Department News, 2003-2004

Faculty and Student Awards

Professor John H. Drew was the 2003 recipient of the Thomas Ashley Graves, Jr. Award for Sustained Excellence in Teaching. This award was created to underscore the importance William and Mary attaches to superior teaching. The award is named for Thomas Ashley Graves, Jr., who retired in 1985 after nearly 14 years as President of the College. The recipient of the award is chosen by the president from nominations submitted by each of the academic deans. The award was presented to Professor Drew at Commencement Ceremony by Collge President Timothy J. Sullivan on May 11, 2003. 

News article on WM News            Professor John H. Drew's homepage


Professor Chi-Kwong Li has been selected as the recipient of the 2003 Faculty Award for the Advancement of Teaching by the Alpha Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa at the College of William and Mary. This award is offered to "a faculty member who has shown a commitment to the concept of an academic community in which teachers and students work together to advance knowledge." 
Phi Beta Kappa, the nation's oldest and most prestigious undergraduate honors organization, was founded on December 5, 1776, at the College of William and Mary.

Professor Chi-Kwong Li's webpage

Phi Beta Kappa Society


A research article The Multishift QR Algorithm. Part II: Aggressive Early Deflation (published on SIAM Journal on Matrix Analysis and Applications) co-authored by Karen Braman, Ralph Byers and Roy Mathias received the SIAM Activity Group on Linear Algebra Prize by SIAM Linear Algebra Activity Group. The award, established in 1987, is awarded to the author(s) of the most outstanding paper, as determined by the prize committee, on a topic in applicable linear algebra published in English in a peer-reviewed journal in the past three years. The award was presented to Professor Mathias and his co-authors during SIAM Conference on Applied Linear Algebra, which was held on William and Mary campus, July 15-19, 2003 (see separate news item below.)

Professor Roy Mathias' webpage

SIAM (Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics)

Mathematics and economics concentrator Hanley Chiang, Class of 2003, received this year’s Lord Botetourt Medal. Chiang was the only member of the class of 2003 to graduate with a 4.0 grade point average. The award was established in 1772 by Norborne Berkeley, Baron de Botetourt, Governor of Virginia. It is awarded “for the honor and encouragement of literary merit” and is given to the graduating senior who has attained the greatest distinction in scholarship. Chiang, who graduated with a double major in mathematics and economics, is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and earned “highest honors” in mathematics. In nominating Chiang for the award, a faculty member wrote, “He has an extraordinary level of intellectual curiosity and analytical ability and…is a first-rate scholar.” Chiang also won 2002 Thomas Jefferson Prize in Natural Philosophy, and Truman Scholarship. He will begin his graduate study on economics in Harvard University starting 2003 fall.

News article on WM News  Other awards won by Hanley Chiang (in 2002 Newsletter) Hanley Chiang profile

Research Grants


Professors Chi-Kwong Li, Roy Mathias, Sebastian Schreiber and Gregory Smith (Applied Sciences) reiceive a National Science Foundation NSF grant of $100,000 for Research Experience of Undergraduate in Mathematical Biology. The duration of the grant is 2003-2005. The grant is a supplement to the grant DMS-0091774 awarded to Mathias and Li on Matrix Analysis on Science and Engineering. For the project, each year 5-6 undergraduate research students will work with professors on matrix problems that arise in Markov chains models of Ca Release Site Dynamics and population dynamics.

Homepages: Chi-Kwong Li, Roy Mathias, Sebastian SchreiberGregory Smith

Mathematical Biology REU in William and Mary (site coming soon)


Professor Junping Shi receives a National Science Foundation (NSF) research grant of $108,545 for his project Persistence and Pattern Formation in Biological Systems. The duration of the grant is 9/1/2003--8/31/2006. The grant includes summer and travel support for Professor Shi, and it will also support related research of two undergraduate students each year. Professor Shi is going to study some reaction-diffusion models of population ecology and of pattern formations of biochemical systems.

