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Two new posts to coordinate, boost research technology

To coordinate existing information technology efforts and provide greater support for researchers, KU is making two appointments this summer to new positions.

Dilawar Grewal will join Information Services in August as director of research IT services and will lead the formation of that department. He will work closely with KU's academic units, libraries, the Office of Research and Graduate Studies and research centers to develop and advance research technology services.

Dilawar Grewal

Dilawar Grewal

Donald F. (Rick) McMullen will join the Office of Research and Graduate Studies in August as director and senior scientist for research computing. He will be responsible for developing a comprehensive research computing environment. He will also identify and acquire resources necessary to pursue competitive research and creative activity at KU. He and the existing Research Computing Technologies group will be in the Multidisciplinary Research Building on KU's west campus.

Donald F. McMullen

Donald F. McMullen

"Research is central to KU's mission," said Denise Stephens, vice provost for information services. "We have to make sure faculty in all disciplines have the tools they need to conduct that research productively.

Increasingly, this requires IT resources that facilitate interdisciplinary and inter-institutional collaboration, plus the leadership and expertise to manage those resources effectively."

For example, a typical project in KU's Microscopy and Analytical Imaging Lab requires terabytes of computing power to store, identity, search and analyze images. A terabyte is one trillion bytes of data.

The demand for such lab services is growing, said George Wilson, associate vice provost for research.

"Faculty in various disciplines need IT assistance as they design research projects or prepare competitive grant proposals that involve extensive data analysis," he said.

Grewal currently is assistant vice provost for research and technology at East Tennessee State University, where he is also director of technology and an adjunct faculty member in the College of Education. He previously served for more than 10 years at Texas A&M University in research IT-related positions, including director of research development. He also was the library's research and development manager, founding director of its digital library and director of the Academy for Advanced Telecommunications and Learning Technologies. He earned a doctorate from Texas A&M in 1994.

McMullen is director and principal scientist in the Pervasive Technology Laboratories at Indiana University. He has been at Indiana since 1990 in a series of IT and research positions and is an adjunct faculty member in its computer science department and School of Informatics. Before coming to Indiana, he worked in academia and industry, including positions at the Supercomputer Computations Research Institute at Florida State University and American Cyanamid Co. as a research scientist and process chemist. McMullen received a doctorate in chemistry from Indiana in 1982.

"Research IT is too complex, too vast in scope and too important for any one organization on campus to manage," said Steve Warren, vice provost for research and graduate studies. "These two appointments in two key offices give KU strong collaborative leadership that will benefit our researchers and the work they do."

RESEARCH MATTERS:

Greenhouse gases aren't the only contributors to climate change. Research by Johannes Feddema, professor of geography, shows covering land with crops, concrete and suburban sprawl has an effect on the climate as well. "As humans change a landscape... it will change the reflectivity of the surface and that changes the amount of energy that is absorbed, and then ultimately energy that's available to evaporate water, to conduct into the ground, to be used for photosynthesis" Feddema said. For more, or to listen to the original broadcast, visit www.researchmatters.ku.edu.