This is a list of people connected to Stony Brook University.
Name | Years served | |
---|---|---|
Dr. John Francis Lee | 1961 | |
1965–1978 | ||
1980–1994 | ||
1994–2009 | ||
2009–2019 | ||
July 1, 2020present |
This list includes both present and former faculty members.
Name | Known for | Relationship to Stony Brook | |
---|---|---|---|
Literary critic, philosopher and theologian | Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies | ||
Sociologist, author | Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus [1] | ||
Nobel laureate in economics | Visiting Leading Professor; founding member of Center for Game Theory in Economics | ||
Poet, playwright, activist | Professor Emeritus, Department of Africana Studies | ||
Statistician | |||
Microbiology, helped discover causative agent of Lyme disease[2] | Professor, Director of the Stony Brook Center for Infectious Diseases, and Chair of the Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology | ||
Molecular biologist and evolutionary biologist[3] and Vice President for Research at Cornerstone Pharmaceuticals.[4] | Professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology in the School of Medicine | ||
Philosopher and metaphysician | Professor emeritus in the Department of Philosophy[5] | ||
Pianist | Artist in Residence, Music Department at the Staller Center (1965–1993) | ||
Mathematician; recipient of the Sloan Research Fellowship (1971–1973); Guggenheim Fellowship (1984), elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences (1997); received the Oswald Veblen Prize in Geometry (2001) | Professor, Department of Mathematics (1969–1992)[6] | ||
Author of numerous books on Sufism and Islamic philosophy | Distinguished Professor, Department of Asian and Asian American Studies[7] [8] | ||
Dermatologist, biomedical engineer | Professor, Health Sciences Center | ||
Rose Laub Coser | Sociologist; vice-president of the American Sociological Association; president of the Eastern Sociological Society; contribution to medical sociology, role theory, and sociology of the family | Professor Emeritus of Sociology[9] | |
Clinical Psychologist | Professor, Department of Psychology [10] | ||
Mathematician, Fields Medallist (1986), Shaw Prize recipient (2009), Breakthrough Prize laureate (2014) | Permanent member, Simons Center for Geometry and Physics[11] | ||
Violist, Emerson String Quartet, 1977–present | Artist in Residence, Music Department at the Staller Center[12] | ||
Writer, National Book Critics Circle Award winner (1979) | Professor, Department of English (1978–1996) | ||
Professor, Department of Ecology and Evolution | |||
Sociologist, Pioneer in the field of human sexuality | Professor, Department of Sociology (1968-1998) [13] | ||
Materials science; recipient of the National Medal of Technology, 1995; helped invent magnetic materials used for erasable optical data storage | Professor of Materials Science and engineering | ||
Geneticist | |||
Former chairman, Department of Applied Mathematics | |||
Sociologist, the author of "The Strength of Weak Ties." | Associate to Full Professor of Sociology in 1977–1992 | ||
Artist | Professor of Computer Science | ||
Literary theorist, philosopher | Distinguished University Professor | ||
Chief Research Officer and Vice-President for Research (2012–) | |||
Philosopher of science | Professor Emeritus in the Department of Philosophy | ||
Professor, Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology[14] | |||
Research in mammalian dentition | Research Professor of Evolutionary Developmental Biology[15] | ||
Professor | |||
Developer of Happenings | Department of Fine Arts, 1961–1968; Professor | ||
Distinguished Professor, Department of English (1963–?) | |||
Sociologist | Professor in the Department of Social Sciences | ||
