The 2010 Workshop celebrated 25 years of accomplishments, based largely on facilities envisioned when IRIS was created. With the merging in 2013 of the Cooperative Agreements for core programs and USArray, the IRIS community has a special opportunity to reevaluate and possibly realign the facilities as we look forward to the future of cooperative seismology during the next 25 years.
The IRIS Workshop continues to serve as a forum at the cutting edge of Earth science that is unique for focusing on seismological contributions yet still covers of the full breadth of our discipline. Research enabled by IRIS facilities contributes to our understanding of:
The Workshop is an opportunity for the community to learn about the status of the proposal, provide valuable input for the submission, prepare for the review and response process, and plan for the next Cooperative Agreement.
This is the first Workshop since IRIS management was reorganized into "Instrument Services", "Data Services", and "Education and Public Outreach". The Board of Directors and IRIS staff members plan to talk with Workshop participants about using the new management structure to ensure community engagement in IRIS activities.
New IRIS activities since the 2010 Workshop include OBS-IP Management Office, RAMP and MRI station installations in Chile, and planning for TA stations in Alaska. Activities that have matured since 2010 include Polar Support (including GLISN) and International Development Seismology. There are also important developments in longer-standing IRIS activities — GSN, PASSCAL, DMS, EPO, TA, FA, & MT. There will be talks on research facilitated by many of these activities. In addition, Program Managers, Standing and Advisory Committees, and Working Groups are encouraged to organize SIGs and a section in the poster hall to highlight facility activities.
The Workshop kicks-off at 8am on Wednesday, June 13 and adjourns with an early evening BBQ on Friday, June 15.
The plenary sessions have been organized to build towards the theme of looking far ahead.
Recent Science Drivers and Enablers, Rick Aster and Don Forsyth
What lessons can be learned about facilitating advances from recent past? "Drivers" refers to the scientific challenges and the needs of broader society that drove the geophysical community to take certain directions. "Enablers" refers to technological or other developments that were available to anyone but taken advantage of by geophysicists. Have there been important advances when there was only a driver or only an enabler? Or, have drivers in the absence required enablers led geophysicists to butt their collective heads against a wall? And, in the absence of a relevant driver, have new technologies been distractions rather than enablers of important new science?
Imagine ... Anticipated Science to Meet New Challenges, John Vidale and Anne Sheehan
What new scientific directions might address "Seismological Grand Challenges in Understanding Earth's Dynamic Systems"? The organizers and speakers are asked to envision outcomes from innovative research. The 2009 "Challenges" report detailed many drivers and listed some enablers for geophysics. The 2011 NRC report on "New Research Opportunities in the Earth Sciences" in late 2011 is broader and will be an important guide for NSF as plans its support of the Earth sciences in the next decade. In order to help us address the challenges more quickly or directly, can we imagine what researchers will be accomplishing at least five or ten years from now?
New Technology and Media, Bob Nigbor and Elizabeth Cochran
What developments outside of Earth science are likely to facilitate new discoveries? We are all generally aware of "Moore's Law", but can we foresee how such change will impact how we will collect, process, and visualize data? Are there particular ways that broader society is building on exponentially improving computing and communications capabilities that can be adapted for geophysical research? Are there developments apart from IT that could be enablers?
Facilities for the Next Twenty-Five Years, Richard Allen and Jim Gaherty
What facilities are needed in light of anticipated science and new technology? By the time that we reach the concluding plenary session, the Workshop participants will have reviewed what facilitated recent scientific success, imagined scientific endeavors in response to contemporary drivers, and considered enablers for that science. How will it all be put together? Are there important ways in which existing facilities must be adapted? Are there entirely new facilities that could expedite use of important enablers in geophysical research?
Poster boards are 8' wide x 4' high and will remain up throughout the meeting. Poster assignment information will be available at the Registration table in Meadow Lobby beginning at 3pm on Tuesday, June 12. You may begin to hang posters after 3:00pm on Tuesday. Posters need to be removed by 2:00pm on Friday.
Workshop participants are encouraged to submit Science Highlights and present posters on IRIS-facilitated research and on topics related to the oral plenary sessions. Posters will be displayed in the ballroom at the Convention Center, which is large enough for all of the posters to remain up for the entire Workshop. Break refreshments will be served in the ballroom and the agenda will include times devoted exclusively to poster presentations. Posters on related topics will be clustered and scheduled for authors to be available for discussion at the same time.
