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Arnold L. Rosenberg
Distinguished University Professor |
Arnold L. Rosenberg holds the rank of Distinguished University Professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Prior to joining UMass, he was a Professor of Computer Science at Duke University from 1981 to 1986, and a Research Staff Member at the IBM Watson Research Center from 1965 to 1981. Rosenberg has held visiting positions at Yale University and the University of Toronto. Additionally, he was a Lady Davis Visiting Professor at the Technion (Israel Institute of Technology) and a Fulbright Senior Research Scholar at the University of Paris-South. Rosenberg co-directs the Theoretical Aspects of Parallel and Distributed Systems TAPADS Group ("where technology meets mathematics") at UMass, with Profs. Micah Adler and Ramesh K. Sitaraman. He co-leads the IC Scheduling Research Project with Dr. Grzegorz Malewicz.
Dr. Rosenberg's research focuses on developing algorithmic models
and techniques to deal with the new modalities of "collaborative
computing," especially within the context of Internet-based
computing. Rosenberg is the (co)author of more than 150 technical
papers on these and other topics in theoretical computer science and
discrete mathematics. He is the coauthor, with Prof. Lenwood S. Heath, of the book,
Graph Separators,
with Applications and has served as coeditor of several books.
Dr. Rosenberg is a Fellow of the ACM, a Fellow of the IEEE, and a Golden Core member of the IEEE Computer Society. He serves on several journal editorial and advisory boards.
Dr. Rosenberg received an A.B. in mathematics from Harvard College in 1962, and an A.M. and Ph.D. in applied mathematics from Harvard University, in 1963 and 1966, respectively.
In response to requests, here is a pointer to my paper "The Hardest Natural Languages" (in Postscript) (in PDF)
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Fall, 2006: CMPSCI 691FF, Algorithmics for Internet-based Computing
Spring, 2007: CMPSCI 401, An Undergraduate Introduction to the Theory of Computation (This is the Spring'06 page)