VIMS

Patterson receives Lockheed Martin Award

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      Elizabeth Corbin, President-Elect of the Marine Technology Society, presents VIMS Professor Mark Patterson with the Lockheed Martin Award for Ocean Science and Engineering.  
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      VIMS Professor Mark Patterson accepts the Lockheed Martin Award for Ocean Science and Engineering during the OCEANS’08 MTS/IEEE Quebec City Conference in Canada.  
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      Patterson displays Fetch during the Sensor Science and Technology Forum.  
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      The capabilities of Fetch.  
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      Assoc. Professor Mark Patterson dives with Fetch outside the Aquarius habitat.  
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      Dr. Patterson also developed Fetch 2. Vehicles like Fetch are finding increasing use in fisheries management, homeland security, assessment of harmful algal blooms, and other applications.  
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      Dr. Mark Patterson showcases Fetch during Marine Science Day at VIMS.  
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The Marine Technology Society has bestowed its Lockheed Martin Award for Ocean Science and Engineering on Dr. Mark Patterson, Associate Professor at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science.

The society is an international organization of marine scientists, technicians, educators, and policy makers. Patterson has been a member since 1998.

Patterson is a marine biologist and world expert on underwater robotics with patents in autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) technology and neural-network recognition of targets from side-scan sonar. He has developed and deployed underwater in situ instrumentation from the Hydrolab and Aquarius underwater habitats, and his work on how flow modulates the metabolism of corals is cited in many textbooks in marine science.

Patterson co-founded Sias Patterson Incorporated, the first company devoted to the design and manufacture of small AUVs. The company’s flagship product, Fetch, racked up a long list of firsts, including qualifying as the first swimming supercomputer.

Fetch became commercially available in 1996, well before other technologies developed in Navy-sponsored labs went commercial. Patterson was intimately involved in all aspects of Fetch’s development, including the LabVIEW code that controls it, which evolved into a cross-platform “AUV toolkit” used on Northrop Grumman’s NNEMO1 AUV. He has been honored with the Antarctic Service Medal and the Phi Beta Kappa Award for Scholarship.

Incorporated in 1963, the Marine Technology Society provides the ocean community with forums for the exchange of information and ideas through its peer-reviewed MTS Journal, conferences, newsletter, technical interest groups, and local section activities.

The award was bestowed during the Society’s annual Awards Luncheon held September 16 during the OCEANS’08 MTS/IEEE Quebec City Conference in Canada.