BME Seminar Series - Jean Vettel, Army Research Lab
Friday,
March 15, 2019
11:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Jean M Vettel earned her PhD in Cognitive Neuroscience from Brown University, funded
by an NSF Graduate Fellowship (2004-2007) and a DoD SMART Fellowship (2007-2009),
following a lab position at Washington University in St. Louis and BA from Carnegie
Mellon. She is currently a Senior Science Lead in the Future Soldier Technologies
Division at the CCDC Army Research Laboratory (Army Futures Command) with joint
appointments at University of California, Santa Barbara and University of Pennsylvania.
She was competitively selected for two of NAE’s Frontiers of Engineering symposia for
outstanding engineers under 45, received numerous Army Commendations and
Certificate of Achievements for her impact to the Army, and invited to brief senior
leadership in the Army, DoD, OSD, and White House. Her collaborative research
investigates how physiological signals from the brain and body can be used in adaptive
technology to enhance human-agent teaming by accounting for individual differences
and the influence of social context. Jean has over 100 publications and reports as well as
several dozen media interviews and invited panels to communicate the value of
neuroscience and human sciences research for the Army across a wide range of
audiences.
by an NSF Graduate Fellowship (2004-2007) and a DoD SMART Fellowship (2007-2009),
following a lab position at Washington University in St. Louis and BA from Carnegie
Mellon. She is currently a Senior Science Lead in the Future Soldier Technologies
Division at the CCDC Army Research Laboratory (Army Futures Command) with joint
appointments at University of California, Santa Barbara and University of Pennsylvania.
She was competitively selected for two of NAE’s Frontiers of Engineering symposia for
outstanding engineers under 45, received numerous Army Commendations and
Certificate of Achievements for her impact to the Army, and invited to brief senior
leadership in the Army, DoD, OSD, and White House. Her collaborative research
investigates how physiological signals from the brain and body can be used in adaptive
technology to enhance human-agent teaming by accounting for individual differences
and the influence of social context. Jean has over 100 publications and reports as well as
several dozen media interviews and invited panels to communicate the value of
neuroscience and human sciences research for the Army across a wide range of
audiences.
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