Dickson Prize
The Dickson Prize in Medicine and the Dickson Prize in Science were both established in 1969 by Joseph Z. Dickson and Agnes Fischer Dickson.
Dickson Prize in Medicine
The Dickson Prize in Medicine is awarded annually by the University of Pittsburgh, and recognizes US citizens who have made "significant, progressive contributions" to medicine.[1] The award includes $50,000, a bronze medal, and the Dickson Prize Lecture. Receiving the Dickson Prize in Medicine is strongly correlated with receiving the Lasker Award and the Nobel Prize.[2]
Recipients
Source: University of Pittsburgh
- 1971 Earl W. Sutherland Jr.
- 1972 Solomon A. Berson and Rosalyn S. Yalow
- 1973 John H. Gibbon Jr.[3]
- 1974 Stephen W. Kuffler
- 1975 Elizabeth F. Neufeld
- 1976 Frank J. Dixon
- 1977 Roger Guillemin
- 1978 Paul Greengard
- 1979 Bert W. O'Malley
- 1980 David H. Hubel and Torsten N. Wiesel
- 1981 Philip Leder
- 1982 Francis H. Ruddle
- 1983 Eric R. Kandel
- 1984 Solomon H. Snyder
- 1985 Robert C. Gallo
- 1986 J. Michael Bishop
- 1987 Elvin A. Kabat
- 1988 Leroy E. Hood
- 1989 Bernard Moss
- 1990 Ernst Knobil
- 1991 Phillip A. Sharp
- 1992 Francis Sellers Collins
- 1993 Stanley B. Prusiner
- 1994 Bert Vogelstein
- 1995 Ronald M. Evans
- 1996 Philippa Marrack
- 1997 Ed Harlow and Eric Steven Lander
- 1998 Richard D. Klausner
- 1999 James E. Darnell Jr.
- 2000 Elizabeth H. Blackburn (Dickson Prize Lecture, April 13, 2000: "Telomere Capping and Cell Proliferation"[4])
- 2001 Robert G. Roeder (Dickson Prize Lecture, September 12, 2001: "Regulation of Transcription in Human Cells: Complexities and Challenges")[5]
- 2002 C. David Allis (Dickson Prize Lecture, September 18, 2002: "Translating the Histone Code: A Tale of Tails")[6]
- 2003 Susan L. Lindquist (Dickson Prize Lecture, September 24, 2003: "Protein Conformation as a Pathway to Understanding Cellular Processes, Disease and Bio-Inspired Materials"[7])
- 2004 Elaine Fuchs (Dickson Prize Lecture, 2004: "Skin Stem Cells and Their Lineages"[8])
- 2005 Ronald W. Davis (Dickson Prize Lecture, 2005: "New Genomic Technology for Yeast Applied to Clinical Medicine"[9])
- 2006 Roger D. Kornberg (Dickson Prize Lecture, October 5, 2006: "Chromatin and Transcription"[10])
- 2007 Carol W. Greider (Dickson Prize Lecture, October 11, 2007: "Telomerase and the Consequences of Telomere Dysfunction"[11])
- 2008 Randy W. Schekman (Dickson Prize Lecture, "Dissecting the Secretion Process: From Basic Mechanism to Human Disease"[12])
- 2009 Victor Ambros (Dickson Prize Lecture, "MicroRNAs, from Model Organisms to Human Biology."[13])
- 2010 Stephen J. Elledge
- 2011 J. Craig Venter
- 2012 Brian J. Druker
- 2013 Huda Y. Zoghbi (Dickson Prize Lecture, Thursday, October 3, 2013: "Rett Syndrome and MECP2 Disorders: From the Clinic to Genes and Neurobiology.")[14]
- 2014 Jeffrey I. Gordon[15]
- 2015 Karl Deisseroth [16]
- 2016 Jennifer Doudna
- 2017 David M. Sabatini
- 2018 Bonnie Bassler
- 2019 Ruslan Medzhitov
Dickson Prize in Science
The Dickson Prize in Science is awarded annually by Carnegie Mellon University, and recognizes those who "have made the most progress in the scientific field in the United States for the year in question."[17] The award is dated by the year in which it was announced, which is often the year before the lecture occurs.[18]
Recipients
Source: Carnegie Mellon University
- 1971 Richard Bellman
- 1972 George Palade and Keith Roberts Porter
- 1973 Francis L. Ver Snyder
- 1974 Elias J. Corey
- 1975 David H. Geiger, civil engineering
- 1975 - not awarded
- 1977 - not awarded
- 1978 John H. Sinfelt
- 1979 Seymour Benzer
- 1980 - not awarded
- 1981 John Werner Cahn
- 1982 - not awarded
- 1983 Harden M. McConnell
- 1983-84 Edward Fredkin
- 1986 Norman Davidson
- 1987 Benjamin Widom
- 1988 Mitchell Feigenbaum
- 1989 Joan A. Steitz
- 1990 Richard E. Dickerson
- 1991 F. Sherwood Rowland
- 1992 David Botstein
- 1993 Paul Lauterbur
- 1994 Vera Rubin
- 1995 Raymond Kurzweil
- 1996 Leland Hartwell
- 1997 John P. Hirth
- 1998 Walter Alvarez
- 1999 Peter Shor, 25th recipient (Dickson Lecture, November 8, 1999, "Quantum Computing")
- 2000 Howard Raiffa (Dickson Lecture, Tue. April 4, 2000: "Analytical Roots of a Decision Scientist"
- 2001 Alexander Pines (Dickson Lecture, April 11, 2001: "Some Magnetic Moments"[19]
- 2002 Carver Mead (Dickson Lecture, March 19, 2002: "The Coming Revolution in Photography")[20]
- 2003 Robert Langer (Dickson Lecture, February 26, 2003: "Biomaterials And How They Will Change Our Lives")
- 2004 Marc W. Kirschner (Dickson Lecture, March 30, 2004: "Timing the Inner Cell Cycle")[21]
- 2005 George Whitesides (Dickson Lecture, March 28, 2005: "Assumptions: If common assumptions about the modern world break down, then what could science and technology make happen?")
