Paul J. Gemperline
Dr. Paul J. Gemperline (b. 1955) is an American analytical chemist and chemometrician. He is a Distinguished Professor of Chemistry at East Carolina University(ECU) located in Greenville, North Carolina and has been the recipient of several scientific awards, including the 2003 Eastern Analytical Symposium Award in Chemometrics. He is author of more than 60 publications in the field of Chemometrics.[1] Dr. Gemperline is currently Dean of the Graduate School at ECU.[2]
Educational background
He graduated from Cleveland State University with a Bachelor of Science in Chemistry in 1978 and received a Ph.D. in Clinical Bioanalytical Chemistry in 1982. His dissertation was titled, "The Design of the Laboratory Network DISNET."
Scientific career
Gemperline came to the notice of a larger scientific community in 1984 with the publication of a paper describing DISNET in the Journal of Automated Methods and Management in Chemistry.[3] (The journal title was changed to Journal of Analytical Methods in Chemistry in 2013.) Gemperline and his colleagues provided methodologies which underlay the improvements in calibration accuracy, computer-based data acquisition and mathematical analysis in chemometrics. The qualitative advances helped open new scientific fields such as molecular modeling and QSAR, cheminformatics, the ‘-omics’ fields of genomics, proteomics, metabonomics and metabolomics, process modeling and process analytical technology.
Gemperline has been most influential by dispersing knowledge of his Chemometric methodologies through his publications. Better process methods can create inflection points that became the foundation for radical improvements and transitions in the scientific enterprise. It can be decades before the implications of particular advances are intuited, especially those related to the basic training of the next generations of chemists.
Gemperline has been dean of the Graduate School at East Carolina University since 2009 and a chemistry faculty member since 1982. He has held several administrative positions at ECU, including associate vice chancellor for research and graduate studies for seven years.[4]
Gemperline currently serves as the Editor-in-Chief of Journal of Chemometrics.[5]
Awards and honors
1983, 1984 NASA Lewis Research Center Summer Faculty Fellow.
1985, 1986, 1987: Senior Visiting Scientist, Burroughs Wellcome Co.[6]
1987: East Carolina University Sigma XI Helms Award for outstanding Research
1999: East Carolina University Distinguished Research Professor of Chemistry Award, 5-Year Achievement Research/Creative Activity Award[7]
2001: East Carolina University College of Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor of Chemistry, Lifetime Achievement Award
2003: Eastern Analytical Symposium Award for Achievement in Chemometrics.
2010: Applied Spectroscopy William F. Meggers Award for outstanding paper appearing in Applied Spectroscopy.[8][9][10]
2014: Distinguished Alumni Award, Cleveland State University.[4]
Publications
Gemperline is author of more than 60 publications in the field of Chemometrics.
References
- ↑ "Paul J. Gemperline Curriculum Vitae" (PDF). Retrieved 27 January 2016.
- ↑ "Graduate School, East Carolina University". Retrieved 27 January 2016.
- ↑ "DISNET: a Distributed Instrument System NETwork", P. J. Gemperline et al., J Automat Chem. 1984; 6(1): 27–32.
- 1 2 YouTube: Distinguished Alumni Awards 2014: Paul Gemperline
- ↑ "Journal of Chemometrics". John Wiley. Retrieved 9 January 2011.
- ↑ See also Burroughs Wellcome Fund
- ↑ East Carolina University Past Award Recipients
- ↑ Patrick J. Cutler, David M. Haaland, and Paul J. Gemperline for 'Systematic Method for the Kinetic Modeling of Temporally Resolved Hyperspectral Microscope Images of Fluorescently Labeled Cells.'
- ↑ Applied Spectroscopy Award Past Recipients
- ↑ Society of Applied Spectroscopy Awards
External links
- Department of Chemistry at the East Carolina University