Peter Fox (professor)

Peter Arthur Fox

Key note speaker at Fordham University
Born (1959-05-25) 25 May 1959
Devonport, Tasmania, Australia
Residence Troy, New York, United States
Citizenship Australia
Ireland
Nationality Australia
Fields Applied Mathematics
Physics
Computer Science
Semantic web
Cognitive Science
Institutions Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
National Center for Atmospheric Research
Yale University
Monash University
Chisholm Institute
Alma mater Monash University
Thesis Compressible Convection in the Sun (With Applications To Granulation, Supergranulation and Sunspots)
Doctoral advisor Rene Francois Edouard van der Borght
Doctoral students Ankesh Khandelwal, Jin Guang Zheng, Yu Chen, Linyun Fu
Known for Defining Informatics and Data Science in Earth Sciences, shaping the Sun-Earth Connections Research Agenda and co-convening the Community
Notable awards EGU Ian McHarg Medal
ESIP Federation Martha Maiden Award
Website
tw.rpi.edu/web/person/PeterFox
twitter.com/taswegian

Peter Arthur Fox is a data science and Semantic eScience researcher at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI), United States. He is a Tetherless World Constellation chair and professor of Earth and Environmental Science, Computer Science and Cognitive Science, and director of the Information Technology and Web Science Program at RPI, and is known for defining informatics and data science in earth sciences as well as defining the sun-earth connection research agenda and co-convening the community.[1] Fox was born in Devonport, Tasmania, Australia and currently resides in Troy, NY, United States.

Education and early career

While studying at Monash University, in Victoria (B.Sc., Mathematics, 1979; B.Sc. (Hons I), Mathematics, 1980; and Ph.D. Applied Mathematics, 1985), Fox worked as a Lecturer in the Mathematics department of Chisholm Institute of Technology (1982–83) and as Assistant Research Scientist in the Mathematics department at Monash University (1983–85).

At the end of December 1985, Fox started his life as a Post Doctoral Fellow (1986–88), and later as an Associate Research Scientist (1988–91) at the Center for Solar and Space Research at Yale University. Fox also taught a course in Astronomy for non-science majors at Yale geared toward students pursuing a liberal arts degree.

While at Yale, Fox was attending a workshop in Boulder, Colorado when he received an invitation to give a talk at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR). Subsequently, a job offer from NCAR was extended and accepted, where he would remain until 2008.

Later career and current positions

From 1991 to 2008, Fox was at the High Altitude Observatory (HAO) of NCAR in Boulder, Colorado, as Scientist until 1995, and Chief Computational Scientist from 1995 to 2008. While at HAO, Fox wrote detailed technical schema that remains decades ahead of its time to this date.

Early in 2008, while employed at HAO, Fox was being actively recruited by a number of academic and research organizations in the U.S.A. and internationally. In September 2008 he accepted a Chaired Full Professor appointment with Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) in Troy, New York.[2] Fox was the third senior chair in the Tetherless World Constellation (TWC) [3] joining James Hendler and Deborah McGuinness.

RPI's TWC pursues disciplinary research and education themes centered on the World Wide Web. Peter Fox is the lead professor for the research areas: Data Frameworks, Data Science, Semantic eScience and XInformatics. Since 2009, the team has three applications themes: Open Government Data, Environmental Informatics, and Health Care and Life Science Informatics. Fox's primary appointment is in the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences [4] in the School of Science. Appointments in the Departments of Computer Science (2008) and Cognitive Science (2014) followed.

In 2012, Fox assumed the directorship of the Information Technology and Web Science (ITWS) academic program [5][6] to set that program in a very data oriented direction. Around this time, the U.S. Navy was searching for an institution to train select officers in Information Dominance. While originally looking at ivy league universities, the Navy ultimately selected a one-year program that Fox developed.[7]

One of the institutions who actively recruited Fox in 2008, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), offered him an adjunct appointment in Applied Ocean Physics and Engineering, which remains in place to date.[8] In this role, Fox has systematically facilitated the process for WHOI to incorporate Semantic Web and Informatics in research.

Fox is past president of the Federation of Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP),[9] co-founder and past chair of the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG) Union Commission on Data and Information (UCDI)[10] and of the American Geophysical Union (AGU) Special Focus Group on Earth and Space Science Informatics (ESSI).[11] Fox is an associate editor for the Earth Science Informatics journal[12] and a member of the editorial board for Computers & Geosciences.[13] Fox also serves on the International Council for Science's Strategic Coordinating Committee for Information and Data[14] and the Research Data Alliance's Technical Advisory Board.[15]

Honors and awards

2015: Fellow, American Geophysical Union[16]
2014: Rensselaer Trustees Award for Academic and Intellectual Achievement
2012: Rensselaer Trustees Award for Academic and Intellectual Achievement
2012: Ian McHarg Medal, European Geosciences Union[17]
2012: Martha Maiden Lifetime Achievement Award, Federation of Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP)[18]
2009: Rensselaer Constellation Chair Medal

Research and education agenda

Fox's research and education agenda covers the fields of data science and analytics, ocean and environmental informatics, computational logic, semantic Web, cognitive bias, semantic data frameworks, and solar and solar-terrestrial physics. The results are applied to large-scale distributed scientific repositories addressing the full life-cycle of data and information within specific science and engineering disciplines as well as among disciplines.

Books

2015: "Semantic eScience" (editor), Springer, Berlin. Special Issue of Earth Science Informatics, ISSN 1865-0473
2015: "The Semantic Web in Earth and Space Science: Current Status and Future Directions" (editor), IOS Press, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. ISBN 978-1-61499-500-5
2015: "Collaborative Knowledge in Scientific Research Networks" (editor), IGI Global, Hershey, PA. ISBN 978-1-4666-6567-5
2004: "Solar Variability and its Effect on the Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate System" (editor), AGU Monograph Series 141, American Geophysical Union, Washington D.C. ISBN 978-0-87590-406-1
2000: "Geophysical and Astrophysical Convection" (editor), Gordon and Breach Science Publishers, The Netherlands. ISBN 90-5699-258-9

References

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