Executive director of the Long Island Regional Planning Board | Director of Stony Brook University's Center for Regional Policy Studies | ||
Writer, anti-war activist, author of Born on the Fourth of July | Writer-in-residence (1983) | ||
Art critic | |||
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2003 for work in developing magnetic resonance imaging[16] | Professor, Department of Chemistry and Radiology (1969-1985) | ||
Paleontologist and conservationist | Visiting Professor of Anthropology | ||
Benjamin Whisoh Lee | Theoretical Physicist, head of theoretical research group at Fermilab who was influential in the development of standard model | Professor of Physics | |
Sociologist | Professor in the Department of Sociology | ||
University President (1980–1994) | |||
Mathematician, Fellow of the Royal Society, 1994 | |||
Communication and cognition of chimpanzees | Professor of psychology | ||
Mathematician; Fields Medal winner (1962); Abel Prize laureate (2011); member of US National Academy of Sciences; recipient of the National Medal of Science; Wolf Prize laureate; three-time winner of the AMS Steele Prize in mathematics | Director, Institute for Mathematical Sciences at Stony Brook[17] | ||
Computer scientist; mathematician; Gödel Prize(2010); ACM Fellow | Professor of Applied Mathematics and Statistics and Research Professor of Computer Science at Stony Brook University.[18] | ||
Particle physicist | Provost (1981–1986)[19] | ||
Associate Professor of Comparative Literature | |||
Indologist, scholar of Hinduism | Associate Professor, Department of Asian and Asian American Studies[20] | ||
Artist | Professor Emeritus and Visiting Professor, Department of Art | ||
Author, evolutionary biologist | Former professor of ecology and evolution | ||
Author | Visiting lecturer (1967–68) | ||
Recipient of the Oswald Veblen Prize in Geometry; member of the US National Academy of Sciences; founder of Renaissance Technologies; philanthropist; benefactor of Stony Brook and other universities | Former chairman, Department of Mathematics | ||
Pulitzer Prize-winning poet | Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Department of English | ||
Chemist | Distinguished Professor, College of Engineering and Applied Sciences | ||
Author, evolutionary biologist | professor of biology | ||
Distinguished Professor[21] | |||
Primatologist, physical anthropologist | Distinguished Service Professor, Department of Anthropology, and director, Institute for the Conservation of Tropical Environments[22] | ||
Nobel Prize in Physics, 1957, shared with Tsung-Dao Lee for work on weak nuclear forces and parity | Professor (1965–1999)[23] | ||
Fields Medal-winning mathematician (1982) | Assistant professor (1972–1974) | ||
Marci Lobel | Health psychologist, known for her research on women’s reproductive health. | Professor of Psychology,[24] Senior researcher and director of the Stress and Reproduction (STAR) Lab[25] |
Name | Known for | Relationship to Stony Brook | |
---|---|---|---|
Chris Algieri | Professional boxer, former WBO junior welterweight title holder | B.S., Health Care Science | |
WCBS-TV and WCBS-AM meteorologist | B.S., Meteorology | ||
Conceptual artist and electrical engineer | B.E., Electrical Engineering | ||
Director of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory | M.A., Ph.D., Theoretical Nuclear Physics | ||
Sociologist | Ph.D., 1997 | ||
B.A., 1980 | |||
Attended and played basketball in 1988–89 (transferred to Montclair State University) | |||
M.A., English Education | |||
B.S., Psychology, Fine Art, Pre-Med | |||
B.A., Theater Arts, 1983 | |||
Classical violist | D.M. | ||
Sociologist and labor activist | Ph.D., Sociology, 1978 | ||
Post-doctoral studies, 1979 | |||
B.A., Theater Arts, 1982 | |||
B.A., English, 1994 | |||
BBC Weather forecaster | B.S., Meteorology | ||
radio show host and publisher of magazine | |||
