
Professor Chris Johnson
Visualizing
the Future
Computers are now extensively used throughout science, engineering,
and medicine. Advances in computational geometric modeling, imaging,
and simulation allow researchers to build and test models of increasingly
complex phenomena and thus to generate unprecedented amounts of
data. These advances have created the need to make corresponding
progress in our ability to understand large amounts of data and
information arising from multiple sources. In fact, to effectively
understand and make use of the vast amounts of information being
produced is one of the greatest scientific challenges of the 21st
Century.
Visual computing, which relies on and takes advantage of, the interplay
among techniques of visualization, computer graphics, virtual reality,
and imaging and vision, is fundamental to understanding models of
complex phenomena, which are often multi-disciplinary in nature.
In this talk, I will first provide several examples of ongoing visual
computing research at the Scientific Computing and Imaging (SCI)
Institute as applied to problems in computational science, engineering,
and medicine, then discuss future research opportunities and challenges.
Chris Johnson is Director of the Scientific Computing and
Imaging Institute (SCI), University of Utah and Co-Director, Center
for Integrative Biomedical Computing (NIH NCRR). He directs
the Scientific Computing and Imaging Institute at the University
of Utah where he is a Distinguished Professor of Computer Science
and holds faculty appointments in the Departments of Physics and
Bioengineering. His research interests are in the areas of scientific
computing and scientific visualization. Dr. Johnson founded the
SCI research group in 1992, which has since grown to become the
SCI Institute employing over 130 faculty, staff and students. Professor
Johnson serves on several international journal editorial boards,
as well as on advisory boards to several national research centers.
Professor Johnson has received several awards, including the the
NSF Presidential Faculty Fellow (PFF) award from President Clinton
in 1995 and the Governor's Medal for Science and Technology from
Governor Michael Leavitt in 1999. In 2003 he received the Distinguished
Professor Award from the University of Utah. In 2004 he was elected
a Fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering
(AIMBE) and in 2005 he was elected a Fellow of the American Association
for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).
http://www.cs.utah.edu/~crj/
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