Professor selected for National Medal
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Elia Powers
UC Irvine professor R. Duncan Luce has been awarded the 2003 National
Medal of Science, regarded as the top scientific honor in the United
States.
Luce, a 20-year UC Irvine faculty member, founded the Institute
for Mathematical Behavioral Sciences in 1988 and served as director
for 10 years.
He is one of eight American engineers and scientists to receive
the lifetime achievement award, established by the U.S. Congress in
1959 and administered by the National Science Foundation. President
Bush will honor the winners at a March 14 ceremony at the White
House.
The National Medal of Science honors individuals for their
pioneering scientific research. Luce, 79, won in the behavioral and
social sciences category.
“It’s very satisfying and humbling at the same time,” Luce said of
the award. “It’s nice to have colleagues recognizing your work.”
Luce is known for using a mix of mathematical theories and
experiments to help explain individual behavior. Using mathematical
models, he attempts to show why humans make the decisions they do.
Current institute director Donald Saari said Luce is a pioneer in
the field and has added more precision to the social sciences.
“He has taken the muscle power of mathematics and used it to
measure relationships between people and the consequences of their
decisions,” said Saari, a UCI professor of mathematics and economics.
“If we find commonality in the way people make decisions, then we
are able to predict [their actions],” he said.
An often-published author, Luce’s 1959 book “Individual Choice
Behavior” elaborates on his scientific theories. The text was
recently rereleased, and Saari said he considers it a key source of
information.
Luce, who first came to UCI in 1972, no longer teaches full time
at the institution. He is a professor emeritus of cognitive sciences
and economics in the School of Social Sciences.
Luce’s past awards include the 2004 Norman Anderson Award of the
Society of Experimental Psychologists, 2003 Frank P. Ramsey Medal of
the Decision Analysis Society and the 2001 Gold Medal for Life
Achievement in the Science of Psychology of the American
Psychological Foundation.
* ELIA POWERS is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
He may be reached at (714) 966-4623 or by e-mail at
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