New York Post writer/editor | B.A., English, 1971 | ||
Ph.D., Clinical Psychology, 1981 | |||
Billionaire, Co-founder and CEO of Highbridge Capital Management | B.A., Economics, 1978 | ||
B.A., 1995 | |||
Oceanographer NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center | Ph.D., 1985 | ||
B.S., Political Science | |||
B.A., 1967 | |||
Acting Surgeon General of the United States, Acting Assistant Secretary for Health [26] | B.A., Biology, 1978 [27] | ||
Professor at Yale University | Ph.D., Computer Science | ||
Opera singer | B.A. | ||
Television writer | B.A. | ||
Squash player | |||
Ph.D. | |||
B.A., 2002 | |||
Mathematician | |||
Former president of Stanford University and 2017 Turing Award recipient | M.A., Ph.D., Computer Science | ||
PEN Award-winning historian and former vice-president, Penguin Random House[28] [29] | B.A, 1988[30] | ||
D.M.A. in piano performance | |||
Ph.D., 1985 | |||
Ph.D., 1974 | |||
Ph.D., 1982[31] | |||
Scientist, astronomer, mathematician | |||
Academy Award for Scientific and Technical Achievement winner | B.S. 1981, Computer Science | ||
Opera singer | B.A. | ||
Neuroscientist | Ph.D., 1977 | ||
International concert pianist, founder and artistic director of Chamber Music OC, member of classical music ensemble Trio Céleste | D.M.A. in piano performance | ||
B.A., 1992 | |||
Sociologist | Ph.D., 1979 | ||
B.A., 1986; Ph.D., 1992 | |||
M.S., 1980 | |||
Microbiologist | Ph.D., 2002 | ||
Fellow of the Indian Academy of Sciences and the Indian National Science Academy and a recipient of the S.S. Bhatnagar Award for Physical Sciences | Ph.D., Theoretical Physics | ||
Physicist | Ph.D., 2000 | ||
Singer, Song-Writer and Social Activist | B.S., Biomedical engineering and Applied Mathematics | ||
B.S., Business management, 1997 | |||
Historian | Ph.D. | ||
B.S., Computer Science 1997, B.S., Mathematics 1997 | |||
Rock music promoter | B.A., 1965, 1966 | ||
Computer scientist | Ph.D., 1996 | ||
Nan Phinney | Accelerator physicist at Stanford Linear Collider[32] | Ph.D., 1972 | |
Sociologist | Ph.D., 1978 | ||
Director of Center for Rehabilitation of Pain Syndromes at David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA; president of North American Neuromodulation Society | M.D., M.S., B.S. 1972 Stony Brook's SAB Concert Chairman | ||
Author, and co-creator of the Macintosh computer[33] at Apple Computer, Inc. | B.S., 1964; B.A., 1965 | ||
B.S., Information Systems, 2013 | |||
Writer, sports agent at C.L. Rocks Corporation | B.A. History, 1994 (Magna Cum Laude) | ||
World's youngest college professor (age 18), B.S. at age 14 | B.S. 2003 Applied Mathematics summa cum laude[34] | ||
Howard Saltz | As editor of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel in Fort Lauderdale won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 2013 | B.A. 1983 | |
B.S., 1968 | |||
B.A., 1984[35] | |||
B.S., Computer Science / Philosophy | |||
Distinguished Professor at Harish-Chandra Research Institute, Allahabad. Winner of Fundamental Physics Prize | Ph.D., Theoretical Physics | ||
Professional soccer player | |||
Composer | |||
B.A., 1990 | |||
Geneticist | Ph.D. | ||
B.A., 1979 | |||
Michelle Tokarczyk | Author, poet, and professor of English at Goucher College | Ph.D., 1986 | |
President of METI (Messaging Extraterrestrial Intelligence), astrobiologist | Ph.D., Psychology, 1996[36] | ||
Molecular biologist and geneticist | B.A., 1974 | ||
Ph.D., 1991 | |||
Santanu Chaudhuri | Ph.D., Computational and Materials Chemistry | ||
Sumathi Rao | Professor of Physics at Harish-Chandra Research Institute | PhD Physics 1983 | |
Robert J. Frey | Research Professor at Stony Brook University, former MD of Renaissance Technologies | B.S., 1980; Ph.D., 1986., Applied Mathematics | |
Richard Gelfond | CEO of IMAX Corporation | B.A., 1976 | |
Gary Beauvoir | Pilot | B.A., 2020 | |