Katia Vega

Design Professor Katia Vega Honored as a Leading Woman in STEM by Johnson & Johnson

Katia Vega, an assistant professor in the Department of Design in the UC Davis College of Letters and Science, has been selected as one of six winners of the Johnson & Johnson Women in STEM2D (WiSTEM2D) Scholars Award

The award supports outstanding women researchers in the disciplines of science, technology, engineering, mathematics, manufacturing and design. Vega will receive $150,000 in funding and three years of mentorship from Johnson & Johnson leaders and members of the award’s advisory board.

Launched in June 2017, the Johnson & Johnson WiSTEM2D Scholars Award aims to fuel development of female STEM2D leaders and feed the STEM2D talent pipeline by awarding and sponsoring women at critical points in their careers, in each of the STEM2D disciplines: Science, Technology, Engineering, Math, Manufacturing and Design. 

"Through this Award and other programs, Johnson & Johnson is hoping to increase the participation of women in STEM2D fields worldwide," said Cat Oyler, Vice President, Global Public Health, Tuberculosis, Johnson & Johnson and WiSTEM2D University Sponsor. “We want to nourish the development of women leaders building a larger pool of highly-trained, female researchers so that they can lead STEM2D breakthroughs in the future.” 

Human and device symbiosis

With a background in computer science, Vega brings an interdisciplinary approach to her work in “Beauty Technology.” By melding computing, chemistry, biotech, anatomy, human behavior, electronics and design, Vega and her collaborators integrate technology into wearable cosmetics. Her goal is transforming the body’s surface into an interactive platform with cosmetics and beauty accessories applied directly to skin, fingernails and hair.

In one recent project, “The Dermal Abyss,” Vega wielded a tattoo gun to apply color-changing ink that responds to health markers present in skin. “In this way, the skin is a bio-display that reveals information that is inside the body, such as pH, sodium and glucose levels,” she said. 

“Winning the Johnson & Johnson WiSTEM2D Scholars Award is a significant milestone in my research career and strongly motivates me to continue my efforts in bridging the body and technology,” Vega said.

Vega’s work has also been honored by MIT Technology Review,which named her one of the 5 Innovators Under 35 in Peru in 2016. CNET recognized her as one of the Top 20 Most Influential Latinos in Tech in 2017. In 2018, she earned an Interactive Innovation Award in SciFi No Longerat the South by Southwest (SXSW) Conference. Vega earned a doctorate in computer science at PUC-Rio in Brazil and was a postdoctoral associate at the MIT Media Lab. She joined UC Davis as an assistant professor in 2017.

“Katia’s ability to integrate art and technology is bold and brilliant,” said Elizabeth Spiller, dean of the College of Letters and Science. “One of the more than 200 new faculty recruited to the College of Letters and Science in the past five years, she exemplifies both UC Davis’s number one ranking for launching women into STEM careers and our long tradition of groundbreaking excellence in the arts. I am very pleased to congratulate her on this achievement.”

— Becky Oskin, content strategist, UC Davis College of Letters and Science

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