National Academies Press: OpenBook

Advanced Technology Program: Challenges and Opportunities (1999)

Chapter: Annex B. Participants List

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Suggested Citation:"Annex B. Participants List." National Research Council. 1999. Advanced Technology Program: Challenges and Opportunities. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9699.
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B. Participants List

Philip Abelson

AAAS

Arthur J. Alexander

Japan Economic Institute

Maggie Angell

Dewey Ballantine

John Aybar

National Academy of Sciences

Susanne Bachtel

National Research Council

Claude Barfield

American Enterprise Institute

Jon Baron

DoD/SBIR

Micheal Baum

NIST

Barbara Bauman

EPRI

Brian Belanger

NIST

Richard Bissell

National Research Council

Darin Boville

NIST

Barry Bozeman

Georgia Institute of Technology

Kelvin Brockbank

Life Science Holdings, Inc.

Kelly Carnes

Department of Commerce

Connie Chang

NIST

Speakers are italicized.

Suggested Citation:"Annex B. Participants List." National Research Council. 1999. Advanced Technology Program: Challenges and Opportunities. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9699.
×

Iain Cockburn

University of British Columbia

William Colglazier

National Research Council

Mark Crawford

New Technology Week

Michael Darby

University of California at Los Angeles

Michael Daum

Department of Commerce

Brian Delroy

Embassy of Australia

Jennifer Dowling

SEMI

Mitch Eggers

Genometrix, Inc.

Linda Ewing

United Auto Workers

Maryann Feldman

Johns Hopkins University

Robert Finni

Office of Congressman Amo Houghton

Jeffrey Fisher

Solectria Corporation

Kenneth Flamm

University of Texas

Peter Ford

General Electric Company

Anup K. Ghosh

Reliable Software Technologies

David Gibson

X-Ray Optical Systems, Inc.

David Goldston

Office of Representative Sherman Boehlert

Heike Grimm

Union Mittelstaendischer Unternehmen

Carlos Grinspon

NIST

Jeff Grove

House Committee on Science

Matthew Heyman

NIST

Christopher Hill

George Mason University

Laura T. Holliday

National Research Council

John B. Horrigan

National Research Council

Shirley Hurwitz

NIST

Steven Izatt

IBC Advanced Technologies, Inc.

Ray Kammer

NIST

Henry Kelly

White House Office of Science and Technology Policy

Suggested Citation:"Annex B. Participants List." National Research Council. 1999. Advanced Technology Program: Challenges and Opportunities. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9699.
×

Maryellen Kelley

Carnegie Mellon and NIST

David King

NIST

Jean-Francois Large

French Embassy

Alan Lauder

DuPont

William Lehr

Columbia University

Joshua Lerner

Harvard Business School

Al Link

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

William Long

Business Performance Research Associates

Janet Lynch

General Electric

Sheila Martin

Research Triangle Institute

Purabi Mazumdar

NIST

Anne-Marie Mazza

National Research Council

Clark McFadden

Dewey Ballantine

Stephen A. Merrill

National Research Council

Youhyoun Moon

Korean Embassy

William Morin

Sayer and Associates

Julie Moses

British Embassy

Uwe Muller

Vysis, Inc.

Richard Nelson

Columbia University

William Newall

Axys Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Robert Norwood

NASA Headquarters

Laura Ost

NIST

Mark Pittenger

Osiris Therapeutics, Inc.

Lura Powell

NIST

Richard Ramseyer

Honeywell Technology Center

Samuel Rankin, III

American Mathematical Society

Ralph Resnik

Extrude Hone Corporation

Laura Rheintgen

National Academy of Sciences

Suggested Citation:"Annex B. Participants List." National Research Council. 1999. Advanced Technology Program: Challenges and Opportunities. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9699.
×

Stephen Rock

Stanford University, Aero/Astro

Sally Rood

Federal Laboratory Consortium

Rosalie Ruegg

NIST

Richard Russell

House Committee on Science

Susannah Schiller

NIST

Katherine Schinasi

NIST

Volker Schlegel

German Embassy

Jeffrey Schloss

NIH

Stanley Schneider

Real-Time Innovations, Inc.

Craig Schultz

National Research Council

Brij Seth

Westinghouse Power Generation

Anil Sethi

Sequoia Software Corporation

Manny Sieradzki

Diamond Semiconductor Group, Inc.

Bill Spencer

SEMATECH

J.C. Spender

New York Institute of Technology

Todd Spener

Chatter Financial

Marc Stanley

NIST

Richard Spivak

NIST

John Taylor

National Venture Capital Association

James Turner

House Committee on Science

David A.

Villarreal Department of Commerce

Nicholas Vonortas

George Washington University

Caroline Wagner

The RAND Corporation

Andrew Wang

NIST

Todd Watkins

Lehigh University

Charles Wessner

National Research Council

Philip Winkler

Air Products and Chemicals, Inc.

Egon Wolff

Caterpillar, Inc.

Suggested Citation:"Annex B. Participants List." National Research Council. 1999. Advanced Technology Program: Challenges and Opportunities. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9699.
×

Karl Wollin

German Embassy

Loren Yager

General Accounting Office

Jack Yedvish

NASA Headquarters

Joel Yudken

AFL-CIO

Lynne Zucker

University of California at Los Angeles

Suggested Citation:"Annex B. Participants List." National Research Council. 1999. Advanced Technology Program: Challenges and Opportunities. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9699.
×
Page 123
Suggested Citation:"Annex B. Participants List." National Research Council. 1999. Advanced Technology Program: Challenges and Opportunities. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9699.
×
Page 124
Suggested Citation:"Annex B. Participants List." National Research Council. 1999. Advanced Technology Program: Challenges and Opportunities. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9699.
×
Page 125
Suggested Citation:"Annex B. Participants List." National Research Council. 1999. Advanced Technology Program: Challenges and Opportunities. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9699.
×
Page 126
Suggested Citation:"Annex B. Participants List." National Research Council. 1999. Advanced Technology Program: Challenges and Opportunities. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9699.
×
Page 127
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The growth in government programs to support high-technology industry within national economies and their impact on international science and technology cooperation and on the multilateral trading system are of considerable interest worldwide. Accordingly, these topics were taken up by STEP in a study carried out in conjunction with the Hamburg Institute for Economic Research and the Institute for World Economics in Kiel. One of the principal recommendations for further work emerging from that study was a call for an analysis of the principles of effective cooperation in technology development, to include lessons from national and international consortia, including eligibility standards and assessments of what new cooperative mechanisms might be developed to meet the challenges of international cooperation in high-technology products.

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