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Nancy Nersessian Awarded NEH Fellowship
Cognitive science professor
recognized for her research on human creativity in science
and engineering.
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Nancy Nersessian, professor and director of the
Cognitive
Science Program at Georgia Tech’s
College of
Computing, has been awarded a year-long
fellowship by the National Endowment for the
Humanities (NEH) for academic year 2005-06.
Nersessian’s research focuses on human creativity in
science and engineering. A major theme of this
research is the model-based reasoning practices
through which scientists created novel
understandings of nature. She has investigated these
practices in historical cases of conceptual change
in physics and in ethnographic studies of problem
solving in interdisciplinary bio-engineering
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laboratories (PI, Wendy Newsletter, Department of Biomedical
Engineering, Co - PI: "Laboratory Learning: Model-Based
Reasoning in Research and Instructional Laboratories," 2004
- 2007 REC0411825, and "Biomedical Engineering Thinking and
Learning: The Challenge of Integrating Systems and
Analogical Thinking," 2001 - 2004 REC0106773). The award
will assist her theoretical work on an integrative account
of the complex cognitive and cultural systems which give
rise to the physical and computational models researchers
construct to simulate biological phenomena in problem
solving and in learning. In addition, Nersessian is
currently at work on a book, Creating Concepts: Model-based
reasoning in conceptual change, to be published by MIT
Press.
Upon
receiving the honor, Nersessian said “I am pleased and
honored to have the Endowment recognize my contributions as
important to the humanities. Although as a interdisciplinary
cognitive scientist my research focuses on science and
engineering, I strongly believe, based on years of research,
that creativity in the humanities, arts, and sciences forms
but one spectrum, and this is most visible in the kinds of
modeling practices with which I am concerned. The award will
enable me to have a sustained period of reflection and
writing about the interplay of cognition and culture in
these.”
This
year’s NEH fellowship program is very competitive.
Nersessian was among 193 recipients from a pool of 1,470
fellowship applications this year, a success rate of 13
percent. Created in 1965, the National Endowment for the
Humanities is an independent grant-making agency of the US
government dedicated to supporting research, education,
preservation and public programs in the humanities.
Proposals are evaluated by a panel of experts outside of NEH
and are then submitted to the National Council on the
Humanities. The council then makes recommendations to the
NEH chairman, who has the final authority over which
proposals receive the grant.
Nersessian has an A.B. in Physics and Philosophy from
Boston University and M.A.
and Ph.D. degrees from Case
Western Reserve University in Philosophy. She is author
of numerous publications, and has been appointed jointly at
Georgia Tech’s
School
of Public Policy and the
College of Computing
since 1993. She has been a Fulbright Research Scholar at the
University of Leiden,
the Netherlands, a Fellow of the Netherlands Institute for
Advanced Study, a Senior Fellow of the
Pittsburgh Center for the Philosophy of Science, a
Senior Fellow of the Dibner Institute at MIT and has taught
at several institutions, including the
Technical University of
Twente, the Netherlands and
Princeton
University. In 2003-4 she was Chair of the Cognitive
Science Society.
Learn
more about
Nancy Nersessian and Georgia Tech’s
College of Computing.
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