FEATURES:
o
behind the scenes of highly cited research in these interviews
and first-person essays featuring authors of the highly cited
papers in Optoelectronics, as well
as the top-cited scientists in this area. More interviews and
essays are available in the other Special
Topics areas, as well as in in cites
and Science Watch
which are the other editorial components of ISI
Essential
Science Indicators
from ISI.
In addition, the citation statistics for these and other
researchers are available through ISI Essential Science
Indicators data.
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An
interview with:
Dr
Hermann Haus
December
2001
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In this
interview, Dr. Hermann Haus discusses his long and fruitful
career in quantum optical systems and optical devices. In ISI
Essential
Science Indicators
Special Topic on Optoelectronics, Dr. Haus is listed as the
most-cited scientist in this field over the past decade, with
a total of 94 papers garnering 1,695 citations over this
period. Current ISI
Essential
Science Indicators data indicate that Dr. Haus’s citation
record now contains 148 papers with a total of 2,625 citations
to date. Dr. Haus holds the title of Institute Professor at
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he is the
principal researcher in the Optics and Devices Group of the
Research Laboratory of Electronics.
[read]  |
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An
interview with:
Dr.
Henry Kapteyn
September
2001
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Dr. Henry Kapteyn of the
University of Colorado at Boulder Department of Physics discusses his
highly cited work in the field of optoelectronics. Thirty of Dr.
Kapteyn’s papers were included in our analysis of high-impact
optoelectronics research. These papers have been cited a total of
1,021 times, making Dr. Kapteyn one of the top 5 most-cited
optoelectronics authors of the past decade.
[read]  |
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An
interview with:
Dr.
Ursula
Keller
August
2001
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In our analysis of high-impact researchers in the field of
optoelectronics, Dr. Ursula Keller is ranked third, with 63 papers
cited a total of 1,097 times. In addition to being a full professor of
experimental physics at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in
Zürich (ETH), Dr. Keller is the head of ETH’s Ultrafast Laser
Physics Laboratory. Prior to joining ETH in 1993 as an associate
professor, she was a member of the technical staff at AT&T Bell
Laboratories in Holmdel, NJ. In this interview, Dr. Keller discusses
the influences that have shaped her career, and the impact of her work
in her field.
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