To present a poster at the 2012 IRIS Workshop, you must submit a Science Highlight by May 4. IRIS will use the Science Highlight title and author information for the poster information to be published in the Workshop program.
The Science Highlights will also be stored and prominentaly displayed from IRIS' homepage, presenting an opportunity to share with all the broad and exciting body of work produced by the IRIS community. This virtual archive will serve as a resource to peers within the geoscience community, science directors at the National Science Foundation, and the general public. We encourage members of the IRIS community to contribute scientific, educational and outreach highlights to our gallery of IRIS-enabled accomplishments.
Next-Generation Instrumentation for Portable Seismology - Seth Moran, James Gridley
While the IRIS 2013-2018 proposal includes a commitment to sustaining the existing PASSCAL and USArray pools of broadband, Texan, and multichannel sensor/digitizer packages, the portable pool also has limitations in terms of the types of experiments it can support. In this SIG we will discuss the science drivers for a new style of experiment involving tight spatial arrays of large numbers (“Large N”) of intermediate-period (10-30s) sensors. Presentations will include summaries of discussions to date and preliminary results from an ongoing trade study, followed by community discussion of objectives and requirements.
Resources for Undergraduate Teaching in Seismology - Maggie Benoit & Michael Hubenthal
What are the latest curricular materials available to teach seismology at a variety of undergraduate levels? What topics or resources (e.g. software, DMS tools, data sets) would you like to see developed into activities for your students? This SIG will include an overview of some of the most recently developed activities designed to be integrated into your existing courses, while also conveying the latest seismological research to your students. This will be followed by a discussion focused on eliciting feedback regarding new curricular activities that will be developed through both IRIS and the Pearson Higher Ed group. This is your chance to have an impact on the materials that will be available in the future.
GSN Data Quality - Kent Anderson, Tim Ahern
The GSN network is two years into a major quality initiative to improve the state of the GSN dataset. This work has included the continued upgrade to the GSN field systems and infrastructure, calibration of the GSN seismometers, review and update to the station metadata, and the implementation of an updated Quality Assurance System to identify, document, rectify and report data issues to the network operators and the GSN data user community. In conjunction with the GSN effort, the DMS is revamping its data quality tools to improve and expand the metrics available to assess the quality of the overall IRIS data holdings. This SIG will provide an update to both the GSN Quality Assurance System and the DMS Quality assessment tool development.
Global Array of BroadBand Arrays (GABBA) - Chuck Ammon, Thorne Lay, Keith Koper
Important research questions related to Earth's deep interior and complex earthquake faulting processes are difficult to resolve with present day configurations of global seismic networks. However, significant progress can be made using medium-aperture (150 km x 150 km to 300 km x 300 km) broadband arrays, if the number of such arrays around the world with strategic locations can be increased, with operational lifetimes of a decade or more. This SIG will explore this concept for expansion of IRIS instrumentation supporting global seismology, recognizing that strong international partnerships will be essential to achieving a system with on the order of 10 GABBA nodes around the world. We invite short contributions on research applications that have utilized current broadband arrays and dense networks of stations (from regional networks, PASSCAL deployments, etc.) of dimensions comparable to the GABBA notion, as well as contributions on complementary value of deploying additional short-period arrays around the world. We also seek to identify a GABBA working group that can advance this concept and serve as a workshop steering committee that IRIS may support in the Fall of 2012 to explore development of a proposal to augment global seismic observations with GABBA.
Seismo-Acoustics - Brian Stump, Michael Hedlin, Stephen Arrowsmith
With the addition of both barometers and infrasound gauges to the Transportable Array a rich source of atmospheric pressure data is now available in consort with seismic data. These data are providing the ability to study sources of both seismic and acoustic energy such as shallow earthquakes, ocean storms as well as man made sources such as explosions. The data provide the opportunity to not only characterize these sources but also quantify the time varying nature of the atmosphere as well as constrain sources in the atmosphere that primarily generate pressure waves. The stations provide data for the study of coupling across a very broad frequency band between the atmosphere and the solid Earth. We will review the current opportunities that exist for combining seismic and pressure data for studying not only sources of these waves but also for characterizing the atmosphere as a function of time.
