黑料网

News

Outstanding referee 2015 reward 黑料网 University physicist

Associate Professor Patrick Rinke received the honor of Outstanding Referee by the American Physical Society.

He has assessed  manuscripts in three journals published by the Society: Physical Review B, Physical Review Applied, and Physical Review Letters.

This year, Patrick Rinke is one of 142 referees given this honor. Editors selected the honorees based on the quality, number, and timeliness of their reports, and this time out of 60,000 colleagues providing feedback to researchers seeking publication in the American Physical Society鈥檚 journals. Read more about the

鈥淧eer review is the essence of our academic system of accreditation and validation, and it is mainly done by committed scientists. Referees provide quality assuranceing and also judge the importance of the reported results and discoveries, in particular in top tier journals. As such, peer reviewers should adhere to best practices, almost like a code of honor,鈥 says Rinke.

Assessing manuscripts is a voluntary activity, but nonetheless rewarding. "While peer reviewing is often time consuming, it is also interesting, because we get to read about new discoveries first," he adds.

An author himself, he understands the importance of returning his peer view reports on time and always with constructive feedback to improve the quality of manuscripts 鈥 whether or not they eventually appear in one of the APS鈥檚 journals.

Rinke is an expert in computational materials science with a focus on theoretical spectroscopy. He specializes in developing and applying computational methodology for tackling outstanding problems in semiconductor science and technology and in hybrid materials, such as interfaces between organic and inorganic materials. Rinke leads the Computational Electronic Structure Theory group (CEST) at the Centre of Excellence in Computational Nanoscience (COMP) in the Department of Applied Physics and is actively building his team of PhD students and Postdoctoral Researchers.
Patrick Rinke's

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Four people celebrating a Deployable grant award, with large white text and Aalto Founder School logos.
Awards and Recognition, Press releases, University Published:

Prototyping and Validation Grant: Deployable

Four Aalto master's students built a physical AI startup on a borrowed GPU, beat PhD teams at a hackathon, and received Aalto's prototyping and validation grant.
3D brain scan on screen showing colourful neural pathways inside a semi-transparent head model
Research & Art Published:

Applications open for Innovation Postdoc in AI

A fully funded, 12鈥搈onth career track to turn your doctoral discoveries into a deep-tech startup.
Outdoor wooden daybeds with sheer beige curtains in a ruined courtyard garden with tall plants.
Cooperation, Press releases, Research & Art Published:

A Finnish working group鈥檚 artwork brings a cooling garden to Spain, which is sweltering in the heat

Through their garden art installation, a group of Finnish architects and artists proposes vegetation and a sense of community, among other things, as solutions to urban heat islands and the environmental crisis.
Two children play with bright cartoon panels on a grey tiled wall, spinning sections to mix the figures.
Press releases, Research & Art Published:

RealYou AI will develop the next generation of personalized AI decision assistants

Researchers to build cognitive machine learning that will improve decision-making with instantly personalized intelligent assistance.