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... Conferences/
Workshops by Faculty...
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Last
update: 12/23/2007 |
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H.
Pham will co-chair "ISSAT 14th International Conference
on Reliability and Quality in Design", Orlando,
Florida August 7-9, 2008.
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International
Conference on Modeling of Complex Systems and Environments
July 16-18, 2007
Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
H.
Pham will chair "International Conference on Modeling
of Complex Systems and Environments", Ho Chi Minh
City, Vietnam, July 16-18, 2007.
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Conference on
System Integration and Reliability Improvements
December
13-15, 2006
Hanoi, Vietnam
H.
Pham will co-chair "The
First IEEE International Conference on System Integration
and Reliability Improvements (SIRI) 2006",
Hanoi, Vietnam, December 13-15, 2006.
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Conference on
Data Mining, Systems Analysis and Optimization in Neuroscience
February 15-17, 2006
University of Florida
Gainesville, FL |
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Sponsored by DIMACS, National Science
Foundation, UF Engineering, UF Genetics Institute
ORGANIZERS: W. Art Chaovalitwongse,
Rutgers University
.......................Panos
M. Pardalos, University of Florida
.......................Leonidas
D. Iasemidis, Arizona State University
Current experimental neuroscience methods have resulted
in massive amounts of data, but traditional data-processing
and quantitative methods are not sophisticated enough
to exploit this new flood of information. The purpose
of this conference is to explore new methods in experimental
and quantitative neuroscience. There is an increasing
number of modern research efforts in data mining, systems
analysis and optimization research to advance methods
needed to process the large spatial and temporal data
arising in experimental and quantitative neuroscience.
This conference is designed is to bring together scientists,
engineers, neurobiologists and clinicians, with scientific
interest and expertise in the human brain, in an attempt
to share knowledge, ideas, and scientific methodology.
This conference will result in lively discussions of
the cross-disciplinary research and open up a new question:
How do we go from the gigabytes of experimental data
that we now have to concise conclusions about the function
of the brain? The answer to this question will revolutionize
neuroscience research and give us a greater understanding
of brain function.
A major area of interest lies in the study of how neuronal
circuitries of the brain support its cognitive and functioning
capacities at a descriptive level of the molecular mechanisms
of synaptic plasticity. Advances in the fields of signal
processing, statistics, data mining and optimization
have made it possible to discover and investigate complex
patterns in the vast amount of information being generated
by neuroimaging and neurophysiological signals.
PARTICIPANTS:
Researchers and practitioners working in related areas
are invited to submit abstracts for possible conference
presentations. Those who submit abstracts will be notified
regarding whether a presentation based on the abstract
can be scheduled for the conference. Accepted abstracts
will be printed in the conference program and speakers
will have approximately thirty minutes to present their
material. The conference facilities will have projectors
for presenting material from a laptop computer, as well
as overhead projectors.
IMPORTANT DATES:
Session Proposals: December 15, 2005
Submission Deadlines: December 31, 2005
To submit an abstract or propose a session, please email
the session title or presentation title and abstract
to W. Art Chaovalitwongse (wchaoval@rci.rutgers.edu).
Full papers presented at the conference will be considered
for publication in special issues of international journals.
CONTACT INFORMATION:
Email: wchaoval@rci.rutgers.edu
URL: http://www.ise.ufl.edu/cao/neuroscience2006/
http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/Workshops/Neuroscience/
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| DIMACS
Workshop on
COMPUTATIONAL OPTIMIZATION AND LOGISTICS CHALLENGES
IN THE ENTERPRISE (COLCE)
April 19-20, 2006
ExxonMobil Research & Engineering (EMRE)
1545 Route 22 East
Annandale, New Jersey 08801
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DIMACS
Organizers:
W. Art Chaovalitwongse
Rutgers Univ., wchaoval@rci.rutgers.edu
Fred Roberts
DIMACS, froberts@dimacs.rutgers.edu
EMRE Organizers:
Kevin C. Furman
EMRE, kevin.c.furman@exxonmobil.com
CALL FOR PARTICIPATION:
DIMACS and EMRE cordially invite you to participate in
the "DIMACS Workshop on Computational Optimization
and Logistics Challenges in the Enterprise (COLCE)".
For further information, please send an e-mail to wchaoval@rci.rutgers.edu.