Early Career Investigators - Danielle Sumy, Harmony Colella, Andy Frassetto
New faculty members and researchers have commitments spread across research, teaching, service, student advising, family, etc. This SIG meeting will be split into two parts. First, a panel of seasoned members of the community will profile their career paths and be available to answer questions from early career scientists. Second, we will review the current resources available to assist early career development and discuss ideas for their improvement. This SIG will serve as a formal beginning to the IRIS Early Career Investigator (ECI) Program, a community where we can foster collaboration and openly (and freely) discuss ways to overcome common challenges. We encourage all members of the IRIS community to attend and participate in this SIG. Perspectives and mentorship from more senior members of the IRIS community are particularly welcomed. For more ECI information, please visit: dev.iris.edu/hq/eci.
Solid Earth Science Computational Facility - Jeroen Tromp, Alan Levander, Artie Rodgers, Louise Kellogg
With dramatic increases in the quality and quantity of geophysical data and the availability of sophisticated open-source numerical modeling tools, there is a need for a Solid Earth Science high performance computing facility. As examples, USArray and similarly dense international arrays are providing seismologists with a tsunami of new data. Data analysis is keeping up with data acquisition only for the computationally simplest analysis methods, as even computationally modest analysis is often still labor intensive. Imaging/modeling with this data requires powerful numerical modeling tools, automation of routine analysis tasks, and high-performance computing facilities, without which the power of these arrays as observational platforms for deciphering North American structure may never be realized. Such a facility was envisioned in the first IRIS proposal as long ago as 1984. Hardware structure, machine access and scheduling policies in such a facility would reflect the research, education, and training needs of the solid Earth community – thereby enabling rapid major advances in this vibrant area of research.
Synergies in Seismology between GeoPRISMS and EarthScope - Susan Schwartz, Maggie Benoit, Cliff Thurber
The GeoPRISMS Program, successor to MARGINS, offers near-term opportunities for interdisciplinary onshore-offshore investigations at three US continental margins: Alaska-Aleutians Subduction Zone, Cascadia Subduction Zone, and Eastern North American, and eventually, also in East Africa and New Zealand. Recent community planning workshops for the three US settings, jointly sponsored by GeoPRISMS and EarthScope, outlined the scientific targets and research priorities for each setting, defining research opportunities in seismology and associated interdisciplinary studies. We will review the community-developed implementation plans for these three primary sites, with emphasis on opportunities for the IRIS community, and entertain open discussions about specific projects and collaborations designed to achieve the scientific objectives of the program.
Citizen Science in Seismology - Elizabeth Cochran and Richard Allen
The general public has been enlisted to help with seismology research and hazards mitigation in a variety of projects, ranging from the well-established such as Did You Feel It, to developing monitoring programs such as the Quake Catcher Network, to novel uses of social media. Some projects ask for volunteers to host sensors, while other go door-to-door with specific requests. This SIG will include presentations from some of the groups that count on public involvement, followed by discussion of lessons learned and strategies to engage the public in future projects.
International Development Seismology - What, Where, and How? - Susan Beck, Jay Pulliam
Scientific engagement in developing parts of the world presents the university community with unique challenges and exciting opportunities to directly impact society in ways that complement their fundamental research activities. In addition, scientists conducting research in developing countries have the opportunity to become true global scholars, sharing the excitement and intellectual resources of the scientific quest with local partners. While these experiences can be quite rewarding, sustaining their impetus often requires creative schemes, particularly to harness the necessary financial resources. Over the past few years, IRIS IDS has begun the exploration of these issues and the most effective ways to address them. We invite all members of the IRIS community, at any career stage to share their experiences, opinions, and recommendations for how to make global social responsibility an integral part of our exciting international seismology.
