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William “Brent” Seales isn’t one to think inside the box. Chair of the computer science department at UK, Seales is applying his expertise in imaging to improving medicine by enhancing surgeon’s sight as they operate and unwrapping antiquities—like the Herculaneum scrolls buried by volcanic ash—that no one else thought were salvageable.  

“In terms of breakthroughs and research results, the most fulfilling moment was when I received an email from Israel telling me that we had discovered a text in a scroll that was 1500 years old. That's a moment that I don't think I'll be able to replicate in my career. It was fantastic,” said Seales.  

“Through our framework there is a pathway to take a completely unknown and damaged text and then to produce, as a finding, what it contains. More and more, I'm convinced that being able to produce, and then deliver to the scholarly community, that engine for discovery is probably going to be one of my biggest findings,” he said.  

“For me, computing was a completely blank slate, in a world where a lot of things were already settled. So, I think it was the unknown potential for how I could contribute, that was really what spurred me as a graduate student to go forward with research.”  

Earlier this month, Seales was recognized as one of 17 University Research Professors for 2016-2017. In 2012-2013 he spent a year as a visiting scientist at the Google Cultural Institute in Paris, France, and in 2014 he was named a Great Teacher by the UK Alumni Association, an award based on student nominations. In this podcast, Seales talks about his students—how the diversity of research opportunities at UK gives students space to discover their talents—and the trajectory of his research.

 

Credits

Produced by Alicia P. Gregory, videography/direction by Chad Rumford and Ben Corwin (Research Communications).