Plenary Speakers
Susanne C. Brenner, Louisiana State University
TITLE: DD-LOD
Dr. Brenner earned a Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of Michigan, 1988. She is a Louisiana State University System Boyd Professor. She holds a joint appointment with the Department of Mathematics and Center for Computation and Technology (CCT). At CCT she serves as the Associate Director for Academic Affairs.
During 2021-2022 she served as President of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM). Currently she is serving a one year term as Past President. In 2005 she was awarded a Humboldt-Forschungspreis (Humboldt Research Award) from the German Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. In 2011 she was awarded the AWM-SIAM Sonia Kovalevsky Lecture Prize. She is a SIAM Fellow (Class of 2010), AMS Fellow (Inaugural Class 2013), AAAS Fellow (2012), and AWM Fellow (2020).
Currently she serves as Managing Editor of Mathematics of Computation. She also serves on the editorial boards of the SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis, Numerische Mathematik, Numerical Algorithms, Electronic Transactions on Numerical Analysis, the Journal of Numerical Mathematics, and Computational Methods in Applied Mathematics. Dr. Brenner is also the Editor-in-Chief of the SIAM Classics in Applied Mathematics book series, all while serving on the the SIAM and AMS Councils.
Research interests include: numerical analysis, scientific computing, finite element methods, multigrid and domain decomposition methods, computational mechanics, computational electromagnetics, variational inequalities, and PDE constrained optimization.
Marta D'Elia, Pasteur Labs
TITLE: Scientific Machine Learning in industrial pipelines: methods and examples.
Dr. Marta D'Elia earned a Ph.D. in applied mathematics at Emory University, 2011. She is a Principal Scientist at Pasteur Labs and an Adjunct Professor at Stanford ICME.Previously, she was a Research Scientist at Meta and a Principal Member of the Technical Staff at Sandia National Laboratories, California.
Dr. D'Elia's work deals with Scientific Machine Learning, Optimization and Optimal Design, and Nonlocal and Fractional Problems.
Robert Kirby, Baylor University
TITLE: High-level software for numerical PDE
Dr Kirby earned a Ph.D. from the University of Texas at Austin, 2000 and is Professor of Mathematics at Baylor University.
Dr. Kirby's work focuses on finite elements for partial differential equations, preconditioners for multiphysics problems, mathematical software, multicore computing.
Maxim A. Olshanskii, University of Houston
TITLE: Unfitted Finite Element Methods for PDEs Posed on Surfaces
Dr. Olshanskii received his Ph.D. degree from Moscow State University in 1996 and a second doctorate (Habilitation) in Mathematics from the Institute of Numerical Mathematics, Russian Academy of Science in 2006. He is currently a professor of Mathematics at the University of Houston. He also holds an adjunct professorship at Emory University. Until 2012, he was a professor at the Department of Mathematics and Mechanics at Moscow State University.
His research interests lie in numerical analysis and scientific computing, with a focus on applications to fluid problems, interface and free boundary problems, geometric PDEs, reduced order modeling, and cardiovascular models. He has been recognized with research awards from multiple agencies in the USA, Russia, and the European Union.
Dr. Olshanskii serves as the Editor in Chief of the Journal of Numerical Mathematics and is a member of the editorial boards of the journals Computational Methods in Applied Mathematics and European Journal of Mathematics.
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