Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM) is pleased to
announce the 2024 Class of SIAM Fellows. These distinguished
members were nominated in recognition of their outstanding research
and service to the community. Through their various
contributions, SIAM Fellows form a crucial group of
individuals helping to advance the fields of applied mathematics,
computational science, and data science.
SIAM congratulates these 26 esteemed members of the community,
listed below in alphabetical order:
Peter Ashwin, University of Exeter, is being
recognized for contributions to dynamical systems and its
application to mathematical biology and climate change.
Heinz Bauschke, University of British Columbia,
is being recognized for contributions in convex analysis, monotone
operator theory, fixed point theory, and their applications in
optimization.
David Samuel Bindel, Cornell University, is
being recognized for contributions in numerical linear algebra and
its innovative use in broad areas of computational science and
engineering.
Jie Chen, City University of Hong Kong, is
being recognized for breakthroughs in fundamental limitations of
feedback control, system identification, model validation, and
delay systems.
Patrick L. Combettes, North Carolina State
University, is being recognized for contributions to the theory and
applications of convex optimization, especially proximal
methods.
Hans De Sterck, University of Waterloo, is
being recognized for contributions to scientific computing methods
including multilevel and nonlinear solvers, and for exemplary
scientific leadership and service to SIAM.
Aaron L. Fogelson, University of Utah, is being
recognized for pioneering work on mathematical modeling and
numerical methods for platelet aggregation and blood clotting.
Hélène Frankowska, CNRS and Sorbonne
University, is being recognized for fundamental and pioneering
contributions to optimal control theory and differential
inclusions, both deterministic, stochastic, and in Wasserstein
spaces.
Michael P. Friedlander, University of British
Columbia, is being recognized for theoretical and applied
contributions to convex and nonconvex optimization.
Daniel Kráľ, Masaryk University, is being
recognized for fundamental contributions to graph theory,
combinatorics and computer science, and for service to the
profession.
Richard B. Lehoucq, Sandia National
Laboratories, is being recognized for contributions to numerical
linear algebra and software, continuum mechanics, nonlocal
modeling, applications of probability to optimization, and
high-dimensional data analysis.
José Mario Martínez, State University of
Campinas, is being recognized for his contributions to the theory,
practice, and applications of continuous optimization.
Deanna Needell, University of California Los
Angeles, is being recognized for contributions to compressed
sensing, stochastic optimization, and applied data science.
Cornelis W. Oosterlee, Utrecht University, is
being recognized for outstanding contributions to multigrid methods
and financial mathematics, and exceptional service to these
research communities.
Art B. Owen, Stanford University, is being
recognized for seminal contributions straddling computational
mathematics and statistics.
Fred S. Roberts, Rutgers University, is being
recognized for distinguished research in discrete mathematics,
leadership of major research centers, and service to SIAM.
Joachim Rosenthal, University of Zurich, is
being recognized for contributions to systems theory, coding
theory, and cryptography and for establishing connections between
them.
Claudia Sagastizábal, IMECC, Unicamp, is being
recognized for contributions to non-smooth optimization and
applications to engineering, and numerical methods for
optimization.
Carola-Bibiane Schönlieb, University of
Cambridge, is being recognized for important contributions to
mathematical imaging, inverse problems, and applied partial
differential equations, as well as outstanding leadership and
service.
Mark S. Squillante, IBM Thomas J. Watson
Research Center, is being recognized for fundamental contributions
to the mathematical analysis, modeling, control, and optimization
of stochastic systems and their applications.
Luis Nunes Vicente, Lehigh University, is being
recognized for groundbreaking contributions to derivative-free and
bilevel optimization, and exemplary leadership in editorial and
organizational service to the SIAM community.
Layne Terry Watson, Virginia Polytechnic
Institute and State University, is being recognized for pioneering
the theoretical development, algorithm design, software
implementation, and application of homotopy methods.
Nathaniel Whitaker, University of
Massachusetts, is being recognized for significant achievements in
broadening participation in mathematics and important contributions
to multiple fields in applied mathematics, especially fluid
mechanics.
Chao Yang, Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory, is being recognized for contributions in the
development of novel algorithms and software for eigenvalue
problems, and applications of algorithms and software to solve
challenging scientific problems.
Ulrike Meier Yang, Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory, is being recognized for pioneering work on parallel
algebraic multigrid and software, and broad impact on
high-performance computing.
Lexing Ying, Stanford University, is being
recognized for contributions in numerical analysis and scientific
computing.
Learn more about the SIAM Fellows Program.
View the full list of SIAM Fellows.
About SIAMSociety for Industrial and Applied
Mathematics (SIAM), headquartered in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is
an international society of 14,000 individual, academic, and
corporate members from 85 countries. SIAM fosters the development
of applied mathematics and computational methodologies needed in
various application areas. Through publications, conferences, and
communities like student chapters, geographic sections, and
activity groups, SIAM builds cooperation between mathematics and
the worlds of science and technology to solve real-world problems.
Learn more at siam.org.
Becky Kerner
Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics
267-992-8681
kerner@siam.org