Department of Mathematics
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Faculty Research Seminars


In order to give department members a better idea of the kinds of research undertaken by members of our faculty, we are introducing the FACULTY RESEARCH COLLOQUIUM, to be held on the fourth Wednesday of the month. The plan is to have two talks on each such Wednesday. Both faculty and students are strongly encouraged to attend! We hope that these talks will be helpful to students looking around for faculty to serve as research advisors, and helpful to faculty who might find others in their own department with whom they might collaborate on research projects.
– Stan Payne, Faculty Research Coordinator

Spring 2004

Craig Johns - Infilling Sparse Records of Spatial Fields
Karen Kadafar - Multivariate Equivalence Tests with Lognormal Distributions
Jan Mandel - When Point Boundary Conditions Are Meaningful and When They Are Not, or, Why We Need Functional Analysis

Spring 2003

Burt Simon - Speeding Up Simulations with Control Variates
Andrew Knyazev - Why and how to compute eigenvalues and eigenvectors of matrices of the size million-by-million?
W. E. Cherowitzo - On Flocks of Cones: A Revolution of Perspective
Leopoldo P. Franca - Modeling Multiscale Phenomena via Finite element Methods

Fall 2002

Stephan R. Sain - Multivariate Lattice Models for Spatial Data
Lynn S. Bennethum - An Introduction to Deterministic Modeling of a Physical System
Rich Lundgren - Variations on Interval Graphs
Bill Briggs - Domino Chain Reactions
Anatoli Pouhalskii - Limit Theorems or What is Applied Mathematics?
Weldon Lodwick - Being Certain About Uncertainty


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