Four Faculty Members recognized as Highly Cited Researchers
Four faculty members at Boston University’s Department of Earth & Environment have been recognized by Web of Science as Highly Cited Researchers in 2021! Considered true trailblazers in their fields, these elite researchers have produced multiple highly-cited papers that rank in the top 1% of their field and year in Web of science. This […]
Three E&E faculty promoted to Professors!
A special congratulations to Wally Fulweiler, Mike Dietze, and Lucy Hutyra for reaching the rank of Professor! They ecstatically shared their achievements on Twitter, saying: 22 years ago I sat in our living room & said I'd never get into grad school. My brothers encouraged me to apply. Today I was promoted to Full […]
Kathryn Wheeler and Michael Dietze publish a paper in Remote Sensing
Kathryn Wheeler recently published a paper with her advisor, Michael Dietze. Read the paper here: https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/11/21/2507
Tess McCabe honored for ESA presentation
PhD candidate Tess McCabe has received the E.C. Pielou Award from the Ecological Society of America. The competitive award is made annually based on the overall quality of a student’s scientific contribution to statistical ecology. At the ESA’s Annual Meeting, Tess presented “Scaling contagious disturbance in a spatially implicit way: Implications for describing disturbance regimes.” She […]
Colin Averill wins ESA Biogeosciences publications award
Colin Averill, a faculty member at ETH Zurich, has received the Gene E. Likens Award from the Biogeosciences Section of the Ecological Society of America. The prize recognizes work conducted by an early career scientist; Averill conducted his research as a postdoc with E&E Associate Professor Mike Dietze and Biology Assistant Professor Jennifer Bhatnagar. The […]
Mike Dietze and Ecological Forecasting Initiative profiled in Science
Associate Professor Michael Dietze was profiled this month in Science, which highlighted his Ecological Forecasting Initiative as “a grassroots effort to set standards, encourage interdisciplinary approaches, and develop forecasting methods that can be applied to many situations, including fisheries management, wildlife migrations, algal blooms, wildfire patterns, and human disease.” “EFI specifically aims to tackle cross-cutting […]
Mike Dietze delivers keynote at Mass Environmental Education Society
Associate Professor Mike Dietze delivered the keynote at the Massachusetts Environmental Education Society annual conference, as he addressed ecological forecasting and its application to citizen science. Professor Dietze spoke of the ways that iterative forecasts can improve and accelerate basic environmental science, while at the same time making that science more directly relevant to society. […]
Istem Fer, Elizabeth Cowdery, and Mike Dietze publish in Biogeosciences
Postdoc Istem Fer, PhD candidate Elizabeth Cowdery, and Associate Professor Mike Dietze have co-authored “Linking big models to big data: efficient ecosystem model calibration through Bayesian model emulation” in Biogeosciences. “Bayesian methods provide a rigorous data assimilation framework for these applications, especially for problems with multiple data constraints,” the authors note. “However, the Markov chain […]
Associate Professor Mike Dietze to deliver NSF Distinguished Lecture
On September 27 Associate Professor Mike Dietze will deliver the Distinguished Lecture for the National Science Foundation, hosted by the Directorate for Biological Sciences and Division of Biological Infrastructure. His talk is entitled “Solving the Challenge of Predicting Nature: How Close Are We and How Do We Get There.” Is nature predictable? If so, how […]
Associate Professor Mike Dietze hosts NOAA webinar on predicting nature
Associate Professor Mike Dietze hosts “Solving the Challenge of Predicting Nature: How Close Are We and How Do We Get There?” as part of NOAA’s National Ocean Service Science Seminar Series. Wednesday, September 12, 12-1PM EDT Is nature predictable? If so, can we use that understanding to better manage and conserve ecosystems? Near-term ecological forecasting […]