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Faculty Members
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Randall Beer (2006),
Professor, Computer Science, Informatics, and Cognitive Science.
PhD (Computer Science) 1989, Case Western Reserve University.
Embodied, situated and dynamical approaches to behavior and
cognition, evolutionary robotics, computational neuroscience,
theoretical biology.
Email: rdbeer
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Randall Bramley (1992),
Professor. PhD (Computer Science) 1989, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign. Scientific computation, parallel numerical
algorithms, computational optimization, and numerical linear
algebra.
Email: bramley
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Geoffrey Brown (2003),
Professor and Director of Undergraduate Education. PhD (Electrical Engineering)
1987, University of Texas at Austin. Embedded system design,
hardware/software codesign, concurrent system verification.
Email: geobrown
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Arun Chauhan
(2004), Assistant Professor. PhD (Computer Science) 2003,
Rice University. Compilers, high-level programming systems,
parallel and high-performance computing, grid computing.
Email: achauhan
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Kay Connelly (2003),
Assistant Professor. Associate Director of the Center for Applied Cybersecurity
Research. Ph.D. (computer science) 2003, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign. Security, resource management and applications for ubiquitous systems,
network security, usability studies and methodologies.
Email: connelly
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R. Kent Dybvig (1985), Professor. PhD
(Computer Science) 1987, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill. Programming language design and implementation, compilers and
code optimization.
Email: dyb
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Geoffrey Charles Fox (2001), Professor of Computer Science, Informatics, Physics. Indiana University; Director of Community Grid Laboratory; Pervasive Technology Laboratories at Indiana University. Ph.D. in Theoretical Physics from Cambridge University (1967).
Grid architectures, large scale messaging, grid computation, collaborative environments, and parallel computation.
Email: gcf
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Daniel P. Friedman (1973), Professor. PhD (Computer
Science) 1973, University of Texas at Austin. Programming languages.
Email: dfried
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Dennis Gannon (1985), Professor, Computer Science; PhD (Mathematics) 1974, University of
California, Davis. PhD (Computer Science) 1980, University of
Illinois. Parallel computation, programming systems, graphics and tool
design, computer architecture.
Email: gannon
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Michael E. Gasser (1988), Associate professor,
Computer Science and Cognitive Science. PhD (Applied Linguistics) 1988,
University of California, Los Angeles. Natural
language processing, learning, and translation; connectionist and
statistical modeling; intelligent tools for information evaluation.
Email: gasser
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Minaxi Gupta (2004), Assistant Professor, Computer Science. PhD (Computer Science) 2004, Georgia Institute of Technology. Research interests: networking and distributed systems.
Email: minaxi
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Andrew J. Hanson (1989), Professor and chair. PhD (Physics)
1971, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. Scientific visualization, computer graphics and computer
vision, applications of visualization to mathematical problems in
dimensions greater than three, cognitive models for visualization, design
of intelligent human interfaces for visualization applications.
Email: hanson
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Christopher T. Haynes (1982), Associate professor. PhD (Computer Science) 1982, University
of Iowa. Programming languages.
Email: chaynes
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Raquel Hill (2005), Assistant Professor in Computer Science Department
and Department of Informatics. PhD (Computer Science) 2002, Harvard
University, Postdoctoral Appointment 2003-05, University of Illinois,
Urbana/Champaign. Security, resource allocation, securing ubiquitous
computing environments.
Email: ralhill
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Douglas R. Hofstadter (1988), College Professor of
Cognitive Science and Computer Science; adjunct professor of Philosophy, Psychology, History & Philosophy of Science; and Comparative Literature. Director, Center for Research on Concepts and Cognition. PhD (Physics) 1975, University of Oregon. Artificial intelligence, philosophy of mind, cognitive science.
Email: dughof
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Steven D. Johnson (1982), Professor. PhD
(Computer Science) 1983, Indiana University. Formal methods for systems, design derivation, parallel symbolic computation, scientific instrumentation.
Email: sjohnson
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David Leake (1990), Professor and Graduate Program Director. PhD (Computer
Science) 1990, Yale University. Artificial intelligence and cognitive
science, especially
case-based reasoning, goal-driven learning, introspective
reasoning, intelligent information search, and memory organization.
Email: leake
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Daniel Leivant (1991), Professor, Computer
Science; adjunct professor of Philosophy and Mathematics. PhD
(Mathematics) 1975, University of Amsterdam. Theory of computing, theory
of programming languages, mathematical logic and foundations of mathematics.
