Submission declined on 27 January 2024 by
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Gabriele Dorothea Scheler (born 1960 in Göttingen) is a German-American computer scientist and neuroscientist.
Scheler pioneered neural network research on linguistic semantics and grammatical categories. [1], and developed a novel approach for classification based on adaptive distance measures [2]. She later worked on neuroscience topics such as neuromodulation, synchronization, intrinsic properties and internal protein signaling. She investigated the lognormal distributions of intrinsic frequencies and synaptic strengths and analyzed their significance for localist memory [3]. She also invented a method for calculating dose-response matrices in protein signaling pathways with applications for drug development [4]
Her work has centered on neural network research [2], natural language processing [1], and computational neuroscience [5]. Her academic career took place at the LMU Munich, (M.A. 1985, Ph.D. 1989), TU Munich (1995-1998), Salk Institute (1998-2001), UC Berkeley (2001-2004), and Stanford University (2005-2010). From 1988 until 1995 she worked intensely on problems in artificial intelligence, first with the company Digital Equipment, then at the Institute for Computational Linguistics in Heidelberg and the Max_Planck_Institute_of_Biochemistry in Munich. Subsequently she became interested in neuroscience, and has since followed a career in computational neuroscience. At Stanford she organized the Biological Modelling Club, a dedicated group of researchers in mathematical and computational biology. She is co-founder of the Carl Correns Foundation for Mathematical Biology [6], founded 2011 in Mountain View, California.
Gabriele Scheler developed a brain disorder in her early twenties, caused by a two-week coma in Berkeley 1983, probably induced by deliberate poisoning. A doctoral scholarship for Stanford University had to be declined because of this sudden illness. Her experience as a patient contributed to her resolve to investigate computational neuroscience problems with a view of later medical applications.
Gabriele Scheler grew up in Goettingen, as the daughter of Fritz Scheler, and Elisabeth Scheler née Correns, the daughter of Carl Wilhelm Correns, who had a formative influence on his granddaughter. Her family includes Erich Correns (Maler) , Carl Erich Correns, Emil Ballowitz , Hugo Pernice , Erich Pernice, Erich Correns, Werner Scheler, Max Scheler. She graduated from Theodor-Heuss-Gymnasium_(Göttingen) as valedictorian three years early in 1977. After a year at the University of Tübingen, she moved to the Institute for logic and scientific theory at the LMU Munich, where she also did her Ph.D. She married in 1991 and had a son in 1995. Since 1998 she has lived in California, first in San Diego, and then in Mountain View.
Submission declined on 27 January 2024 by
Cabrils (
talk). This draft's references do not show that the subject
qualifies for a Wikipedia article. In summary, the draft needs to
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You can also browse Wikipedia:Featured articles and Wikipedia:Good articles to find examples of Wikipedia's best writing on topics similar to your proposed article. Improving your odds of a speedy review To improve your odds of a faster review, tag your draft with relevant WikiProject tags using the button below. This will let reviewers know a new draft has been submitted in their area of interest. For instance, if you wrote about a female astronomer, you would want to add the Biography, Astronomy, and Women scientists tags. Editor resources
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Gabriele Dorothea Scheler (born 1960 in Göttingen) is a German-American computer scientist and neuroscientist.
Scheler pioneered neural network research on linguistic semantics and grammatical categories. [1], and developed a novel approach for classification based on adaptive distance measures [2]. She later worked on neuroscience topics such as neuromodulation, synchronization, intrinsic properties and internal protein signaling. She investigated the lognormal distributions of intrinsic frequencies and synaptic strengths and analyzed their significance for localist memory [3]. She also invented a method for calculating dose-response matrices in protein signaling pathways with applications for drug development [4]
Her work has centered on neural network research [2], natural language processing [1], and computational neuroscience [5]. Her academic career took place at the LMU Munich, (M.A. 1985, Ph.D. 1989), TU Munich (1995-1998), Salk Institute (1998-2001), UC Berkeley (2001-2004), and Stanford University (2005-2010). From 1988 until 1995 she worked intensely on problems in artificial intelligence, first with the company Digital Equipment, then at the Institute for Computational Linguistics in Heidelberg and the Max_Planck_Institute_of_Biochemistry in Munich. Subsequently she became interested in neuroscience, and has since followed a career in computational neuroscience. At Stanford she organized the Biological Modelling Club, a dedicated group of researchers in mathematical and computational biology. She is co-founder of the Carl Correns Foundation for Mathematical Biology [6], founded 2011 in Mountain View, California.
Gabriele Scheler developed a brain disorder in her early twenties, caused by a two-week coma in Berkeley 1983, probably induced by deliberate poisoning. A doctoral scholarship for Stanford University had to be declined because of this sudden illness. Her experience as a patient contributed to her resolve to investigate computational neuroscience problems with a view of later medical applications.
Gabriele Scheler grew up in Goettingen, as the daughter of Fritz Scheler, and Elisabeth Scheler née Correns, the daughter of Carl Wilhelm Correns, who had a formative influence on his granddaughter. Her family includes Erich Correns (Maler) , Carl Erich Correns, Emil Ballowitz , Hugo Pernice , Erich Pernice, Erich Correns, Werner Scheler, Max Scheler. She graduated from Theodor-Heuss-Gymnasium_(Göttingen) as valedictorian three years early in 1977. After a year at the University of Tübingen, she moved to the Institute for logic and scientific theory at the LMU Munich, where she also did her Ph.D. She married in 1991 and had a son in 1995. Since 1998 she has lived in California, first in San Diego, and then in Mountain View.
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