PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Stephen K. Streiffer named director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Long-time national lab leader begins tenure in October

Stephen K. Streiffer named director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory
2023-07-27
(Press-News.org) UT-Battelle, LLC, has appointed Stephen K. Streiffer to be the next director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL). He currently serves as interim director at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory and will join ORNL in October.

“Stephen is a proven leader with diverse experience and a commitment to mission-driven research and development,” said Lou Von Thaer, CEO of Battelle and chair of UT-Battelle, which operates ORNL for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). “Throughout his career, Stephen has leveraged existing strengths to create new opportunities and partnerships that strengthen our nation’s ability to innovate and compete.”

Streiffer joined SLAC last year as Stanford University’s vice president responsible for oversight of the lab. He was named interim director in February 2023. He previously spent 24 years in research and leadership positions at Argonne National Laboratory, concluding his tenure as the lab’s deputy director for science and technology.

“Our national laboratories provide scientists with access to some of the most powerful research facilities in the world, and Stephen has been a key leader in the development of these capabilities,” said Asmeret Asefaw Berhe, director of DOE’s Office of Science. “At Oak Ridge, Stephen’s experience will help to ensure continued impact that benefits the nation and world.”

At Argonne, Streiffer led the Photon Sciences Directorate and served as director of the Advanced Photon Source (APS), a DOE Office of Science user facility that generates ultra-bright, high-energy x-ray beams for researchers from government, academia, and the private sector. APS is undergoing an $815 million upgrade.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, from March 2020 through May 2022, Streiffer also served as co-director of DOE’s National Virtual Biotechnology Laboratory (NVBL), a consortium that included ORNL and leveraged the national labs to address challenges related to testing, treatment, epidemiological modeling, and supply chain bottlenecks encountered during the height of the pandemic.

Prior to APS and NVBL, Streiffer helped to create and lead Argonne’s Physical Sciences and Engineering Directorate—which includes its Materials Science, Chemical Sciences and Engineering, Nanoscience and Technology, High Energy Physics, and Physics divisions. He also served as deputy associate laboratory director for its predecessor Energy Sciences and Engineering Directorate. From 2000-2009, he served a leadership role in development of Argonne’s Center for Nanoscale Materials, another Office of Science user facility.

“I was fortunate to work closely with Stephen at Argonne, so I’ve seen his commitment to teamwork and his ability to build support first-hand,” said Mark Peters, Battelle’s executive vice president of Laboratory Management and Operations. “One of ORNL’s top priorities is to retain, recruit, and develop staff members across its broad portfolio of research and operational areas, and that’s been an important area of focus in Stephen’s career. We’re thrilled he’s coming to ORNL.”

Streiffer earned his Ph.D. in materials science and engineering from Stanford University and a bachelor’s in materials science from Rice University. He is a fellow of the American Physical Society and a member of the Materials Research Society and Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.

“I look forward to getting to work at Oak Ridge,” Streiffer said. “Through my roles with Office of Science programs and user facilities, I’ve collaborated with ORNL and its extremely talented staff for many years. It’s a great honor to be selected as lab director and to join the team, and I’m committed to continuing the transformative role Oak Ridge has played in our nation’s scientific enterprise for almost 80 years.”

Randy Boyd, president of the University of Tennessee System and vice chair of the UT-Battelle Board of Governors, praised Streiffer’s appointment: “UT is proud to partner with Battelle to manage what we believe is the best science laboratory in the country, if not the world. One of our most important responsibilities is to select and hire the best leadership possible to lead the thousands of brilliant people that make the lab so successful. We believe we have done that in hiring Stephen Streiffer. He has the experience, the energy and the vision to lead the lab to even greater heights.”