Data Products - Chad Trabant, Tim Ahern
A discussion of data products that are or could be produced by the IRIS DMC and used by the community to aid in research. IRIS staff will give an overview of existing data products currently produced at the DMC. The DMC's product effort is community driven; this is an opportunity for direct feedback with a focus on future data products. For a list of the currently data produced products including information on future products please visit: http://dev.iris.edu/dms/products/
Where individuals are prepared to make a greater effort to address an important need, a half-day or full-day symposium just before and after the IRIS Workshop can be an opportunity to delve deeply into a particular area. Suggestions for additional symposia that link facility activities with research or education projects are welcome, but those planned at this time are:
Plenary sessions, poster sessions, special interest group meetings (SIGs), and pre-Workshop symposia will all be held in the Boise Centre on The Grove, located in downtown Boise. The Workshop consists of three full days, beginning on Wednesday, June 13 and ending with an afternoon field trip and off-site dinner on Friday, June 15. Pre-Workshop symposia will be held on Tuesday, June 12.
One Block from Boise Centre on The Grove:
The Grove Hotel
245 S. Capitol Blvd
Boise, Idaho 83702
http://www.grovehotelboise.com
Three Blocks from Boise Centre on The Grove:
Hampton Inn & Suites
495 S. Capitol Blvd
Boise, Idaho 83702
http://hamptoninn.hilton.com/en/hp/groups/personalized/B/BOIDNHX-IRS-20120611/index.jhtml?WT.mc_id=POG
Boise Airport (BOI) is 4 miles from both hotels and the Boise Centre. The airport services five airlines:
Alaska Airlines
Delta Airlines
Southwest Airlines
United Airlines
USAir
More Information can be obtained here (http://www.iflyboise.com/)
Shuttle Service: Complimentary
Both hotels offer complimentary shuttle service. Look for the hotel board near the baggage claim area. Search for your hotel, push the hotel button, and a shuttle will be called for pick-up. Please check-in with your hotel concierge to secure shuttle service for your return trip to the airport.
Taxi fare: $15
Our biennial Workshop is a unique opportunity for the IRIS community to convene for inclusive discussion of recent research, facilities, NSF priorities, and plans. IRIS helps to defray expenses in order to ensure broad participation in this conversation.
REGISTRATION FEES ARE A NON-REIMBURSABLE EXPENSE FOR ALL CATEGORIES
IRIS will reimburse members of the IRIS Board of Directors and voting members of the four Program Standing Committees for the cost of their own lodging during the Workshop and their own travel, up to a maximum of $500.
IRIS will reimburse speakers at Plenary Sessions for the cost of their own lodging during the Workshop and their own travel, up to a maximum of $500. Organizing a plenary session, or organizing or speaking at a SIG meeting does not qualify a participant for reimbursement of any expenses.
For each Voting Member of the Consortium that is not represented at the Workshop by a member of the Board of Directors, a member of one of the four Program Standing Committees, or a speaker at a Plenary Session, IRIS will reimburse one representative for the cost of their own lodging during the Workshop. Voting Member Representatives are responsible for the cost of their own travel. Voting Members of the Consortium are encouraged to use this support for a junior faculty member who might not otherwise be able to participate in the Workshop.
Subject to individual approval in advance of the workshop, IRIS will pay the cost of lodging in a shared double room during the Workshop and reimburse the cost of their travel, up to a maximum of $500, for a limited number of students and post-docs. Normally, no more than one person is supported in this category from each Voting Member of the Consortium. IRIS will reserve rooms and assign roommates for approved students and post-docs. Supported students and post-docs who choose not to share a room may contact IRIS to make arrangements for a single room, at the individual’s expense in excess of the shared room rate.
Every participant is responsible to register for the Workshop and field trips before the deadline and must pay the Workshop and field trip fees.
Every participant is individually responsible for expenses except where reimbursement is explicitly offered above. Every participant is responsible for travel expenses in excess of $500, expenses for travel in first or business class or on non-U.S. carriers, lodging for accompanying persons, and lodging before or after the Workshop.
Except for supported students and post-docs, every participant is responsible for making their own lodging reservation.
