Silvia Sell谩n
While she was a mathematics student in Spain, eager to pursue a career in research, discovered an opportunity to join a summer undergraduate research program at the in Toronto.
鈥淚 jumped at the chance,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 thought, I don't care what the project is, I'll do anything. I just want to do research.鈥
Sell谩n took part in the program, loved it and enrolled a second time, having found the trailhead for the career path she wanted.
鈥淚t helped that I fell in love with Canada, too!鈥 she says.
Now a PhD student in the 海角视频 of Computer Science, Sell谩n has been awarded the Faculty of Arts & Science鈥檚 and a .
The Dean鈥檚 Doctoral Excellence Scholarship recognizes one student鈥檚 academic excellence and the impact of their research. It鈥檚 also given for an individual鈥檚 contributions toward colleagues and other students, and for the leadership they demonstrate outside of their research activities.
The Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship recognizes doctoral students who demonstrate leadership skills and a high standard of scholarly achievement in graduate studies across a variety of fields.
鈥淚t's a real honour and means a lot to me,鈥 says Sell谩n. 鈥淚 already consider myself lucky to get paid to do research. To be recognized on top of that makes me very happy.鈥
, an assistant professor in the 海角视频 of Computer Science, was Sell谩n鈥檚 supervisor at the Fields Institute and is her current supervisor.
鈥淚鈥檓 excited that Silvia won these scholarships,鈥 says Jacobson. 鈥淏ut not surprised. She exemplifies the qualities that these scholarships reward.
鈥淪ilvia is deeply curious,鈥 he says. 鈥淪he participates actively at our conferences and symposia, frequently asking questions and arranging follow-up discussions with fellow researchers. She is discerning about which questions are interesting academically and which questions are important.鈥
Sell谩n鈥檚 research lies in a realm known as geometry processing, a subdiscipline of computer graphics that spans the three-dimensional real and digital worlds.
The field encompasses 3D digital effects found in countless films, from The Terminator to Toy Story to Tenet. It is a fundamental element of modern medical imaging, the video gaming industry, as well as design sectors of every stripe: architecture, engineering, automotive design, industrial design and more.
鈥淵ou scan something with your phone and it becomes a model in your computer,鈥 says Sell谩n about her field. 鈥淵ou transform that form with some algorithm, then print that model with a 3D printer.
鈥淭he blurring of those lines between the real and digital 3D worlds is what I'm most interested in.鈥
As a measure of her success in the field, Jacobson says, 鈥淚t is rare, though not unheard of, for students to publish multiple first-authored papers in the same year at SIGGRAPH, the world鈥檚 largest computer graphics conference.
鈥淚t is exceptionally rare for a first-year PhD student. If it has happened before Silvia did it, I'm not aware of it.鈥
In 2020, she received the Beatrice 鈥淭rixie鈥 Worsley Graduate Scholarship in Computer Science which is awarded to students in the PhD program in the 海角视频 of Computer Science who have helped promote women in the field.
The scholarship is named after the Faculty of Arts & Science alumna considered to be the first woman to earn a doctorate in computer science and Canada鈥檚 first female computer scientist.
The award recognized Sell谩n鈥檚 contributions to improving the representation of women in computer graphics and computer science. For example, she belongs to Women in Graphics Research (WIGRAPH), a computer graphics research team that holds events, supports networking and promotes research by women in the field.
Sell谩n also provides support to others by helping students with their graduate school applications.
鈥淚 try to help, not just women in computer science, but students from every underrepresented background,鈥 she says. 鈥淭here are some unwritten rules about how to get into grad school that aren鈥檛 widely known. My advisor explained those rules to me but there are many students who aren't as lucky as I am.鈥
Sell谩n would like to stay in academia, run her own lab and give to her own students what her supervisor provided her. She is definitely set on continuing on in her current field.
鈥淚 was studying math before,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd the idea I had of mathematical research is that every 50 years or so, someone would solve a theory or prove a theorem and the field would change. Then nothing would happen for another 50 years.
鈥淭hat happens in geometry processing, too,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut in this work, it seems to happen every three months. It's a wild field to be a part of and I hope to stay in it forever.鈥
Story by Chris Sasaki .