June-Yi Lee is an atmospheric scientist at
Pusan National University known for her use of models to investigate the atmosphere and the ocean under future climate scenarios.
Education and career
Lee received a B.S. from
Ewha Womans University in 1997. She earned an M.S. (1999) and a Ph.D. (2003) from
Seoul National University. She then did postdoctoral work at
NASA and the
University of Hawaiʻi.[1] As of 2022 she is an associate professor at Pusan National University,[2] and an associate researcher at the University of Hawaii.[1]
Research
Lee's early work examined rainfall patterns[3] and modeling of the Asian-Australian monsoon.[4] She subsequently examined seasonal predictions within coupled ocean-atmosphere models,[5] with a particular focus on seasonal oscillations and the impact on the Asian summer monsoon.[6] More recently she examines how the monsoon is parameterized within the
CMIP5 model.[7] In 2021, she was the coordinating lead author for Working Group I, chapter 4 of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.[8]
In 2018 Lee received the Climate Change Grand Leaders Award from the Climate Change Center.[9] in 2020 she received the 30th Science and Technology Award from the Korean Federation of Science and Technology Society,[10] in recognition of her paper on the 2016 heat wave in Korea.[11] In 2021 she was named scientist of the year by the Korean Science Journalists Association.[12][better source needed]
June-Yi Lee is an atmospheric scientist at
Pusan National University known for her use of models to investigate the atmosphere and the ocean under future climate scenarios.
Education and career
Lee received a B.S. from
Ewha Womans University in 1997. She earned an M.S. (1999) and a Ph.D. (2003) from
Seoul National University. She then did postdoctoral work at
NASA and the
University of Hawaiʻi.[1] As of 2022 she is an associate professor at Pusan National University,[2] and an associate researcher at the University of Hawaii.[1]
Research
Lee's early work examined rainfall patterns[3] and modeling of the Asian-Australian monsoon.[4] She subsequently examined seasonal predictions within coupled ocean-atmosphere models,[5] with a particular focus on seasonal oscillations and the impact on the Asian summer monsoon.[6] More recently she examines how the monsoon is parameterized within the
CMIP5 model.[7] In 2021, she was the coordinating lead author for Working Group I, chapter 4 of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.[8]
In 2018 Lee received the Climate Change Grand Leaders Award from the Climate Change Center.[9] in 2020 she received the 30th Science and Technology Award from the Korean Federation of Science and Technology Society,[10] in recognition of her paper on the 2016 heat wave in Korea.[11] In 2021 she was named scientist of the year by the Korean Science Journalists Association.[12][better source needed]