UT-Battelle, a partnership of the University of Tennessee and Battelle Memorial Institute, operates ORNL for DOE’s Office of Science. For more information, visit ORNL.gov.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Stephen K. Streiffer named director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory Stephen K. Streiffer named director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory 2 Stephen K. Streiffer named director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Gene therapy treats chronic pain by dialing down sodium

Gene therapy treats chronic pain by dialing down sodium
2023-07-27
Researchers at NYU College of Dentistry’s Pain Research Center have developed a gene therapy that treats chronic pain by indirectly regulating a specific sodium ion channel, according to a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).   The innovative therapy, tested in cells and animals, is made possible by the discovery of the precise region where a regulatory protein binds to the NaV1.7 sodium ion channel to control its activity.   “Our study represents a major step forward in understanding the underlying biology of the NaV1.7 sodium ion channel, which can be harnessed to provide relief from chronic pain,” said Rajesh ...

Bees and wasps independently invent the same architectural tricks

Bees and wasps independently invent the same architectural tricks
2023-07-27
At first glance, the hexagonal cells build by honey bees and social wasps may seem similar, but they are significantly different. Honey bees build using wax, whereas wasps use paper. Honey bees build their double-sided combs vertically, whereas wasps build single-sided comb horizontally (i.e., the opening of each cell faces downward). Indeed, the hexagonal cells built by these two groups have independent evolutionary origins. Just like sharks and whales have similar body plans due to their watery environment, bees and wasps build hexagonal cells because the shape maximizes strength and storage area, while minimizing building materials. But what happens when perfectly ...

Study finds strong support for easing Medicaid enrollment procedures

2023-07-27
During the COVID-19 pandemic, governments changed rules and procedures related to Medicaid enrollment. These changes decreased many of the burdens eligible people face when signing up for programs and contributed to a 30 percent increase in Medicaid enrollment. However, the end of public health emergency declarations brings an end to these pandemic policies, which many fear could lead to eligible people losing public health insurance simply because they are unable to fulfill administrative requirements such as accurately filling out and submitting forms, renewing their enrollment ...

MIND diet study shows 'short-term' impact on cognition

2023-07-27
New research shows the importance of long-term commitment to the MIND diet for reaping the greatest benefit to brain health. “The benefits within the new study’s three-year clinical trial weren’t as impressive as we’ve seen with the MIND diet observational studies in the past, but there were improvements in cognition in the short-term, consistent with the longer-term observational data,” said lead study author Lisa Barnes, PhD, associate director of the Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center at RUSH. Results from the study, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, showed that within a three-year period, there was no significant ...

Race/ethnicity isn't associated with unplanned hospitalizations after breast reconstruction

2023-07-27
July 27, 2023 – Race/ethnicity is not an independent predictor of hospital readmission in patients undergoing breast reconstruction surgery, reports a study in the August issue of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery®, the official medical journal of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS). The journal is published in the Lippincott portfolio by Wolters Kluwer. Among patients who have unplanned hospitalizations after breast reconstruction, costs are substantially higher for Black or Hispanic patients, according to the new research by ASPS ...

Nematode resurrected from Siberian permafrost laid dormant for 46,000 years

Nematode resurrected from Siberian permafrost laid dormant for 46,000 years
2023-07-27
A soil nematode reanimated from Siberian permafrost had laid dormant for approximately 46,000 years, according to a study publishing July 27, 2023 in the open access journal PLOS Genetics by Anastasia Shatilovich at the Institute of Physicochemical and Biological Problems in Soil Science RAS in Russia, Vamshidhar Gade at the Max Planck Institute for Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics in Germany, and colleagues. Some animals, such as tardigrades, rotifers, and nematodes, can survive harsh conditions by entering a dormant state known as “cryptobiosis”. Previously, nematode individuals were reanimated from samples collected from a fossilized burrow in silt deposits ...

New insights into the origin of the Indo-European languages

New insights into the origin of the Indo-European languages
2023-07-27
For over two hundred years, the origin of the Indo-European languages has been disputed. Two main theories have recently dominated this debate: the ‘Steppe’ hypothesis, which proposes an origin in the Pontic-Caspian Steppe around 6000 years ago, and the ‘Anatolian’ or ‘farming’ hypothesis, suggesting an older origin tied to early agriculture around 9000 years ago. Previous phylogenetic analyses of Indo-European languages have come to conflicting conclusions about the age of the family, due to the combined effects of inaccuracies and inconsistencies in the datasets they used and limitations in the way that phylogenetic methods analyzed ...

