Close

Presenter

James Glazier
Biography
Dr. Glazier completed his BA in Physics and Mathematics at Harvard College and his PhD in Experimental Condensed Matter Physics at the University of Chicago. He was an NSF/JSPS Postdoctoral Fellow in biophysics at the Research Institute of Electrical Communication of Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan. He held faculty positions in Physics at the University of Notre Dame and Indiana University, Bloomington. As part of his work on infection modeling, he is founder and co-lead of the Interagency Modeling and Analysis Group and Multiscale Modeling Consortium (IMAG/MSM) Working Group on Multiscale Modeling and Viral Pandemics. He leads the collaborative development of the open-source CompuCell3D multi-scale modeling and model-sharing environment and works closely with the EPA, which has adopted CompuCell3D as a core platform for their CompTox computational toxicology program. He actively disseminates both methods and models, with more than 200 invited talks and seminars on modeling and CompuCell3D. He has expertise supervising collaborative development of models and in developing workflows integrating models with experimental data, most recently in the area of developmental toxicology. In 2016, he became one of the founding members of Indiana University’s Department of Intelligent Systems Engineering (the first engineering program at Indiana University, Bloomington), which aims to apply advanced computing techniques to understand and control complex natural and engineered emergent systems. Within ISE, he leads the creation of the Bioengineering track, with 8 faculty hires in 2016 and 2017 and novel transdisciplinary BS, MS and PhD syllabi. As founding director of the Biocomplexity Institute at Indiana University, he has extensive experience in model sharing, having led the IMAG/MSM model sharing Working Group for 2 years and participated extensively in developing multi-cell model specification standards. He was instrumental in more than 10 interdisciplinary biosciences faculty hires at Indiana University in the Departments of Physics and Biology and the School of Informatics. He also led the creation of a new Biological Physics PhD track with an interdisciplinary syllabus and qualifying examination. He has experience organizing large-scale multidisciplinary biomedical research projects and has organized 11 international workshops on Biocomplexity and numerous symposia and panels at major international meetings as well as 15 CompuCell3D User-training workshops and five workshops on model sharing and standards. He has supervised 14 students who have completed PhD dissertations, 21 postdoctoral researchers and 33 high-school and undergraduate researchers.
Committee Roles
SC Workshop Committee Member: CAFCW