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Suggested Citation:"Appendix: Workshop Agenda and Participants." National Research Council. 2000. The Interface of Three Areas of Computer Science with the Mathematical Sciences: Summary of a Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9951.
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Appendix

Workshop Agenda and Participants

FINAL AGENDA

Friday, April 28

1:00 pm

Welcome and overview of workshop goals

Robert MacPherson, Institute for Advanced Study and Chair, Board on Mathematical Sciences

Network Traffic Modeling—Session 1

1:10

Panel discussion: The major challenges of network traffic modeling

Walter Willinger, AT&T-Research

Donald Towsley, University of Massachusetts

Sugih Jamin, University of Michigan

Andrew Odlyzko, AT&T-Research, moderator

2:10

Plenary discussion: Identification of mathematical and statistical challenges that link to the challenges of network traffic modeling

3:10

Break

3:30

Resume plenary discussion

4:45

Summaries from session rapporteurs

Ingrid Daubechies, Princeton University

David Donoho, Stanford University

5:15

Adjourn

5:30

Reception

7:30

Adjourn reception

Saturday, April 29

8:00am

Continental breakfast in meeting room

Computer Vision—Session 2

8:30

Panel discussion: The major challenges of computer vision

Jitendra Malik, University of California at Berkeley

Larry Davis, University of Maryland

Guillermo Sapiro, University of Minnesota

Tony Chan, University of California at Los Angeles, moderator

Suggested Citation:"Appendix: Workshop Agenda and Participants." National Research Council. 2000. The Interface of Three Areas of Computer Science with the Mathematical Sciences: Summary of a Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9951.
×

9:30

Plenary discussion: Identification of mathematical and statistical challenges that link to the challenges of computer vision

10:30

Break

10:45

Resume plenary discussion

12:00

Summary from session rapporteurs

Stanley Osher, University of California at Los Angeles

Demetri Terzopoulos, University of Toronto

12:15 pm

Lunch

Data Mining and Search—Session 3

1:00

Panel discussion: The major challenges of data mining and search

Chid Apte, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center

Raúl E. Valdés-Pérez, Carnegie Mellon University

Jon Kleinberg, Cornell University

Dianne P. O'Leary, University of Maryland, moderator

2:00

Plenary discussion: Identification of mathematical and statistical challenges that link to the challenges of data mining and search

3:00

Break

3:15

Resume plenary discussion

4:15

Summary from session rapporteur

Laszlo Lovasz, Microsoft Research

4:30

General discussion: Next steps to improve these interfaces, including actions to be taken by the National Academies.

Suggested Citation:"Appendix: Workshop Agenda and Participants." National Research Council. 2000. The Interface of Three Areas of Computer Science with the Mathematical Sciences: Summary of a Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9951.
×

LIST OF PARTICIPANTS

Padmanabhan Anandan, Microsoft Research

Chid Apte, IBM T.J.Watson Research Center

John Baras, University of Maryland

Kristin P. Bennett, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Peter J. Bickel, University of California at Berkeley

Lynn Billard, University of Georgia

Marjory Blumenthal, National Research Council

Christian Borgs, Microsoft Research

Tony Chan, University of California at Los Angeles

Jennifer Chayes, Microsoft Research

Ingrid Daubechies, Princeton University

Larry Davis, University of Maryland

David Donoho, Stanford University

Wm. Randolph Franklin, National Science Foundation/Computer and Information Science and Engineering Directorate

Susan Gauch, University of Kansas

C. William Gear, NEC Research Institute

Anna Gilbert, AT&T-Research

David Heath, Carnegie Mellon University

Alan Inouye, National Research Council

Sugih Jamin, University of Michigan

Iain M. Johnstone, Stanford University

Behzad Kamgar-Parsi, Naval Research Laboratory

Anna Karlin, University of Washington

Jon Kleinberg, Cornell University

Laszlo Lovasz, Microsoft Research

Robert D. MacPherson, Institute for Advanced Study

Jitendra Malik, University of California at Berkeley

Wen Masters, Office of Naval Research

Debasis Mitra, Bell Laboratories, Lucent Technologies

Andrew Odlyzko, AT&T-Research

Dianne P. O'Leary, University of Maryland

Charles Osgood, National Security Agency

Stanley Osher, University of California at Los Angeles

Tomaso (Tommy) Poggio, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Andrew Pollington, National Science Foundation/Division of Mathematical Sciences

William Pulleyblank, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center

James Rosenberger, National Science Foundation/Division of Mathematical Sciences

Guillermo Sapiro, University of Minnesota

Carey Schwartz, Office of Naval Research

Demetri Terzopoulos, University of Toronto

Alvin Thaler, National Science Foundation/Division of Mathematical Sciences

Philippe Tondeur, National Science Foundation/Division of Mathematical Sciences

Donald Towsley, University of Massachusetts

Raúl E. Valdés-Pérez, Carnegie Mellon University

Scott Weidman, National Research Council

Ruth Williams, University of California at San Diego

Walter Willinger, AT&T-Research

Yimin Xiao, Microsoft Research

Suggested Citation:"Appendix: Workshop Agenda and Participants." National Research Council. 2000. The Interface of Three Areas of Computer Science with the Mathematical Sciences: Summary of a Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9951.
×
Page 16
Suggested Citation:"Appendix: Workshop Agenda and Participants." National Research Council. 2000. The Interface of Three Areas of Computer Science with the Mathematical Sciences: Summary of a Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9951.
×
Page 17
Suggested Citation:"Appendix: Workshop Agenda and Participants." National Research Council. 2000. The Interface of Three Areas of Computer Science with the Mathematical Sciences: Summary of a Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9951.
×
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