Oct 07, 2024  
2009-2011 Graduate Catalog 
    
2009-2011 Graduate Catalog ARCHIVED CATALOG: CONTENT MAY NOT BE CURRENT. USE THE DROP DOWN ABOVE TO ACCESS THE CURRENT CATALOG.

School of Computer Science


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Director

Minor, John T.
  (1985), Associate Professor; B.A., Rice University; Ph.D., University of Texas, Austin.
   

Graduate Coordinator

Datta, Ajoy K.
  (1988), Professor; B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Jadavpur University.
   

Graduate Faculty

Bein, Wolfgang
  (1998), Associate Professor; M.S., Ph.D., University of Osnabruck.
Berghel, Hal
  (1999), Professor; B.A., M.A., Ph.D., University of Nebraska, Lincoln.
Gewali, Laxmi P.
  (1989), Professor; B.S., Gauhati University, India; M.S., Tribhuwan University, Nepal; M.S., Ph.D., University of Texas-Dallas.
Kim, Yoohwan
  (2004), Assistant Professor; B.A., Seoul National University, Korea. M.S., Ph.D., Case Western Reserve University.
Larmore, Lawrence L.
  (1994), Professor; B.S., Tulane University; Ph.D., Northwestern University; Ph.D., University of California, Irvine.
Nartker, Thomas A.
  (1986), Professor; B.S., University of Dayton; M.S., University of Tennessee; Ph.D., Texas A&M University.
Ogawa, Roy H.
  (1983), Associate Professor; B.A., M.A., University of Hawaii; Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley.
Pedersen, Jan B.
  (2003), Assistant Professor; B.S., M.S., University of Aarhus, Denmark; Ph.D., University of British Columbia.
Pinelle, David
  (2007), Assistant Professor; B.S., Texas Tech University; Ph.D., University of Saskatchewan.
Taghva, Sidkazem
  (1987), Professor; B.S., Pahlavi University; M.S., University of Kansas; Ph.D., University of Iowa.
Yfantis, Evangelos A.
  (1979), Professor; B.S., University of Athens; M.S., Fairleigh Dickinson University; M.S., Rutgers University; M.S., New Jersey Institute of Technology; Ph.D., University of Wyoming.

The School of Computer Science offers programs leading to the Master of Science and the Doctor of Philosophy degrees in Computer Science. Areas of school strength include both theoretical and experimental computer science, especially within such areas as information and network security, Internet forensics, real-time algorithms, informationretrieval, document analysis, graphics, computational geometry, networking and distributed systems, parallel programming, artificial intelligence, software engineering, and human-computer interfaces.

The distributed computing environment of the College of Engineering is housed in the Thomas T. Beam Engineering Complex. Several hundred modern computing systems are operated for purposes of instruction, experimentation, laboratory instrument control, data acquisition, and research. More than 50 of the systems are in public laboratories accessible to all engineering students. These laboratories contain both Windows and Unix/Linux clients and servers in a variety of modern configurations.

Students can also obtain permission to access the machines of the National Supercomputer Center for Energy and the Environment (NSCEE).

Programs

 

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