Project Description on NSF website: DMS-0314736

Professor Junping Shi's webpage

Mathematical Biology REU in William and Mary (site coming soon)


Professor Michael W. Trosset and Dennis M. Manos(Applied Sciences) receive a research grant of $49,975  for their project Proteomics Software Package for Detection and Analysis of  Cancer from INCOGEN, Inc.  The duration of the grant is 4/1/2003 - 9/1/2003. The grant is a subcontract of a Phase I Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grant from National Institute of Health. INCOGEN, Inc. is a bioinformatic company located in Williamsburg, and it provides software and professional services to scientists involved in pharmaceutical, agricultural and biotechnology research. The project develops algorithms to classify patient profiles for early cancer diagnosis based on SELDI (Surface Enhanced Laser Desorption Ionisation) mass spectrometry data.

Professor Michael W. Trosset's homepage

News about INCOGEN relocating to Williamsburg   NIH SBIR 2003 award
 








Professor Robert Michael Lewis, Roy MathiasLarry M. Leemis, and Michael W. Trosset receive a National Science Foundation (NSF) equipment grant of  $39,999 for the project Scientific Computing Research Environments for the Mathematical Sciences. The duration of the grant is 8/15/2002-7/31/2004. The grant will be used to purchase equipment for the creation of a computing network dedicated to the support of research in the mathematical sciences. The award will provide funds for high-bandwidth networking equipment, high-performance computers for numerical calculations, and a file server. This equipment, together with desktop machines providing platforms for smaller computations, will provide a numerical/file server cluster for the faculty investigators and students working on a number of research projects. This equipment will be used for computationally intensive research projects spanning a wide range of applied mathematics. These include numerical methods for engineering design, numerical mathematics, computational biochemistry, and operations research.

Project Description on NSF website: DMS-0215444


New Faculty Members

Professor Alexander Pankov

  • Professor Alexander Pankov joined our department as a visiting professor for the academic year of 2003-2004. His research areas are Partial Differential Equations, Mathematical Physics, Nonlinear Analisys, and Calculus of Variations. Before joining W&M, Professor Pankov was a visiting professor in Texas A&M University.

  • Professor Pankov's webpage at Texas A&M University
  • Dr. Martine Reurings from Vrije University, Amsterdam, Netherlands will visit us for the academic year of  2003-04 as a post-doctoral fellow of Professor Leiba Rodman. Dr. Reurings' research interest is on the dynamics of maps on the set of Hermitian matrices. Dr. Reurings obtained her Ph.D degree in April 2003 in Vrije University under the supervision of Professor André C.M. Ran.

  • Dr. Martine Reurings's webpage at Vrije University
  • Marilyn Gloyer joined our department as a  part-time instructor for the academic year of 2003-2004.  She will teach Math 111 in both the fall sand spring semesters. Before joining William and Mary, she taught at the University of Memphis, Fairfield University and other colleges in Connecticut and Virginia.  

Dr. Martine Reurings

Class of 2003

 
Information on Graduating Seniors (2003)
 
Hanley Chiang Harvard University (Economics, graduate study) 
Mariel Conlon University of North Carolina 
(Bioinformatics, graduate study) 
Frank Curtis  Northwestern University 
(Operations Research, graduate study) 
Matthew Duggan College of Willaim and Mary 
(Computational Operations Research, graduate study)
Rebecca Ellison  University of Arizona 
(Mathematical Biology, graduate study)
Sarah Hockensmith  The Analytical Sciences Corporation in Washington DC (work) 
Michael Levy  University of  Colorado 
(Applied Mathematics, graduate study) 
Robert McGregor College of Willaim and Mary 
(Computer Sciences, graduate study) 
Jessica Otis  University of Virginia (Mathematics, graduate study) 
Suzanne Robertson  University of Arizona 
(Applied Mathematics, graduate study) 
Matthew Schu  (teaching high school) 
Mary Swajkoski  Teach for America program (teaching) 
Daniel Sweeney  US Air Force (applying) 
James Turner  College of Willaim and Mary 
(Computational Operations Research, graduate study) 
Bryan Walter NASA-Langley Research Center (work)
 