Every registered participant and registered accompanying person is welcome at all group meals (breakfast, lunch, dinner, and breaks) throughout the Workshop. Qualified participants will receive reimbursement after submitting an IRIS expense form and receipts within one month after the Workshop
If you have any questions or comments regarding the science program please contact a member of the Science Program Committee:
Susan Bilek New Mexico Tech Socorro, NM sbilek@nmt.edu |
John Hole Virginia Tech Blacksburg, VA hole@vt.edu |
Lee Liberty Boise State University Boise, ID lliberty@boisestate.edu |
If you have any questions or comments regarding the meeting please contact:
Mary Baranowski
1200 New York Avenue, NW Suite 400
Washington, DC 20005
Mary.Baranowski@iris.edu
Phone: 202-682-2220, Ext. 116
Fax: 202.682.0633
Presentations from the plenary sessions are posted next to the title of talk and can be downloaded as a .pdf document.
View the updated participant list here.
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Mon, May 21, 2012 - 5:10:00 PM.
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The abstract submission period for this workshop closed at
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Last Name | First Name | Institution |
---|---|---|
Abatchev | Zagid | University of California, Los Angeles |
Abers | Geoff | Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University |
Aderhold | Kasey | Boston University |
Ahern | Tim | IRIS Consortium |
Allen | Richard | University of California, Berkeley |
Allstadt | Kate | University of Washington |
Alvizuri | Celso | University of Alaska Fairbanks |
Ammon | Chuck | Pennsylvania State University |
Ampuero | Pablo | California Institute of Technology |
Anderson | Greg | National Science Foundation |
Anderson | Kent | IRIS Consortium |
Arrowsmith | Ramon | Arizona State University |
Arrowsmith | Stephen | Los Alamos National Laboratory |
Ashmore | Sarah | IRIS Consortium/Data Management Center |
Aster | Rick | New Mexico Tech |
Astiz | Luciana | University of California, San Diego |
Audet | Pascal | University of Ottawa |
Austin | Ken | UNAVCO, Inc. |
Azevedo | Sandra | IRIS Consortium/PASSCAL |
Azevedo | Steve | IRIS Consortium/PASSCAL |
Ball | Justin | University of Colorado, Boulder |
Bannister | Stephen | GNS Science, New Zealand |
Baranowski | Mary | IRIS Consortium |
Batiza | Rodey | National Science Foundation |
Beaudoin | Bruce | IRIS Consortium/PASSCAL |
Beck | Susan | University of Arizona |
Benoit | Maggie | The College of New Jersey |
Benson | Rick | IRIS Consortium/Data Management Center |
Benthien | Mark | Southern California Earthquake Center |
Beroza | Greg | Stanford University |
Bilek | Susan | New Mexico Tech |
Bockholt | Blaine | University of Memphis |
Bohlen | Steve | Lawrence Livermore National Lab |
Brodsky | Emily | UCSC |
Brudzinski | Mike | Miami University of Ohio |
Bruton | Christopher | Alaska Earthquake Information Center |
Busby | Bob | IRIS Consortium |
Butler | Bob | University of Portland |
Cabello | Olga | IRIS Consortium |
Carlson | Rick | National Science Foundation |
Casey | Rob | IRIS Consortium/Data Management Center |
Chang | Ying | Saint Louis University |
Channel | Ted | Boise State University |
Chaput | Julien | New Mexico Tech |
Chen | Wang-Ping | Zhejiang University |
Chen | Yu | Stony Brook University |
Chong | Jiajun | University of California, Berkeley |
Christensen | Doug | University of Alaska Fairbanks |
Chu | Risheng | California Institute of Technology |
Clark | Adam | IRIS Consortium/Data Management Center |
Cleveland | Mike | Pennsylvania State University |
Colella | Harmony | Miami University of Ohio |
Convers | Jaime | Georgia Institute of Technology |
Cote | Tim | NRCan/GSC |
Cox | Trilby | UCSD-USArray-ANF |
Creager | Ken | University of Washington |
D. West | John | Arizona State University |
Davenport | Kathy | Virginia Tech |
Davis | Pete | University of California, San Diego |
Dorr | Perle | IRIS Consortium |
Dueker | Ken | University of Wyoming |
E. Anderson | Katherine | New Mexico Tech |