Email: leivant
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Andrew Lumsdaine (2001), Professor. PhD (Electrical Engineering and Computer Science) 1992, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Computational science and engineering, parallel and distributed computing, software engineering, generic programming, mathematical software, numerical analysis.
Email: lums
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Michael McRobbie (1997), Professor of Computer Science,
Indiana University President, Professor of Philosophy, Professor of Informatics, Professor of Cognitive Science and Adjunct Professor of Information Science on the Bloomington campus, and Professor of Computer Technology in the Purdue School of Engineering and Technology at IUPUI.
CEO of the
Pervasive Technology Laboratories. McRobbie currently and has
previously held numerous government, research and private sector
committee, board and advisory appointments nationally and
internationally.
Email: mcrobbie
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Filippo Menczer (2003), Associate Professor,
Informatics and Computer Science. PhD (Computer
Science and Cognitive Science) 1998, University of California, San
Diego. Scalable Web, text, and data mining applications; Web
intelligence, Web IR, distributed information systems; adaptive agents;
evolutionary computation, machine learning, neural networks; complex
systems, social networks, artificial life, and agent based
computational economics.
Email: fil
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Jonathan W. Mills (1988), Associate professor. PhD
(Computer Science) 1988, Arizona State. Universal analog VLSI computers
using Kirchhoff Machines and Lukasiewicz Logic Arrays, super-Turing
computation theory, biologically-plausible robotic systems, implementation
of massively-parallel (1000+ robots) colonies, Stiquito (ant-like) and
Ananzi (spider-like) robot design, Artificial Life.
Email: jwmills
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Beth Plale (2001), Associate Professor. PhD
(Computer Science) 1998, State University of New York Binghamton followed by
a Post Doctorate at Georgia Institute of Technology, 1998-2001. Interests
include data intensive computations, data streams, high performance
computing, distributed and parallel computing, database query processing.
Email: plale
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Paul W. Purdom (1971), Professor. PhD
(Physics) 1966, California Institute of Technology. Analysis of
algorithms, rewriting systems, compilers, game playing.
Email: pwp
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Gregory J. E. Rawlins (1987),
Associate professor. PhD (Computer Science) 1987, University of
Waterloo. Data mining, genetic algorithms, spatial interfaces, Java,
open-source software, software engineering, and adaptive software.
Email: rawlins
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Edward L. Robertson (1978), Associate Dean of Undergraduate Studies of the School of Informatics, Professor of Computer Science and Informatics. PhD (Computer Science) 1970, University of Wisconsin. Database systems theory and practice, enterprise architectures and information systems modeling, software engineering.
Email: edrbtsn
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Amr Sabry (2000),
Professor. PhD (Computer Science) 1994, Rice University.
All aspects of programming language research: design, semantic and
logic foundations, type theory, compilers, analysis, verification,
optimization, program specification and construction, hardware
description languages, and software engineering support.
Email: sabry
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Matthias Scheutz (2007), Associate Professor, Computer Science,
Informatics, and Cognitive Science.
PhD (Cognitive Science and Computer Science) 1999, Indiana University;
PhD (Philosophy) 1995, University of Vienna.
Artificial intelligence, robotics, artificial life, agent-based computing,
cognitive modeling, foundations of cognitive science,
multi-scale agent-based models
of social behavior, and complex cognitive and affective robots for
human-robot interaction.
Email: mscheutz
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Robert B. Schnabel (2007), Professor, Computer Science and Informatics;
Dean, School of Informatics. PhD (Computer Science) 1977,
Cornell University. Numerical computation, parallel computation, applications to
molecular chemistry, and diversifying participation in computing and information
technology, both in the areas of education and workforce development.
Email: schnabel
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Dirk Van Gucht (1985),
Professor. PhD (Computer Science)
1985, Vanderbilt University. Database theory and systems, machine
learning.
Email: vgucht
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David S. Wise (1972), Professor;
Vice President of ACM. PhD
(Computer Science) 1971, University of Wisconsin. Applicative
programming, multiprocessing architectures and algorithms.
Email: dswise
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Catharine Wyss (2002), Assistant Professor
in Computer Science Department and Department of Informatics. PhD
(Computer Science) 2002, Indiana University. Database systems,
database query languages.
Email: cmw
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Instructors
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Dan-Adrian German, Lecturer. MS in computer
science, Indiana University (1994). Programming languages for the
web. Effective teaching techniques for computer science education.
Geometry of fractal sets.
Email: dgerman
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Suzanne Menzel, Sr. Lecturer of computer science. MS in computer science, Rutgers University (1983). Development of effective
teaching techniques for computer science education.
