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 Press Release 10-028 2009 Science and Engineering Visualization Challenge Winners Announced

Winning entries appear in the Feb. 19 issue of Science
February 18, 2010
View the 2009 winners and the first place winner of non-interactive media.
The National Science Foundation (NSF) along with the journal Science, published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), today announced the winners of their seventh annual International Science & Engineering Visualization Challenge. The winning entries include extraordinary photographs, illustrations, videos and graphics that reveal intricate details of life and the world around us--down to the smallest scale. The winning visualizations range from a video that uses found objects to explain the epigenetics of identical twins, to an electron microscope photograph that catches self-assembling polymers in action as they grip a green orb, offering a powerful message about cooperative efforts to save the Earth. One of two first-place winners in the illustrations category is a 3.5-meter-tall, three-dimensional art installation, one of several projects by biologist Peter Lloyd Jones and architect Jenny E. Sabin of the University of Pennsylvania's Sabin + Jones LabStudio that depict large, complex data sets in new ways. Called "Branching Morphogenesis," the work is an illustration of the forces lung cells exert as they form capillaries. It aims to reveal--through abstraction--the unseen beauty and dynamic relationships that exist between endothelial cells and their surrounding extracellular microenvironment. "Sometimes graphing data won't tell you about its intricacies," Jones says. "This makes the whole process exciting and interactive." The installation is featured on the cover of the Feb. 19 issue of Science. Illustrators, photographers, computer programmers and graphics specialists from around the world were invited to submit visualizations that would intrigue, explain and educate. This year, there were 130 entries from 14 countries. The winning entries communicate information about mathematical theory with a rendering of Kuen's surface; use interactive media to teach high school students about the intricate cycles and pathways that keep the cell alive by generating and burning energy; use video to show how dollar bills can be used to build a complete picture of how people move from place to place in the United States; and more. The Feb. 19 issue of Science features the winning entries, which will also be freely available with registration, at http://www.sciencemag.org/special/vis2009/ and the NSF's Web site at www.nsf.gov/news/scivis. The 2009 winning entries appear below in the following five categories: PHOTOGRAPHY First Place Sung Hoon Kang, Joanna Aizenberg, and Boaz Pokroy, Harvard University Save Our Earth. Let's Go Green Honorable Mentions Michael P. Zach, University of Wisconsin - Stevens Point Microbe vs. Mineral - A Life and Death Struggle in the Desert Russell Taylor, Briana K. Whitaker, and Briana L. Carstens, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Flower Power Dr. Heiti Paves and Birger Ilau, Tallinn University of Technology Self-fertilization ILLUSTRATION First Place (tie) Richard Palais and Luc Benard, University of California at Irvin Kuen's Surface: A Meditation on Euclid, Lobachevsky, and Quantum Fields. Peter Lloyd Jones, Andrew Lucia, and Jenny E. Sabin, University of Pennsylvania's Sabin + Jones Lab Studio Branching Morphogenesis Honorable Mentions David Beck, Clarkson University and Jennifer Jacquet, University of British Columbia Jellyfish Burger Mario De Stefano, Antonia Auletta, and Carla Langella, The 2nd University of Naples Back to the Future INFORMATIONAL GRAPHICS AND POSTERS First Place Dwayne Godwin, Wake Forest University School of Medicine and Jorge Cham, www.phdcomics.com Brain Development Honorable Mention Erin Olson, Daphne Orlando and Tim Manning, R&D Systems, Inc. Regulation of the Cell Cycle & DNA Damage-Induced Checkpoint Activation INTERACTIVE GAMES First Place Jeremy Friedberg and Andrea Bielecki, Spongelab Interactive Genomics Digital Lab: Cell Biology NON-INTERACTIVE MEDIA First Place (tie) Genetic Science Learning Center, University of Utah - Harmony Starr, Molly Malone and Brendan Nicholson The Epigenetics of Identical Twins Christian Thiemann and Daniel Grady, Northwestern University Follow the Money: Human Mobility and Effective Communities Honorable Mentions Gregor Hochleitner, Christian Gredel and Nils Sparwasser, German Aerospace Center (DLR) Decision Support System for Tsunami Early Warning Stacy Jannis, William Dempsey, and Rebekah Fredenburg, Jannis Productions Inside the Brain: Unraveling the Mystery of Alzheimer's Disease
-NSF-

Media Contacts
Maria C. Zacharias, NSF (703) 292-8454 mzachari@nsf.gov
Natasha Pinol, American Association for the Advancement of Science (202) 326-7088 npinol@aaas.org
Program Contacts
Susan M. Mason, NSF (703) 292-7748 smason@nsf.gov
The National Science Foundation (NSF) is an independent federal agency that supports fundamental research and education across all fields of science and engineering. In fiscal year (FY) 2012, its budget was $7.0 billion. NSF funds reach all 50 states through grants to nearly 2,000 colleges, universities and other institutions. Each year, NSF receives about 50,000 competitive requests for funding, and makes about 11,500 new funding awards. NSF also awards about $593 million in professional and service contracts yearly.
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