UCLA Engineering Faculty
Jia-Ming Liu Receives 2006 Guggenheim Fellowship

Jia Ming Liu
Jia-Ming Liu, professor of electrical engineering
at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science,
has been chosen to receive a prestigious 2006 Guggenheim Fellowship,
among the most coveted honors accorded to scholars, artists and
writers.
The Fellowship, awarded by the John Simon Guggenheim
Memorial Foundation, is conferred for “unusually distinguished
achievement and exceptional promise for future accomplishment.”
Fellowship winners are selected by a committee of scholars from
universities and institutes across the U.S. and Canada.
Liu will use his Guggenheim Fellowship to conduct
research on three-dimensional intracellular laser nanoscopy –
using lasers to see structures inside a cell with a resolution
on the scale of only nanometers. Liu’s work ultimately will
allow biologists and medical doctors to determine the precise
location of various molecular cell components made of genes and
their products in the subcellular domain – and to obtain
a greater understanding of cell function in health and disease.
Liu's past research focuses on ultrafast optics
and electronics, optoelectronics and semiconductor lasers, nonlinear
optics, and optical-wave propagation. He has published extensively
in these areas and holds several patents in lasers and optoelectronics.
He is internationally recognized as a leading expert in ultrafast
lasers and nonlinear laser dynamics.
The professor joined UCLA Engineering in 1986.
He is a Fellow of the Optical Society of America, a Senior Member
of the IEEE Laser and Electro-Optics Society, and a Fellow of
the American Physical Society.
Only two Guggenheim Fellowships were presented
to engineers this year, one to UCLA’s Liu and the other
to M.I.T. The 2006 winners include 187 artists, scholars, and
scientists selected from nearly 3,000 applicants for awards totaling
$7.5 million.
Since 1925, the Guggenheim Foundation has granted
about $247 million in fellowships to more than 16,000 individuals.
Recipients have included writers, playwrights, painters, sculptors,
photographers, filmmakers, choreographers, physical and biological
scientists, social scientists, and scholars in the humanities.
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