Publication Type |
video |
School or College |
School of Medicine; College of Science |
Department |
Human Genetics; Oncological Sciences; Biology |
Program |
Institute of Human Genetics. Howard Hughes Medical Institute. |
Other Author |
National Science and Technology Medals Foundation |
Contributor |
National Science Foundation; White House Office of Science and Technology Policy |
Title |
National Medals of Science and Technology Awards (2001) Ceremony and Banquet, held June 13, 2002 |
Date |
2002 |
Description |
This 51 minutes, 5 seconds video is divided into two parts: the first part is a film introducing the award winners and their achievements; the second is the presentation of the actual awards by George W. Bush, President of the United States. Medal winners were: Mario R. Capecchi for his pioneering work with transgenic mice and gene targeting; Victor A. McKusick for his work on recessive disorders and cataloging recessive disorders; Francisco J. Ayala in molecular biology for his work on malaria; John A. Ewen for his breakthrough work with metallocenes in modifying and developing new plastics; Arun N. Netravali for communications technology and picture transmission; Sydney Pestka for his pioneering work with Interferon and anti-viral therapies; Gene Likens, ecologist and a leading pioneer in the study of acid rain; the Dow Chemical Company; Jerry M. Woodall for his work with compound semiconductors and materials science; Elias M. Stein for his work in the field of harmonic analysis; Calyampudi R. Rao for his pioneering contributions to the foundations of statistical theory and multivariate statistical methodology, and their applications; Ann M. Graybiel for brain research and the basal ganglia and its role in habit formation and in disorders such as Parkinson's disease; Charles D. Keeling for carbon dioxide monitoring and the development of the Keeling curve which measures the progressive buildup of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, in the atmosphere; George F. Bass, a leading pioneer in the field of modern underwater archaeology; Andreas Acrivos for his work in fluid mechanics; Ernest R. Davidson whose name is associated with both the Davidson correction and the ""Davidson diagonalization"" method; Gabor A Somorjai for pioneering work in surface science and catalysis; Marvin L. Cohen for condensed matter physics, materials science, and atomic binding; and Raymond Davis for his groundbreaking work with solar neutrinos. |
Type |
Image/MovingImage |
Publisher |
National Science and Technology Medals Foundation |
Subject |
Molecular genetics; Gene targeting; Transgenic mice; Gene expression; Genetic engineering; Capecchi, Mario R.; Science - Awards - United States; Awards presentations |
Subject MESH |
Genetic Research; Gene Targeting; Mice, Knockout; DNA Mutational Analysis; Recombination, Genetic; Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental |
Language |
eng |
Rights Management |
(c) National Science and Technology Medals Foundation |
Identifier |
ir-main,1821 |
ARK |
ark:/87278/s6m33dgh |
Setname |
ir_uspace |
ID |
707926 |
Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6m33dgh |