- 2006 David Haussler (Dickson Lecture, March 9, 2006: "Ultraconserved elements, living fossil transposons, and rapid bursts of change: reconstructing the uneven evolutionary history of the human genome"
- 2007 Jared Diamond (Dickson Lecture, March 26, 2007: "Collapse")[22]
- 2008 Jean Fréchet
- 2009 Richard M. Karp
- 2010 Saul Perlmutter (Dickson Lecture, March 17, 2010: "Stalking Dark Energy & the Mystery of the Accelerating Universe")
- 2011 David A. Tirrell
- 2011 Marvin L. Cohen (March 8, 2012: "Einstein, Condensed Matter Physics, Nanoscience & Superconductivity")
- 2013 François M. M. Morel (March 12, 2013: "Ocean Acidification: Causes, Time Scales & Consequences")[23]
- 2014 Karl Deisseroth (February 3, 2014: "Illuminating the Brain")
- 2015 Joseph M. DeSimone (February 16, 2015: "Breakthroughs in Imprint Lithography and 3D Additive Fabrication")
- 2016 Judea Pearl (February 29, 2016 : "Science, Counterfactuals and Free Will") [24]
- 2017 Chad A. Mirkin (February 2, 2017 : "Nanotechnology: Small Things Matter")
- 2018 Jennifer Doudna (February 1, 2018: "CRISPR Systems: Nature's Toolkit for Genome Editing"[25])[26]
- 2019 Emery N. Brown (January 31, 2019: "The Dynamics of the Unconscious Brain Under General Anesthesia") [27][28]
Further reading
- Dickson Prize in Science at Carnegie Mellon University
- Dickson Prize in Medicine at University of Pittsburgh
See also
Notes
- ^ "Dickson Prize in Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh". The Dickson Prize in Medicine. University of Pittsburgh. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- ^ "About the Dickson Prize in Medicine". The Dickson Prize in Medicine. University of Pittsburgh. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- ^ Finding Aid to the John H. Gibbon Papers, 1903-1956 , including the Dickson Prize Talk Archived August 23, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ University of Pittsburgh, University Times, v.32, n.16 (April 13, 2000). Archived September 20, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Science 2001 Dickson Prize Lecturer". Archived from the original on 2007-06-26. Retrieved 2008-05-25.
- ^ Science 2002 Schedule Archived 2007-06-24 at the Wayback Machine (PDF).
- ^ Whitehead Institute press release Archived September 1, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Dickson Prize, 2004
- ^ Dickson Prize, 2005
- ^ Medical News Today
- ^ Dickson Prize in Medicine, University of Pittsburgh
- ^ Dickson Prize in Medicine, 2008
- ^ Dickson Prize in Medicine, 2009
- ^ "Huda Y. Zoghbi, M.D., Will Receive Pitt's Dickson Prize at Science 2013—Convergence". UPMC Life Changing Medicine. UPMC/University of Pittsburgh Schools of the Health Sciences. July 5, 2013. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- ^ "Jeffrey I. Gordon, M.D., Will Receive Pitt's Dickson Prize at Science 2014—Sustain It!". UPMC Life Changing Medicine. UPMC/University of Pittsburgh Schools of the Health Sciences. July 17, 2014. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- ^ "2015 Dickson Prize Winner". The Dickson Prize in Medicine. University of Pittsburgh. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- ^ "The Dickson Prize in Science". Carnegie Mellon University. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- ^ "Dickson Prize Past Winners". Carnegie Mellon University. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- ^ Thomas, Teresa S. (March 22, 2001). "Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Researcher Alexander Pines To Receive Dickson Prize in Science From Carnegie Mellon". Carnegie Mellon Media Relations. Carnegie Mellon University. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- ^ Towey, Laine (March 8, 2002). "Microelectronics Pioneer Carver Mead Wins $47,000 Dickson Prize". Carnegie Mellon News. Carnegie Mellon University. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- ^ Ward, Lauren. "Carnegie Mellon to Award Dickson Prize to Top Cell Biologist". Carnegie Mellon Media Relations. Carnegie Mellon University. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- ^ Potts, Jonathan (March 5, 2007). "Award-Winning Author, Scientist Jared Diamond To Receive Carnegie Mellon's Dickson Prize". Carnegie Mellon University. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- ^ Ocean Acidification: Causes, Time Scales and Consequences - 2012 Dickson Prize Lecture
- ^ http://www.cmu.edu/dickson-prize/ Carnegie Mellon University, Dickson Prize in Science Honoring Judea Pearl
- ^ "CRISPR Systems: Nature's Toolkit for Genome Editing". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 31 December 2018.
- ^ "Past Winners". www.cmu.edu. Carnegie Mellon University. Retrieved 31 December 2018.
- ^ "The 2018 Dickson Prize Recipient". www.cmu.edu. Carnegie Mellon University. Retrieved 31 December 2018.
- ^ "Dickson Prize in Science Page". www.cmu.edu. Carnegie Mellon University. Retrieved 31 December 2018.