Email: menzel
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Charles E. Pope (1993), CSCI A110 Course Coordinator, Lecturer. BS, Business Administration,
Ambassador University (1993); BA, Ethics, Ambassador University (1993);
BS, Management Information Systems, Ambassador University (1992). 12
years consulting with Fortune 500 organizations: implement technical
support centers, design of call center reporting applications, network
management, and telecommunications expense management. Interests:
Effective teaching techniques in large classrooms, case-based learning,
practical application of productivity software, VoIP.
Email: cepope
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Jeffrey M. Whitmer (1994), Lecturer. MA
(Philosophy of Science) 1986, Indiana University. Intel/RISC-based PC
Operating systems, Network Operating Systems, Networking Protocols and
Topologies, Network Adminstration in Business and Education.
Email: jwhitmer
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Emeriti Faculty
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J. Michael Dunn (1987), Emeritus Professor of Computer Science;
Emeritus Professor of Informatics;
Emeritus Oscar R. Ewing Professor of Philosophy.
Former Dean, School of Informatics. PhD (Philosophy) 1966,
University of Pittsburgh. Algebraic logic, proof theory, non-standard
logics (esp. relevance logic), relations between logic and computer
science.
Email: dunn
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Stanley A. Hagstrom (1971), Professor emeritus of computer science.
PhD (Physical Chemistry) 1957, Iowa State University. Digital
simulations of molecular structure.
Email: hagstrom
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Franklin Prosser (1969), Professor emeritus of computer science. PhD
(Physical Chemistry) 1961, Pennsylvania State University. Digital
hardware, computer science education.
Email: prosser
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George Springer, Professor emeritus of computer science
and mathematics. Department's Director of Honors Programs.
PhD (Mathematics) 1949, Harvard. Programming language education.
Email: springer
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David E. Winkel, Professor emeritus of computer science.
PhD (Physical Chemistry) 1957, Iowa State University. Design of
area-efficient VLSI structures derived from high-level language
specifications and the implementation of RISC engines suitable for Prolog
and Scheme.
Email: winkel
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Adjunct Faculty
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Danko Antolovic,
Researcher in Pervasive Technology's Advanced
Network Managment Lab
(ANML)
where he most recently
developed Porcupine, a system for
mapping wireless-network traffic.
He holds the Ph.D. and M.S. degrees in Chemistry from the Johns Hopkins
University, and the M.S. degree in
Computer Science from Indiana University. Dr. Antolovic has
collaborated in a series of robotics projects
in the Computer Science Department and is currently working with a team
of CS students, staff, and faculty
to develop a computer-controlled golf cart (ERTS)
for research and instruction in embedded systems.
Email: dantolov
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L. Jean Camp (2002),
Associate Adjunct Professor, Computer Science and Associate Professor, Department Informatics. Professor Camp studies security and privacy in social contexts,
defined as trust. She holds two patents with one pending, is the
author of more than forty journal articles, and two books.
Email: ljcamp
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Mehmet Dalkilic,
Associate Professor School of Informatics,
Associate Director Bioinformatics,
Associate Center for Genomics and Bioinformatics,
Coordinator Life Sciences Group,
Adjunct Computer Science Dept.
PhD (Computer Science) 2000, Indiana University.
Data Mining, searching for hidden information in large amounts of data, and bioinformatcs.
Email: dalkilic
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Dennis Groth, Assistant Adjunct Professor of Computer Science, Assistant Professor, Department of Informatics and Assistant Professor of Cognitive Science. PhD (Computer Science) 2002, Indiana University. Database visualization, data mining, and human-computer interaction. Research focuses on the development of new database access and data mining techniques in support of data visualization activities.
Email:dgroth
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Marc Gyssens, Professor of Computer Science,
University of Limburg, Belgium. PhD (Mathematics w/ specialization in Computer Science)
1985 (greatest distinction), University of Antwerp. Adjunct Professor of Computer
Science, Indiana University. Applying mathematics and logic to
database systems problems, combinatorial optimization for constraint
satisfaction problems.
Email: marc.gyssens
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Sun Kim, Associate Professor, Department of Informatics, INGEN investigator, Center for Genomics and Bioinformatics, Adjunct Associate Professor of Computer Science. PhD (Computer Science) 1997, The University of Iowa. Research Interests: String pattern matching techniques, data mining, machine learning, combinatorial search; Bioinformatics: Shotgun sequence assembly algorithms, post-assembly procedures, computational comparative genomics, repetitive sequence analysis.