E. Thompson | Lennox | University of Texas at El Paso |
Eakins | Jennifer | University of California, San Diego |
Ebinger | Cindy | University of Rochester |
Eilon | Zach | Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University |
Ekstrom | Goran | Columbia University |
Evers | Brent | IRIS Consortium |
Fay | Dan | Microsoft Research |
Flanagan | Megan | Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory |
Ford | Heather | Brown University |
Forsyth | Don | Brown University |
Foster | Katie | University of Wyoming |
Fouch | Matt | Carnegie Institution of Washington |
Franke | Mathias | Kinemetrics |
Frassetto | Andy | IRIS Consortium |
Fuis | Gary | U.S. Geological Survey |
Gaherty | Jim | Columbia University |
Gao | Haiying | University of Rhode Island |
Golden | Paul | Southern Methodist University |
Golonka | Steve | Refraction Technology |
Gridley | James | IRIS Consortium |
Guilhem | Aurelie | Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory |
Hafner | Katrin | IRIS Consortium |
Haney | Matt | U.S. Geological Survey |
Hansen | Roger | University of Alaska, Fairbanks |
Hansen | Steve | University of Wyoming |
Harben | Phil | Rocky Mountain Geophysics |
Harder | Steve | University of Texas at El Paso |
Hayek | Khalil | Canadian Hazards Information Service |
Hayes | Gavin | U.S. Geological Survey |
Hearn | Tom | New Mexico State University |
Hedlin | Michael | University of California, San Diego |
Hellman | Sid | Instrumental Software Technologies, Inc. |
Hellstern | Don | Southern Methodist University |
Hirshorn | Barry | DOC/NOAA/Pacific Tsunami Warning Center |
Hodgkinson | Kathleen | UNAVCO |
Holcomb | Kelly | IRIS Consortium |
Hole | John | Virginia Tech |
Hubenthal | Michael | IRIS Consortium |
Humphreys | Gene | University of Oregon |
Isse | Takehi | University of Tokyo |
J. Cox | Gale | IRIS Consortium/Data Management Center |
Jaiswal | Priyank | Oklahoma State University |
Jaume | Steven | College of Charleston |
Ji | Chen | University of California, Santa Barbara |
Jin | Jing | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign |
Kellogg | Louise | University of California, Davis |
Keranen | Katie | University of Oklahoma |
Kim | YoungHee | Columbia University |
Klaus | Amanda | University of Washington |
Knox | Hunter | Sandia National Labs |
Koper | Keith | University of Utah |
Kroeger | Glenn | Trinity University |
Kroll | Kayla | University of California, Riverside |
Kuo-Chen | Hao | State University of New York at Binghamton |
Kuraica | Ogie | Kinemetrics |
L. Smith | Martin | Blindgoat Geophysics |
Larmat | Carene | Los Alamos National Laboratory |
Laske | Gabi | Scripps Institution of Oceanography |
Lawrence | Jesse | Stanford University |
Lay | Thorne | University of California, Santa Cruz |
Levandowski | Will | University of Colorado |
Levin | Vadim | Rutgers University |
Li | Lun | University of Houston |
Liberty | Lee | Boise State University |
Linn | Leslie | IRIS Consortium |
Liu | Kui | Virginia Tech |
Lockridge | Jeff | Arizona State University |
Long | Hui | Stony Brook University |
Long | Maureen | Yale University |
Lopez | Alberto | University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez |
M. Ward | Kevin | University of Arizona |
Maceira | Monica | Los Alamos National Laboratory |
Marshall | Ben | Albuquerque Seismological Laboratory |
Mattioli | Glen | UNAVCO |
Matzel | Eric | Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory |
McClenahan | Joseph | University of Wyoming |
McIntosh | Kirk | University of Texas at Austin |
McNamara | Daniel | U.S. Geological Survey |
McQuillan | Patrick | IRIS Consortium |
Meng | Lingsen | California Institute of Technology |
Miller | Kate | Texas A&M University |
Miller | Pnina | PASSCAL Instrument Center |
Moore-Driskell | Melissa | University of Memphis |
Moran | Seth | U.S. Geological Survey |
Morgan | Juli | Rice University |
Mourad | Siham | University of Oregon |
Muco | Betim | General Dynamics Information Technology |
Nakai | Jenny | University of Colorado at Boulder |
Nettles | Meredith | Columbia University |
Neuhauser | Doug | University of California, Berkeley |
