Professor J. Ben Rosen
Computer Science Dept.
UCSD and University of Minnesota.
Parallel algorithms, global optimization, with
applications to computational biology.
I have done extensive research on large-scale numerical
optimization methods and applications. My current research
interests include parallel algorithms for global optimization
with applications to computational biology. These applications
are homology-based prediction of protein fragment and fold
structure from sequence, and ligand-protein docking based on
the global minimization of an energy function. I am also doing
research on structure preserving approximation and parameter
estimation in nonlinear systems, based on minimizing the error
in the one, two or infinity norm.
My current positions are
- Professor Emeritus, Univ. of Minnesota
- Adjunct Professor, Computer Science and Engineering, UCSD
- Senior Fellow at the San Diego Supercomputer Center
- Faculty Member of the UCSD Graduate Bioinformatics Program
Earlier Positions include:
- Manhattan Project (1944-47)
- Postdoc Fellow, Forrestal Center, Princeton University (1952-55)
- Head, Applied Math Dept., Shell Development Co.(1955-62)
- Visiting Professor, Computer Science Dept., Stanford University (1962-64)
- Professor, CSci Dept., Univ. of Wisconsin (1964-71),
Chair 1965-68.
- Professor, CSci Dept., Univ. of Minnesota (1971-92),
Chair 1972-81.
I received a BS in Electrical Engineering from Johns Hopkins Univ.
in 1943, and a PhD in Applied Math from Columbia Univ.
in 1952.
Click here for a list of recent papers.
Click here for Jacobs School of
Engineering Biography.
e-mail: jbrosen@cs.ucsd.edu
This Page Last Updated February 5, 2004