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Friday, February 7, 2020

Houston Rice University duo named to National Academy of Engineers


HOUSTON - Reginald DesRoches, the William and Stephanie Sick Dean of Engineering, and Gene Frantz, a professor in the practice of electrical and computer engineering, both at Rice University’s Brown School of Engineering, have been named to the National Academy of Engineers.





DesRoches, who will become Rice provost in July, and Frantz are among
87 inductees in this year’s class, along with 18 new international
members.





According to the academy, the prestigious appointment honors those who have made outstanding contributions to engineering research, practice or education.





Selection of academy members is the culmination of a yearlong
process. The ballot is set in December and the final vote for membership
occurs during January. New members will be formally inducted at the
academy’s annual meeting in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 4.





DesRoches, a civil engineer by training, was named for his research
and design of resilient infrastructure systems to mitigate damage from
natural disasters such as earthquakes and other extreme conditions. He
became dean at Rice in July 2017 after serving as chair of the School of
Civil and Environmental Engineering at the Georgia Institute of
Technology.





“I am truly honored by this recognition,” DesRoches said. “This would
not have been possible without the incredibly dedicated students and
postdocs that I have worked with over the past two decades, as well as
the many outstanding colleagues, collaborators and mentors that I have
had. I share this honor with them.”





Frantz was elected for leadership in the development and commercialization of digital signal microprocessors.





Frantz, who has been called the “father of digital signal
processing,” joined Rice in 2012 after a storied 39-year career at Texas
Instruments (TI). Digital signal processing, or DSP, is ubiquitous in
cell phones, digital cameras and countless other technologies.





He was a member of the team that designed TI’s first speech synthesis
chip, the TMS5100, in the mid-1970s. At the time, many were skeptical
that DSP technology could be implemented on an integrated circuit. The
chip was used in TI’s Speak & Spell, one of the earliest handheld
electronic devices and the first educational toy to utilize speech that
was not recorded on a tape or phonograph.





Two others with strong Rice connections named to the academy are Sallie Keller and Jorge Nocedal.





Keller is former dean of the Brown School of Engineering and now
division director, social and decision analytics division and professor
of public health sciences at the Biocomplexity Institute and Initiative,
University of Virginia, Charlottesville. She was a professor of
statistics and dean of engineering at Rice from 2005 to 2010.





Keller was elected for the development and application of engineering
and statistical techniques in support of national security and
industry.





Nocedal, the Walter P. Murphy Professor of Industrial Engineering and
Management Sciences at Northwestern University, earned his Ph.D. at
Rice in 1978 under the supervision of fellow academy member Richard Tapia.
He was elected for his contributions to the theory, design and
implementation of optimization algorithms and machine learning software.





Nocedal was honored with an Outstanding Engineering Alumni Award at the Brown School of Engineering’s Alumni Awards Celebration last November.





They join eight current members of the Rice faculty in the academy: Pedro Alvarez, Naomi Halas, Antonios Mikos, Rebecca Ricahrds-Kortum, Pol Spanos, Edwin Thomas, Moshe Vardi and Tapia. Emeritus professors George Hirasaki and Ronald Nordgren are also members.


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