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Sheryl Lichtig Wyan
UC Merced
Office of Communications
(209) 724-4408
sheryl.lichtig@ucop.edu
OHIO
STATE'S KEITH ALLEY NAMED VICE CHANCELLOR FOR RESEARCH, DEAN OF
GRADUATE STUDIES OF UC MERCED
MERCED --- Chancellor Carol Tomlinson-Keasey today (May 30) announced
the appointment of Keith Alley, Ph.D., as the University of California,
Merced's founding Vice Chancellor for Research and Dean of Graduate
Studies.
Alley, who currently serves as the Senior Associate
Vice President for Research at The Ohio State University, officially
will assume his new position with UC Merced on July 1, 2002.
As the lead campus research officer, Alley will
be responsible for the development and support of research opportunities,
initiatives and partnerships. In his dual position as dean of graduate
studies, he will oversee graduate degree programs and all issues
related to graduate students and postdoctoral fellows.
"Keith Alley will bring tremendous experience
to the senior leadership team of our developing campus," said
UC Merced Chancellor Carol Tomlinson-Keasey. "He has an outstanding
record in scholarly research, teaching and academic administration.
I am very pleased we will be working with Dr. Alley, whose many
talents and vision will contribute significantly to the development
of UC Merced's programs in research and graduate studies."
Named to his current position with Ohio State's
Office of Research in 2000, Alley's primary responsibility is working
with faculty to facilitate their research programs. He is also responsible
for day-to-day budget allocations from the Office of Research and
represents the vice president for research in all areas. Since 1985,
he also has held faculty appointments in oral biology within the
College of Dentistry and in the Department of Cell Biology, Neurobiology
and Anatomy in the College of Medicine.
Alley has served as the principal investigator
on Federal and State grants totaling in excess of $4 million. His
laboratory studies neuromuscular development and uses amphibian
metamorphosis as a natural model on which to study this phenomenon.
Specifically, his research has focused on the plasticity of cranial
motor neurons and their associated muscular targets during the transition
from aquatic to terrestrial life. He hopes to define the mechanisms
that govern sprouting in the motoneuronal pool to accommodate to
rapid expansion of muscular targets. As a researcher, Alley has
authored numerous scientific articles and abstracts and co-authored
the book "Permar’s Oral Embryology and Microscopy,"
and has delivered an extensive list of invited scholarly presentations.
Also active in graduate advising, he has served on more than 75
masters, doctoral dissertation and doctoral candidacy committees.
At UC Merced, his initial responsibilities will
include establishing policies and administrative structure for the
offices of research and graduate studies, assisting with faculty
recruitment, coordinating development and review of graduate degree
programs, and developing services for graduate students and postdoctoral
fellows. Alley will facilitate faculty efforts to obtain grants,
coordinate submission proposals, team up with other UC campuses
to implement the systems required to handle contracts and grants
of UC Merced faculty and represent the campus within the UC system
and externally on matters associated with graduate affairs.
Alley will serve as the ongoing liaison with campus
research centers, including UC Merced's Sierra Nevada Research Institute
and World Cultures Institute; support UC Merced's research relationship
with MOU partners Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Yosemite
and Sequoia-Kings Canyon National Parks; and support UC Merced's
collaboration with UC Berkeley, UC Davis and UC Santa Cruz through
the Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of
Society (CITIRIS). Working with founding faculty, he also will explore
new research partnership opportunities and directions with other
UC campuses and UC-managed laboratories, as well as industry and
external research agencies.
"To be involved with the creation of a new
research university in the best public system of higher education
in the nation is an honor, and an opportunity that is incredibly
rare in academia," Alley said. "This is a defining moment
and I am excited to begin working with the campus leadership team
to define UC Merced’s signature programs of study and research.
My goal is to start on the road to building a research profile equal
to those at other UC campuses, with a large premium on the involvement
of graduate and undergraduate students in UC Merced campus research."
He is committed to creating a campus that welcomes
diversity and to increasing educational access for the students
in the San Joaquin Valley region, which UC Merced has a special
mission to serve.
"This campus has an opportunity and an obligation
to help this region’s students receive academic preparation
for higher education and to be a leader in the development of a
college-going culture in the Valley," Alley said.
According to Alley, the newness of the campus offers
tremendous potential to build a strong, innovative and student-oriented
research program, and to develop a university with unique, defining
elements. Looking toward the future, Alley said he hopes the campus
will become recognized for educating students as independent thinkers
and effective researchers, and for its success in providing a high
percentage of students with access to valuable lab experiences,
internships and scholarships.
At Ohio State, Alley has had extensive involvement
in program development at department, college and university levels.
He recently coordinated planning for a new $9 million biological
micro-electromechanical lab, meshing clean room, cell and molecular
biology capacities. He was heavily involved in the development of
curriculum and courses for new doctoral programs in oral biology
and neurobiology and charged with building a biologically based
research department in the College of Dentistry. Past positions
to which he was appointed include interim vice president for research,
president of the Ohio State Research Foundation, and chair of the
Department of Oral Biology and associate dean for Research and Graduate
Studies in the College of Dentistry.
He has a record of continuous involvement in faculty
governance, having served on the University Senate, the Research
and Graduate Council and a wide variety of planning, review and
search panels while at Ohio State. Throughout his career, Alley
has also been committed to national and international service. He
is a councilor for the American Association for the Advancement
of Science; past president of the Neuroscience Group of the International
Association for Dental Research; and a former reviewer for National
Institute of Health (NIH) site visits and National Science Foundation
grants.
Alley received his bachelor’s degree, master’s
degree, and Ph.D. in anatomy/neuroscience from the University of
Illinois. He also holds a D.D.S. degree from Illinois. Following,
he was a postdoctoral fellow in neurobiology at the University of
Iowa. He has held two NIH fellowships and was honored with an NIH
Research Career Development Award. Beginning in 1974, Alley served
on the faculty of the schools of Medicine and Dentistry at Case
Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio.
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