Mike Dennin, one of our AirUCI faculty as well as UCI Vice Provost for Teaching and Learning and Dean of Undergraduate Education, is quoted on INC.com in an article entitled 10 Things You Believe That Are Holding You Back From Success (and What to Do Instead). He recommends admitting mistakes and allowing others to see you correct them and move forward rather than deflecting blame.
"Leadership requires appropriate ownership of errors and then moving forward from them. When you take responsibility for your actions, others will turn to you as someone who won't sugarcoat things, but as someone they can trust and rely upon. This in turn strengthens your leadership position as opposed to weakening it."
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News
Here's the latest news from AirUCI — our events, our people, our science.
2017
AirUCI faculty Doug Tobias and two other UCI professors have been funded with seed money from the 2016-17 Investing to Develop Center-Scale Multidisciplinary Convergence Research Programs. Their submission was entitled "Convergence Science for Molecular Biology: From Computation and Social Networks to Biotechnology" and Doug will be working with Prof. Rachel Martin (Chemistry) and Prof. Carter Butts (Sociology) to develop this proposal.
AirUCI faculty Steven Davis is among the awardees of UCI's 2016-17 Research Seed Funding Program Investing to Develop Center-Scale Multidisciplinary Convergence Research Programs. He and his UCI collaborators received seed money to study sustainable water and ecosystem management in the Southwestern U.S. by increasing the accuracy and reliability of sub-seasonal to seasonal precipitation forecasts. It is anticipated this award will prepare the PIs and their teams for successful submission and funding of large center-scale research projects at UCI.
View the Awards page for this program
The American Association for Aerosol Research (AAAR) has presented AirUCI faculty Jim Smith with the 2017 Benjamin Y. H. Liu Award, which recognizes outstanding contributions to aerosol instrumentation and experimental techniques that have significantly advanced the science and technology of aerosols. Way to go, Jim!
Barbara Finlayson-Pitts has received the 2018 Polanyi Medal from the British Royal Society of Chemistry. She will also give the associated Michael Polanyi Lecture at the 25th International Symposium on Gas Kinetics and Related Phenomena to be held in Lille, France from July 22 – 26, 2018.
AirUCI faculty Craig Murray welcomes high school teachers Larry Sepulveda (Rosemead High School) and Linda Kazibwe-James (Whittier Christian School) to his research group for four weeks this summer. Larry and Linda are participating in the NSF-funded ‘Teacher in Residence’ outreach program and will be working with his research team in the lab. The program aims to provide high school teachers with hands-on experience of life in a research laboratory.
AirUCI Project Scientists Lisa Wingen and Veronique Perraud, along with Finlayson-Pitts group grad student Allison Vander Wall, are participating in this year's AAUW-California Tech Trek week, being held on the UCI campus.
Since their founding in 1881, the American Association of University Women (AAUW) has been among the nation’s leading voices in promoting equity and education for women and girls. Since 1998, AAUW Tech Trek camps have been designed to help girls continue their interests in science, math, engineering and technology (STEM) exploration and learning. AirUCI is proud to support this important cause.
AirUCI faculty Annmarie Carlton has received the 2017 Atmospheric Sciences Ascent Award from the American Geophysical Union. The AS Ascent Award is given to one exceptional mid-career scientist per year in the fields of the atmospheric and climate sciences for excellence in research and leadership in his or her field. Congratulations, Annmarie!
Photo of award presentation on 12/12/2017 at the AGU meeting in New Orleans
AirUCI faculty Steve Davis is quoted in a National Geographic article on the threat to millions of people from extreme heat events, potentially impacting the majority of humans by the year 2100. Steve says that poorer, more tropical countries are in greater peril, driving people to leave their homes and migrate which causes additional political and humanitarian stresses. He also cites data showing that summers in 92 percent of U.S. cities have become hotter since 1970 but notes that richer nations have many more options for coping with extreme heat.
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AirUCI faculty Steve Davis is quoted in a Reuters article about the increase in deaths in India due to extreme heat waves, which are becoming more common there and throughout Asia. A modest 0.5 degree Celsius rise in average temperatures in India over the last 50 years has led to a nearly 150 percent hike in heat waves that kill at least 100 people, and scientists project a 2-3 degree rise in global temperatures, even under more conservative climate models.
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