Proposals for special sessions, contributed papers and
invited speakers are welcome and may be submitted via
this email address. We plan to put together, as editors,
a referee volume of a book series based on a selection
of papers presented at the workshop. Details will be announced
at a later time. To submit an abstract and a proposal
for a special session, please email the title and abstract
to W. Art Chaovalitwongse by March 1, 2006.
SCOPE:
The purpose of this 2-day workshop conference is to explore
a wide range of advances in optimization techniques in
the study of supply chain and logistics challenges in
the enterprise. This workshop will provide a forum for
leading as well as beginning researchers to discuss and
address the computational challenges that arise in supply
chain optimization, logistics, planning and scheduling
in the industrial sector. This workshop is designed is
to bring together operations research and mathematical
optimization experts from the academic arena with industry
practitioners, in an attempt to share knowledge, ideas,
and scientific methodology. Both invited and contributed
talks will be presented over the course of the workshop
across a diverse range of relevant topics.
Research Topics:
- Enterprise-Wide Optimization
- Mathematical Finance, Pricing & Forecasting
- Advances in Optimization Models & Algorithms
- Simulation-Optimization
- Planning & Long Term Investment
- Transportation & Logistics
Plenary Speakers:
- Process Operations and Scheduling
- Ignacio Grossmann, CMU
- John M. Mulvey, Princeton U.
- Panos M. Pardalos, U. Florida
- John Dennis, Rice U.
- Panos Kouvelis, Washington U. St. Louis
- Martin Savelsbergh, Georgia Tech
- Marianthi Ierapetritou, Rutgers U.
PARTICIPANTS:
Researchers and practitioners working in related areas
are invited to submit abstracts for possible conference
presentations. Those who submit abstracts will be notified
regarding whether a presentation based on the abstract
can be scheduled for the conference. Accepted abstracts
will be printed in the conference program and speakers
will have approximately twenty minutes to present their
material. |
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| DIMACS
Workshop on
Clustering Problems in Biological Networks
May 9 - 11, 2006
DIMACS Center, CoRE Building, Rutgers University, Piscataway,
NJ
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Organizers:
Sergiy Butenko, Texas A&M, butenko@tamu.edu
W. Art Chaovalitwongse, Rutgers University, wchaoval@rci.rutgers.edu
Panos Pardalos, University of Florida, pardalos@ufl.edu
Presented
under the auspices of the DIMACS/BioMaPS/MB Center Special
Focus on Information Processing in Biology.
This special focus is jointly sponsored by the Center
for Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical Computer Science
(DIMACS), the Biological, Mathematical, and Physical
Sciences Interfaces Institute for Quantitative Biology
(BioMaPS), and the Rutgers Center for Molecular Biophysics
and Biophysical Chemistry (MB Center).
CALL FOR PARTICIPATION:
Further information including instructions for registration
may be obtained from the conference web site or by email
from wchaoval@rci.rutgers.edu. Proposals for special
sessions, contributed papers and invited speakers are
welcome and may be submitted via this email address.
DIMACS and CSNA (Classification Society of North America)
cordially invite you to participate in the "DIMACS
Workshop on Clustering Problems in Biological Networks"
in conjunction with "Classification Society of
North America 2006 Meeting on Network Data Analysis
and Data Mining: Applications in Biology, Computer Science,
Intrusion Detection, and Other areas".
SCOPE:
The purpose of this conference is to explore a wide
range of advances in network clustering techniques in
the study of biological networks. This workshop will
provide a forum for leading as well as beginning researchers
to discuss recent advances and identify current and
future challenges/trends arising in the research concerning
clustering problems in computational biology. This workshop
is designed is to bring together scientists, engineers,
biologists and clinicians, with scientific interest
and expertise in biological systems, in an attempt to
share knowledge, ideas, and scientific methodology.
PARTICIPANTS:
Researchers and practitioners working in related areas
are invited to submit abstracts for possible conference
presentations. Those who submit abstracts will be notified
regarding whether a presentation based on the abstract
can be scheduled for the conference. Accepted abstracts
will be printed in the conference program and speakers
will have approximately thirty minutes to present their
material. The conference facilities will have projectors
for presenting material from a laptop computer, as well
as overhead projectors.
To submit an abstract or organize a session, please
email the session’s and/or presentation’s
title and abstract to W. Art Chaovalitwongse wchaoval@rci.rutgers.edu
by April 1, 2006. Full papers presented at the conference
will be considered for publication in special issues
of international journals.
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