Engineering, for published in 2012.
“It is not often that research is conducted that changes the course of a field,” computer science professor Gail Murphy of the University of British Columbia wrote in a on the paper. “The demonstration by the authors that software is natural and that statistical language models apply fundamentally opens up new approaches to creating scalable, useful software development tools.”
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Devanbu joined the Department of Computer Science, College of Engineering, as an assistant professor in 1998 and was named a distinguished professor in 2021. He wrote “On the Naturalness of Software” with faculty colleague Zhendong Su, postdoctoral scholars Abram Hindle and Earl Barr, and former student Mark Gabe.
The paper describes their discovery of the striking parallels between source code and human language, finding that, like language, code was highly repetitive and predictable — even more so than English. This opened up an entirely new area of research in the field, and he has devoted his career since then to exploring the implications.
Like all recipients of Alexander von Humboldt Research Awards, Devabu has been invited to Germany as a visiting scholar. He will collaborate with Professor Michael Pradel at the University of Stuttgart on improving deep neural models of code, and with Sven Apel and Andreas Zeller at the University of Saarland on bimodal experiments to study program understanding.
The Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, named after the German nature researcher and explorer, aims to strengthen Germany as a research location through international academic exchange and by supporting Humboldt fellows and award winners throughout their lives and careers.
John Harvey, professor, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, recently received the American Society of Civil Engineers’ James Laurie Prize, named after the society’s first president and awarded for contributions to the advancement of transportation engineering.
Harvey is the director of the UC Pavement Research Center and past chair of the Transportation Technology and Policy Graduate Group. He teaches concrete and flexible pavement design and rehabilitation, asphalt concrete materials and project management.
The Pavement Research Center has an ongoing Caltrans-sponsored project (Partnered Pavement Research Center) for research and development of a wide range of pavement technology, and also works with federal agencies and industry.
The American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers announced it will present two of its major awards to ٺƵ professors during the society’s 2022 international meeting, July 17-20, in Houston:
- Isaya Kisekka, associate professor, Department of Land, Air and Water Resources, College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences; and Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering, College of Engineering — Netafim Award for Advancements in Microirrigation, recognizing excellence in research, development, extension, education or industry. Kisekka’s research focuses on developing management strategies and technologies to help farmers optimize productivity and net profitability under limited water while exerting minimum negative impacts on the environment.
- Zhongli Pan, adjunct professor, Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering— International Food Engineering Award, recognizing significant contributions in research, development or the design of food processes. The award also recognizes outstanding leadership, management and education in the food engineering profession. Pan’s group develops new techniques and technologies to make handling and processing crops like fruit, nuts, vegetables and grains more sustainable while enhancing efficiency, quality and safety. In particular, his research group is known for its innovative work using infrared heating technology for peeling, blanching, roasting, drying and disinfecting food products.
The National Science Foundation recently awarded CAREER grants to three ٺƵ faculty members.
CAREER is shorthand for the , which describes the awards as the NSF’s most prestigious in support of faculty members beginning their independent careers and “who have the potential to serve as academic role models in research and education and to lead advances in the mission of their department or organization.”
Here are the three most recent ٺƵ recipients, each listed with the title of the research project for which they received their CAREER grant and an excerpt from the project abstract:
- Megan Dennis, assistant professor, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine, School of Medicine — “Transcriptional Regulation of Primate Gene Expansions.” From the abstract: This project aims to identify what makes us uniquely human by comparing newly decoded primate genomes. Finding genetic differences may offer insights into the origins of increased human brain size and cognitive ability versus other great apes. These same genes may also explain trait differences and susceptibility to diseases observed across modern humans today.
- Sabbie Miller, assistant professor, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, College of Engineering — From the abstract: The focus will be on infrastructure woods, concrete and plastics, culminating in an understanding of the global sequestration potential from these materials.
- Brett Poulin, assistant professor, Department of Environmental Toxicology, College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences — “Uncovering the Geochemical and Biomineralization Processes Responsible for Mercury-Selenium Antagonism in the Environment.” From the abstract: Beyond research, the investigator will work to broaden public interest in metal contaminants through citizen science at U.S. national parks and develop new undergraduate curriculum with project data.
Dateline ٺƵ welcomes news of faculty and staff awards, for publication in Laurels. Send information to dateline@ucdavis.edu.
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Dateline Staff: Dave Jones, editor, 530-752-6556, dateline@ucdavis.edu; Cody Kitaura, News and Media Relations specialist, 530-752-1932, kitaura@ucdavis.edu.