Information on Graduating Master Students (2003) 
 
Catherine Easterling  NASA-Langley Research Center and Lockheed Martin (computer systems analyst) 
Lane Yingjie Lan  University of Maryland 
(Computer Sciences, graduate study for PhD) 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Dear graduate, Please let us know where you are now.
Please sent news about you to shij@math.wm.edu

Conferences

Professors Roy Mathias and Hugo Woerdeman co-chaired the organizing committee of  SIAM Conference on Applied Linear Algebra, which was held on William and Mary campus, July 15-19, 2003. The meeting is sponsored by SIAM Activity Group on Linear Algebra (SIAG/LA). It the latest in a successful series of meetings that began in Raleigh more than 20 years ago. The meeting is being organized in cooperation with the  International Linear Algebra Society (ILAS) and covers a wide and inclusive range of topics in applied and core linear algebra, as well as applications, both emerging and established. Ten distinguished mathematicians and researchers delivered the invited plenary lectures, and about 200 presentations about the linear algebra and applications were given in minisymposia (MS) and contributed sessions. Professors Chi-Kwong Li and Leiba Rodman organized MS: Indefinite Inner Products and Applications; Professors Vladimir Bolotnikov, Charles R. Johnson, Chi-Kwong LiLeiba Rodman, and Michael W. Trosset all gave talks in the meetings, as well as Thomas Milligan (graduate student, W&M) and  Frank Curtis (undergraduate, W&M). Professor Roy Mathias received the SIAM Activity Group on Linear Algebra Prize in the meeting (see news item above).


Summer Research Experience for Undergraduate 

Since 1990, William and Mary has hosted an NSF-funded summer Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) program. For eight weeks in the
summer of 2003, nine REU students from around the country visited the William and Mary mathematics department to work with faculty mentors on research projects on matrix analysis and its applications. Three of the students (Kevin Armstrong, Audrey Crittenden, and Paul Smith) were William and Mary undergraduates. The faculty research mentors were Professors Chi-Kwong Li, Charles R. Johnson, Roy Mathias, Vladimir Bolotnikov, and Sebastian Schreiber. In addition, three doctoral students (Tom Milligan, Raymond Sze, and Brian Sutton) assisted faculty mentors in working with the visiting undergraduates. David Lutzer served as the overall project coordinator.

REU students choose their research projects from a group of problems described by faculty mentors during the first week of the program.  These problems were not textbook exercises.  Instead, they were open-ended projects designed to attack unsolved questions related to linear algebra and, in some cases, to its applications in bio-mathematics, computational mathematics.  At the end of the summer, students presented written and oral summaries of their projects and, if history is a guide, about half of their papers will grow into refereed journal articles with the students and research mentors are co-authors. (A list of previous publications by our mathematics faculty members and undergraduate co-authors can be found at http://www.math.wm.edu/~klsmit/udres.html )

REU students find that participating in mathematical research is quite a different experience from what they have seen in typical undergraduate classes.  NSF hopes that REU experiences will encourage participants to continue their studies in graduate school, and the William and Mary summer REU program has a very strong record in that regard.  Since its inception in 1990, about 75% of William and Mary REU students have gone on to graduate school in a mathematical science, and in some years' REU groups, the percentage is closer to 90%.

 


Interdisciplinary Research

During the last 3 years there have been three very successful interdepartmental seminars running at William and Mary, bringing together mathematicians and physicists. These seminars helped to create active joint research groups in several areas of mutual interest. Professors Carl Carlson, Christopher Carone (Physics) and Nahum Zobin (Mathematics) are studying noncommutative gauge field theories which are meant to explain the small scale structure of space-time, Professor John Delos, Dr. Kevin Mitchell (Physics) and Professor Nahum Zobin are working on problems of dynamical systems related to break up of large molecules and atoms, Professors Eugene Tracy (Physics) and Nahum Zobin are using algebro-geometric methods to investigate complex dynamical systems arising in plasma physics and oceanography.


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