New officers announced at ICO24 in Tokyo

SPIE leaders congratulate new officers and organizers at international conference

24 August 2017
Roberta Ramponi, Maria Yzuel, Michael Booth, Aram Papoyan, Yasuhiko Arakawa

Roberta Ramponi, far left, is the new ICO President; also at the conference in Tokyo
were, from left, outgoing SPIE Appointed Vice President Maria Yzuel, 2014 ICO Prize
recipient Martin Booth, 2015 ICO Galileo Galilei recipient Aram Papoyan, and
Yasuhiko Arakawa, outgoing ICO President and General Chair of ICO24.

TOKYO, Japan, and BELLINGHAM, Washington, USA — Leaders of SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics, were on hand to celebrate the election of new officers of the International Commission for Optics (ICO) in Tokyo this week, in the highly successful ICO24 conference that opened with the Emperor and Empress of Japan present. SPIE is an International Society Member of the ICO.

Roberta Ramponi, Istituto di Fotonica e Nanotecnologie, was elected president, and will begin serving her three-year term in October.

She succeeds Yasuhiko Arakawa of the University of Tokyo, who led the organizing committee of the conference, held 21-25 August with the theme of "Science for Society."

John Harvey of the University of Auckland was elected vice president, and SPIE Member Joseph Niemela of the Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP) was elected treasurer, succeeding SPIE Past President Jim Harrington of Rutgers University. Humberto Michinel of the University of Vigo will be secretary, succeeding Angela Guzmán.

SPIE Fellow Carmiña Londoño of the U.S. National Science Foundation was selected as the SPIE appointed vice president. She succeeds SPIE Past President María Yzuel (Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona), an active advocate and supporter of optics and optics education through work with the ICO, SPIE, ICTP, the Royal Society of Spain, and other organizations.

"The presence of the Japanese Emperor and Empress at the opening ceremony was a strong indication of the high regard in Japan for the field of optics and photonics and for its economic and social importance," said SPIE CEO Eugene Arthurs. "The high-quality presentations and the presence of so many of the world's leaders were impressive. Professor Arakawa deserves strong praise for organizing an event that very compellingly demonstrated why this science is so valuable to society."

Two SPIE Fellows were among luminaries who gave plenary talks. Christopher Dainty of University College London, spoke on "Fundamental limits of mobile phone cameras," and James Fujimoto of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology spoke on "Optical coherence tomography and biomedical imaging."

Recognition of student work, in the form of Student Paper Awards to 18 participants, was supported by SPIE and The Optical Society (OSA).

SPIE also supported expenses for Olivier Kossan Bangui, a professor at the Institut National Polytechnique Félix Houphouët-Boigny in the Ivory Coast, to enable his participation in the conference.

SPIE Past President Katarina Svanberg (Lund University Hospital and South China Normal University) was instrumental in making that happen, Arthurs noted. In addition to her own clinical and research work, Svanberg actively works in programs throughout Africa in particular and in other areas to train and expand the networks of optics and photonics scientists with otherwise limited opportunities.

Among awards presented during a gala banquet were the 2015 ICO Galileo Galilei Award to Aram Papoyan from the National Academy of Science in Armenia, who presented on "Selective reflection of light as a spectroscopic tool"; and the 2014 ICO Prize to Martin Booth of the University of Oxford.

Also attending were ICO vice presidents and SPIE Fellows Mourad Zghal of the Higher School of Communications of Tunis (SUP'COM) and Seung-Han Park of Yonsei University, and SPIE board member and Fellow David Sampson of the University of Western Australia.

Yasuhiko Arakawa, John Greivenkamp

Outgoing ICO President and ICO24 organizer
Yasuhiko Arakawa and SPIE 2018
Vice President John Greivenkamp
Seung-Han Park,  Mourad Zghal

ICO Elected Vice Presidents
Seung-Han Park and
Mourad Zghal
Jospeh Niemela, Roberta Ramponi

Newly elected ICO Treasurer
Joseph Niemela
and President Roberta Ramponi
John Greivenkamp, Qihuang Gong

John Greivenkamp and Chinese Optical Society
President and ICO Elected Vice President
Qihuang Gong, Peking University
ICO24 Society Members and Best Student Paper Award winners with hosts

ICO24 Society Member representatives and Best Student Paper Award winners with hosts

About SPIE

SPIE is the international society for optics and photonics, an educational not-for-profit organization founded in 1955 to advance light-based science, engineering, and technology. The Society serves nearly 264,000 constituents from approximately 166 countries, offering conferences and their published proceedings, continuing education, books, journals, and the SPIE Digital Library. In 2016, SPIE provided $4 million in support of education and outreach programs. www.spie.org

 


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