Genome analysis of 46,000-year-old roundworm from Siberian permafrost reveals novel species

Genome analysis of 46,000-year-old roundworm from Siberian permafrost reveals novel species
2023-07-27
Some organisms, such as tardigrades, rotifers, and nematodes, can survive harsh conditions by entering a dormant state known as “cryptobiosis.” In 2018, researchers from the Institute of Physicochemical and Biological Problems in Soil Science RAS in Russia found two roundworms (nematode) species in the Siberian Permafrost. Radiocarbon dating indicated that the nematode individuals have remained in cryptobiosis since the late Pleistocene, about 46,000 years ago. Researchers from the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics (MPI-CBG) in ...

Tau-regulating protein identified as a promising target for developing Alzheimer’s disease treatment

Tau-regulating protein identified as a promising target for developing Alzheimer’s disease treatment
2023-07-27
PHILADELPHIA – A gene encoding a protein linked to tau production—tripartite motif protein 11 (TRIM11)—was found to suppress deterioration in small animal models of neurodegenerative diseases similar to Alzheimer’s disease (AD), while improving cognitive and motor abilities, according to new research from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Additionally, TRIM11 was identified as playing a key role in removing the protein tangles that cause neurodegenerative diseases, like AD. The findings are published today in Science. ...

A unified theory of the lexicon and the mind: Researchers find common cognitive foundation for child language development and language evolution

2023-07-27
Cognitive and computer scientists at the University of Toronto, Universitat Pompeu Fabra and the Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies have found child language development and the historical evolution of the world’s languages share a common cognitive foundation—a core knowledge base where patterns of children’s language innovation can predict patterns of language evolution, and vice versa. Published today in Science, the paper is a first-of-its-kind step toward a unified theory of the lexicon and the mind examined across timescales. The result may also help predict how a word’s meaning may change ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

AI speeds up the discovery of energy and quantum materials.

An efficient way to hydrogenate nitrogen-containing aromatic compounds has been developed

Study finds common breast cancer treatments may speed aging process

Ultra-powered MRI scans show damage to brain’s ‘control center’ is behind long-lasting Covid-19 symptoms

Despite progress, China remains tethered to coal as climate change pressures mount

Open Call: Journalists in Residence Program at Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA)

Small creatures, big impact

Researcher receives grant to enhance quantum machine learning education

Professor gives American grading system an F

NIH awards $2.2 million to UMass Amherst to explore new tuberculosis therapies

Immune-based treatment gets a boost to its cancer-fighting superpowers

First report of its kind describes HIV reservoir landscape in breast milk

Penn Nursing study finds link between nurse work environment quality and COVID-19 mortality disparities

Systematic review highlights decline in mental health care and increase in suicides following FDA youth antidepressant warnings

Food insufficiency increased with expiration of pandemic-era SNAP emergency allotments

Better-prepared emergency departments could save kids’ lives cost-effectively, Stanford Medicine-led study finds

Supplemental Medicare benefits still leave dental, vision, and hearing care out of reach for many

UW–Madison researchers use AI to identify sex-specific risks associated with brain tumors

George Mason researchers conducting AI exploration for snow water equivalent

Huskisson & Freeman studying gut health of red pandas

Brain’s waste-clearance pathways revealed for the first time

Plenty more fish in the sea? Environmental protections account for around 10 percent of fish stocks on coral reefs

Macaques give birth more easily than women: no maternal mortality at birth

Five George Mason researchers receive funding for Center for Climate Risks Applications

Advancing CRISPR: Lehigh University engineering researchers to develop predictive models for gene editing

Protecting confidentiality in adolescent patient portals

Gatling conducting digitization project

Regenstrief researcher awarded $1.9 million CDC grant

Independent expert report: The Human Brain Project significantly advanced neuroscience

Wu conducting molecular modeling of DR domain of HIV restriction factor PSGL-1

[Press-News.org] Stephen K. Streiffer named director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Long-time national lab leader begins tenure in October