Email: sunkim2
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David C. McCarty, Associate professor of philosophy and
adjunct associate professor of computer science. D.Phil., Oxford
University (1985). Logic and foundations of mathematics: applications of
realizability semantics to constructive formal systems, studies on the
completeness of intuitionistic logic, and investigations of historical
figures in the foundations of mathematics.
Email: dmccarty
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Donald McMullen, Director of the Indiana University Center
for Innovative Computer Applications and adjunct assistant professor of
computer science. PhD 1982, Indiana University. Modeling of secondary
kinteic isotop effects in chemical reactions, computation of solvent-solute
interactions in solvolytic reactions, algorithms for the computation of
the electronic structure of molecules.
Email: mcmullen
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Lawrence S. Moss, Professor of mathematics
and adjunct professor of computer science, adjunct professor of philosophy, mathematics, and informatics. PhD (Mathematics) 1984,
UCLA. Notions of information as they appear in situation theory,
domain theory, and other areas, abstract data types, modal logic, logical
aspects of graph theory, the mathematics of language.
Email: lsm
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Steven Myers, Assistant Adjunct Professor, Computer Science, and Acting Assistant Professor, Informatics. MSc in Computer Science, University of Toronto (1999). Cryptography, Systems Security, Complexity Theory,
Randomized Algorithms and Probabilistic Combinatorics.
Email: samyers
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Luis Rocha, Associate Professor of Informatics,
Adjunct Associate Professor of Computer Science and Associate Professor of
Cognitive Science. Ph.D. (Systems Science and Computer Science) 1997,
State University of New York at Binghamton. Complex Systems, Computational
Biology, Distributed Artificial Intelligence and Artificial Life, Intelligent Information Retrieval, Recommendation Systems, Data-Mining, Computational Intelligence, Fuzzy Set Theory, Evidence Theory, Evolutionary Computation.
Email: rocha
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Haixu Tang, Assistant Adjunct Professor, Computer Science Department and Assistant Professor, Department of Informatics. PhD (Molecular and computational biology) 1998, Shanghai Institute of Biochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences. Bioformitics, Discrete and combinatorial algorithms, Machine learning theory.
Email: hatang
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Michael Trosset,
Adjunct Professor, Computer Science and Professor, Department of Statistics.
PhD (Statistics) 1983, University of California Berkeley.
Computational statistics, statistical learning, design & analysis of computer experiments, and stochastic optimization and response surface methodology.
Email: mtrosset
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Steven S. Wallace, Director and Chief Technologist for the Advanced Network Management
Lab, Pervasive Technology Labs, Indiana University; Design and
operation of large high-speed data networks and the development of
network-related management tools, optimal design of high-performance
layer two networks and the creation of network management tools to
support such environments, and end-to-end application performance
research.
Email: ssw
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Xiaofeng Wang, Assistant Adjunct Professor, Computer Science Department and Assistant Professor, Informatics. Ph.D. in Computer Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University (2004). His research interests span all areas of computer and communication security in particular network security (including denial-of-service attacks and security issues in wireless ad-hoc network), incentive engineering, and anonymity systems.
Email: xw7
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Eric A. Wernert, Senior Manager and
Scientist, Visualization Technologies and Futures, UITS; Director,
Advanced Information Technology Core, IU School of Medicine; Assistant
Adjunct Professor of Computer Science. Ph.D. (Computer Science) 2000,
Indiana University. Information visualization, scientific
visualization, virtual reality, agile display systems, advanced IT
infrastructures and mechanisms for medical research.
Email: ewernert
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Yuqing Melanie Wu, Assistant Adjunct Professor, Computer Science and Assistant Professor, Department of Informatics. PhD (Computer Science) 2004, University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. Database, storing and querying semi-structured data, query language, query processing and query optimization.
Email: yuqwu
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Yuzhen Ye,
Assistant Adjunct Professor, Computer Science and Assistant Professor, Department of Informatics.
PhD (Computational Biology) 2001, Shanghai Institute of Biochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China.
Protein bioinformatics, protein structure prediction and comparison, comparison of protein domain organization, biochemical pathways reconstruction and analysis.
Email: yye
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Chen Yu, Assistant Professor, Computer Science and Assistant Professor, Psychological
and Brain Sciences, and core faculty of Cognitive Science. PhD (Computer
Science) 2004, University of Rochester. Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive
Science, Machine Learning, Perceptual Intelligence, Computer Vision, Virtual
Reality, Speech Processing, and Human Development and Learning.
Email: chenyu
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