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Grace O'Connell

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Grace D. O'Connell
Alma materUniversity of Pennsylvania, University of Maryland
Scientific career
FieldsMechanical engineering, Bio-engineering
Thesis (2009)
Doctoral advisorDawn Elliott

Grace D. O'Connell is an American biomechanical engineer known for her research on the biomechanics of the human spine, on the degeneration and regeneration of spinal tissue, and on the comparison of its properties with the spines of animals used in the study of lumbar disc disease.[1] She is an associate professor of mechanical engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, where she also held the Don M. Cunningham Chair in Mechanical Engineering.[2][3]

Education and career

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O'Connell was a high school student at Upper Darby High School in Pennsylvania.[4] After being inspired by a high school engineering class, and also taking flying lessons as a high school student,[1] O'Connell began an aerospace engineering program at Virginia Tech[5] and then transferred to the University of Maryland, College Park, graduating in 2004. She earned a Ph.D. in bioengineering in 2009 from the University of Pennsylvania,[2] supervised by Dawn Elliott.[6]

She was a postdoctoral researcher with Clark Hung[6] at Columbia University from 2009 to 2013 before joining the University of California, Berkeley faculty.[2] She has also held an adjunct faculty position in the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery at the University of California, San Francisco since 2017.[5] At Berkeley, she was promoted to a tenured associate professorship in 2019.[6] In 2021 she was named as associate dean for inclusive excellence in the UC Berkeley College of Engineering.[7]

Outreach

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O'Connell is a member of the National Society of Black Engineers and the Society of Women Engineers.[5] As a woman of color in engineering, she has been sensitive to the challenges faced by minorities in engineering and has worked to improve the diversity of the field.[4] Her work in this area has included serving as an advisor for the Berkeley Society of Women Engineers and Black Engineering and Science Student Association, and leading the Berkeley Girls in Engineering Program.[5]

Recognition

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O'Connell was the 2019 recipient of the Y. C. Fung Young Investigator Award of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, named for her "pioneering work in multiscale mechanics of musculoskeletal soft tissues".[8][9] She was named as a Fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering in 2021 "for outstanding contributions to understanding biomechanical degeneration and failure of fiber-reinforced biological tissues by creating integrated computational and experimental approaches".[3]

Upper Darby High School named her to their alumni wall of fame in 2021.[4] In 2022, O'Connell received the early career distinguished alumni award from the College of Engineering at the University of Maryland.[10]

References

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  1. ^ a b Glazer, Amanda (September 26, 2019), "Understanding the Mechanics: An Interview with Grace O'Connell", Berkeley Science Review, retrieved 2023-01-04
  2. ^ a b c "Grace D. O'Connell, PhD", Berkeley Biomechanics, University of California, Berkeley, retrieved 2023-01-04
  3. ^ a b Dr. Grace O'Connell to be inducted into medical and biological engineering elite (PDF), AIMBE, February 15, 2021, retrieved 2023-01-04
  4. ^ a b c Alumni Wall of Fame, Upper Darby School District, retrieved 2023-01-04; Grace O'Connell, Class of 2000 (PDF), Upper Darby School District, retrieved 2023-01-04
  5. ^ a b c d Curriculum vitae (PDF), University of California, San Francisco, 2018, retrieved 2023-01-04
  6. ^ a b c Blake, Amber (November 24, 2020), Grace O'Connell, PhD, Orthopaedic Research Society, retrieved 2023-01-04
  7. ^ "Grace O'Connell", Equity in Graduate Education Resource Center, University of Southern California, March 23, 2022, retrieved 2023-01-04
  8. ^ Y. C. Fung Young Investigator Award, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, retrieved 2023-01-04
  9. ^ ME Assistant Professor Grace O'Connell to Receive 2019 Y.C. Fung Early Career Award, Berkeley Mechanical Engineering, January 11, 2019, retrieved 2023-01-04
  10. ^ "Introducing the Early Career Distinguished Alumni Society".
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