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Dahmen German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence, Germany; tel. +49 6 81 / 8 57 75 - 10 45; and email [email protected]. Dahmen joined the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence in 2013, where he heads the Computational 3D Imaging team. He received his diploma and PhD degree in computer science in Saarbrücken, Germany, in 2004 and 2015, respectively. He made a first career working as a technical consultant for SAP Germany. His research interests include algorithms for 3D imaging and tomographic reconstruction, particularly on the question of how maximum information can be acquired using a minimum of measurements. Dahmen won a Presidential Scholar Award at the Microscopy & Microanalysis Conference in 2015. Annick De Backer Electron Microscopy for Materials Research Laboratory, University of Antwerp, Belgium; email [email protected]. De Backer is a postdoctoral researcher in the Electron Microscopy for Materials Research Group at the University of Antwerp. She received her PhD degree at the University of Antwerp in 2015. De Backer’s research focuses on new developments in the field of model-based atomicresolution electron microscopy aiming at quantitative structure characterization of nanostructures with the highest possible precision using advanced statistical techniques. Niels de Jonge Leibniz Institute for New Materials, Germany; tel. +49 6 81 / 9300313; and email [email protected]. De Jonge is a senior group leader at the Leibniz Institute for New Materials and an honorary professor of experimental physics at Saarland University, Germany. He received his MSc degree in experimental physics from the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, and a PhD degree in natural sciences with specialization in biophysics from the University of Freiburg, Germany. He worked as a senior scientist at Philips Research, The Netherlands, on carbon nanotube electron sources. De Jonge is a recipient of the 2016 MRS Innovation in Materials Characterization Award. Michael Elbaum Department of Materials and Interfaces, Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel; tel. +972-8-934-3537; and email [email protected]. Elbaum leads a lab at the Weizmann Institute of Science in the Department of Materials and Interfaces. He studied physics at Brown University and the University of Washington, and completed his postdoctoral studies at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Israel. He studied biological physics during a year spent jointly at the NEC Research Institute and The Rockefeller University. Elbaum’s research interests focus on molecular transport and diffusion in the living cell.

doi:10.1557/mrs.2016.133

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MRShttps://www.cambridge.org/core. BULLETIN • VOLUME 41 • JULY 2016IP• address: www.mrs.org/bulletin 2016 Materials Downloaded from 80.82.77.83, on 01 Sep 2017 at 08:27:06, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, © available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1557/mrs.2016.133

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