Professor Donna J. Cox
Abbreviated Vita
Last update September 2006
Donna J. Cox

Cox is a full professor at the
8/06 … Present Director, Advanced Scientific Visualization Laboratory, NCSA
http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/AboutUs/Leadership/
National Center for Supercomputing
Applications
2/02 … 8/06 Director, Visualization and Experimental Technologies, NCSA
8/00 … 2/02 Special Projects, Research Artist/Scientist, NCSA
1/99 ... 8/00 Chair
External Initiatives, MNC,
8/97 … 8/00 Director, Virtual Director Group, NCSA
8/92
... Present Full Professor,
8/90
... 8/99 Associate
Director for Technologies,
3/92 ... 8/93 Co-Director, Scientific Communications and Media Systems, NCSA
8/90 ... 8/92 Associate
Professor,
8/89 ... 3/92 Associate Director for Education, NCSA
1/89 ... 8/96 Project Leader/PI, Renaissance Experimental Lab
6/85 ... 8/89 Adjunct Professor and Research Artist/Scientist, NCSA
8/85 ... 8/88 Visiting Assistant Professor, UIUC
8/85 Master of Fine Arts (terminal degree) in CGA, University of Wisconsin-Madison
8/82 Bachelor
of
Honors, Recognitions, and Outstanding Achievements
· Chicago Museum of Science and Industry selected Cox as one of 40 modern-day Leonardos’s, selected from thousands prospectus http://www.news.uiuc.edu/news/06/0413leonardo.html
Cox named modern
Leonardo: An exhibit at
See Awards Page for more
Recognitions and Outstanding Achievements
ABBREVIATED VITA:
Cox received the international Coler-Maxwell Award for Excellence 1989 granted by the Leonardo International Society in Arts Science and Technology for her seminal paper that coined the term “Renaissance Teams.” She describes “Renaissance Teams” as interdisciplinary groups of experts collaborating to solve problems in supercomputing visualizations and has been responsible for the organization of these teams for more than 20 years of collaborative work in visualization. She has authored papers on scientific visualization, computer graphics, information design, education, and critical theory.
Cox is a recognized
international keynote speaker at events in countries around the world including
Her most famous
collaborative works include the first visualization of the NSFnet,
“A Visualization Study of Network Growth & Traffic From 1986 to
1992” which has become an icon of the early internet. She was Associate Producer for Scientific
Visualization and Art Director for the PIXAR/NCSA segment of the IMAX science
education movie, “Cosmic Voyage,” nominated for 1997 Academy Award
in documentary short subject category.
"Cosmic Voyage" was funded by National Science Foundation,
Smithsonian Institute, the Motorola Foundation, and the Smithsonian National
Air and Space Museum (NASM). In 2000,
Cox and two co-creators received a
Recent projects
include supercomputer visualizations for the digital planetaria
shows. She collaborated with Hayden
Planetarium at American Museum of Natural History in New York City on two space
shows: “Passport to the Universe” premiering at the millennium and
"Search for Life" in 2002. In
June 2002, the Discovery Channel Program, "Unfolding Universe,"
premiered over seventeen scenes of scientific visualizations produced by Cox
and her collaborators. Her team
developed data-driven scientific visualizations for HDTV NOVA/WGBH show,
"Runaway Universe," receiving the 2002 Golden Camera, International
Film and Video Festival award. At Supercomputing 2002, Cox led the NCSA
Experimental Technology team to develop an integrated system to track technical
program volunteers at the
Cox participated
in National Research Council (NRC) commissions and policy making committees
including the National Research Council Committee on Modeling and Simulation:
Opportunities for Collaboration among the Department of Defense and
Entertainment Industry. She contributed
to the 2003 NRC report: “Beyond
Productivity: Information Technology,
Innovation, and Creativity,” National Academy Press,
National Center for Supercomputing
Applications