Newman | Andrew | Georgia Institute of Technology |
Newman | Susan | Seismological Society of America |
Nigbor | Bob | University of California, Los Angeles |
Okaya | David | University of Southern California |
Oncescu | Lani | Geotech Instruments, LLC |
P. Richardson | Joshua | Michigan Technological University |
Palomeras | Imma | Rice University |
Parker | Horry | University of Georgia |
Parker | Tim | IRIS Consortium/PASSCAL |
Passmore | Paul | Refraction Technology, Inc. |
Pennington | Wayne | Michigan Technological University |
Poppeliers | Christian | Augusta State University |
Porter | Ryan | Carnegie Institute DTM |
Pulliam | Jay | Baylor University |
Puskas | Christine | UNAVCO |
Rajiv | Nishath | Ranasinghe New Mexico State University |
Reimiller | Bob | Certified Software Corporation |
Ringler | Adam | U.S. Geological Survey |
Ritzwoller | Michael | University of Colorado |
Rodgers | Artie | Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory |
S. Cochran | Elizabeth | U.S. Geological Survey |
Saavedra | Teresa | IRIS Consortium |
Sauter | Allan | IRIS Consortium/PASSCAL |
Schmandt | Brandon | California Institute of Technology |
Schmerr | Nick | NASA Goddard Space Flight Center |
Schulte-Pelkum | Vera | University of Colorado Boulder |
Schutt | Derek | Colorado State University |
Shao | Guangfu | University of California, Santa Barbara |
Shawn Wei | S. | Washington University in St. Louis |
Sheehan | Anne | University of Colorado at Boulder |
Shen | Weisen | University of Colorado at Boulder |
Shen | Yang | University of Rhode Island |
Simpson | David | IRIS Consortium |
Sit | Stefany | Miami University |
Slad | George | IRIS Consortium/PASSCAL |
Smith | Ken | University of Nevada, Reno |
Snett | Lee | UNAVCO |
Spriggs | Neil | Nanometrics |
Stasiak | Jim | Hewlett Packard |
Stump | Brian | Southern Methodist University |
Sufri | Oner | University of Utah |
Sumy | Danielle | United States Geological Survey |
Sweet | Justin | University of Washington |
Taber | John | IRIS Consortium |
Tarnowski | Jennifer | University of California, Riverside |
Taylor | Steven | Rocky Mountain Geophysics |
Tepp | Gabrielle | University of Rochester |
Thomas | Trevor | University of Washington |
Thurber | Cliff | University of Wisconsin, Madison |
Thurner | Sally | Rice University |
Trabant | Chad | IRIS Consortium/Data Management Center |
Tromp | Jeroen | Princeton University |
Tytell | Jon | University of California, San Diego |
Tytgat | Guy | PASSCAL Instrument Center |
Ulberg | Carl | University of Washington |
van Wijk | Kasper | Boise State University |
Velasco | Aaron | University of Texas at El Paso |
Vernon | Frank | University of California, San Diego |
Voorhees | Dave | Waubonsee Community College |
Wagner | Lara | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Waite | Greg | Michigan Technological University |
Walter | Bill | Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory |
Walter | Jake | University of California, Santa Cruz |
Wang | Kelin | Geological Survey of Canada |
Warren | Linda | Saint Louis University |
Weertman | Bruce | IRIS Consortium/Data Management Center |
Wiens | Doug | Washington University |
Willemann | Ray | IRIS Consortium |
Williams | Dwight | University of Michigan |
Wilson | Dave | U.S. Geological Survey |
Winberry | Paul | Central Washington |
Wolin | Emily | Northwestern University |
Woodward | Bob | IRIS Consortium |
Woolley | Rob | IRIS Consortium |
Worthington | Lindsay | Texas A&M University |
Wu | Francis | State University of New York at Binghamton |
Wu | Jing | Chinese Academy of Sciences |
Xie | Jiayi | University of Colorado at Boulder |
Yu | Chunquan | Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Yuan | Huaiyu | Berkeley Seismological Lab |
Yuan | Yanhua | Princeton University |
Zanzerkia | Eva | National Science Foundation |
Zhou | Lianqing | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign |
Zimakov | Leonid | Refraction Technology, Inc. |
Zollweg | Jim | Northwest Geosensing |
Notice:
The scholarship application period for this workshop closed at
.