University of Georgia Magazine Spring 2018

Page 31

building a network In early 2015, UGA’s senior leaders met to discuss areas where the university was primed to take a leap forward. When President Jere W. Morehead JD ’80 and Provost Pamela Whitten opened the floor for discussion, Alan Dorsey, dean of the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, and Donald Leo, dean of the College of Engineering, answered quickly. “Informatics.” At the time, informatics wasn’t a foreign concept on campus, but it was scattered. UGA’s Institute of Bioinformatics came online in 2003, and faculty across the university were involved in data science, although collaboration was rare. Things moved quickly following the administration’s meeting. In the fall, a seven-member faculty planning

committee was formed and charged with plotting out the creation of what came to be known as the Georgia Informatics Institutes for Research and Education (GII). “We are very much a network,” says Kyle Johnsen, associate professor of engineering. He serves as GII director. Lakshmish Ramaswamy, professor of computer science, is associate director. “We didn’t want to create a college of informatics or a single institute, where everybody who practices informatics is underneath it,” Johnsen continues. “We recognize that the actual work of informatics is in science and engineering and the humanities, so we have a number of academic clusters. To put everything together would be counterproductive.”

That network includes three new entities—the Institute for Cybersecurity and Privacy, the Health Informatics Institute, and the Center for Cyber-Physical Systems—along with the Institute of Bioinformatics, and the Institute for Artificial Intelligence, which was added to the GII in November. The GII is administered by the College of Engineering, but its scope is much larger, encompassing 46 faculty members spread across the UGA enterprise. In all, UGA boasts more than 160 faculty members who apply informatics to their fields of study. That results in a variety of interesting, boundary-pushing research that stretches beyond the hard sciences to health care, the social sciences, and the humanities.

“Data is the foundation of our generation and every single one after us. Learning how to use data and handle it now puts you at a significant advantage.” —DESTINY SIMMS, FIRST-YEAR COMPUTER SCIENCE STUDENT

bigger number s Informatics’ interdisciplinary nature is related to the complexity of data science itself. The data pipeline is a long one. Some disciplines are stronger on the data collection side while others make greater contributions on the analysis side. The way UGA is building the GII is unlike any other institution in the country. One aspect is how informatics is structured horizontally across departments rather than vertically as an overarching entity. Another is the GII’s approach to educating students. To earn an undergraduate certificate, a student must take 15 hours of informatics spread across 74 courses in fields from humanities to the sciences. A student in any major can earn the certificate—another differentiator. A total of 10

students enrolled in the certificate program for the Fall 2017 semester, the first time it was available, and that number is expected to rise. “Data is the foundation of our generation and every single one after us,” says Destiny Simms, a first-year computer science student from Powder Springs who enrolled in INFO 2000, the informatics introductory course, and is pursuing the certificate. “Learning how to use data and handle it now puts you at a significant advantage.” The GII’s immediate goals include growing its undergraduate certificate program and launching one for graduate students. “Employers are looking for employees with skills in informatics. It’s just a part of the modern work force now,”

Johnsen says. That was one of the themes of the GII’s December symposium, Advancing Informatics in Government and Industry. The event brought more than 150 faculty, students, and guests to the Georgia Center for Continuing Education for a daylong exploration on the impact of data science on the job market, the academy, and public policy. In his opening address, Johnsen shared a statistic stating that four of the top 10 trending jobs for 2017 had some form of “data” in their names: data scientist, data engineer, data analyst, and database administrator. He said UGA was working to train students to fill those jobs. Around the room, heads nodded in agreement.

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