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You are here: Home / Research / Ph.D. Theses

Ph.D. Dissertations by ICS Students

2012

  • Computational Methods and Algorithms for Phage Metagenomic Data Analysis, Mahdi Belcaid, chair: Guylaine Poisson

2011

  • A Framework for Efficient Creation and Customization of High Level Program Visualizations, John Wu, chair: Jan Stelovsky

    2010

    • Dynamic Fractional Resource Scheduling for Cluster Platforms, Mark Stillwell, chair: Henri Casanova
    • A Personalized Recommender Agent for the World Wide Web - A Semantic Perspective, Pei-Chia Chang, chair: Luz Quiroga

      2009

      • Overcoming the Difficulties Created by the Volatile Nature of Desktop Grids Through Understanding, Prediction and Redundancy, Joshua Wingstrom, chair: Henri Casanova
      • Measuring and Extending LR(1) Parser Generation, Xin Chen, chair: David Pager

        2008

        • Network Threat Detection Utilizing Adaptive and Innate Immune System Metaphors, Robert Fanelli, chair: Kim Binsted
        • Automated Inference of Software Development Behaviors: Design, Implementation and Validation of Zorro for Test-Driven Development, Hongbing Kou, chair: Philip Johnson
        • Bayesian Learning Framework with Kernel-Imbedded Gaussian Processes Applied to Microarray Analysis, Xin Zhao, chair: Guylaine Poisson

          2007

          • Computable Social Communication, David Pautler, chair: David Chin -- (abstract)
          • A Rapid, Information Centric, Development (RAPID) Framework to Construct Multi-Lingual Textual Communication Systems in Support of Disaster Relief Operations, Matt Chapman, chair: David Chin -- (abstract)
          • Incorporating Indexicality and Contingency into the Design of Representations for Computer-Mediated Collaboration, Nathan Dwyer, chair: Dan Suthers -- (abstract)

            2006

            • Improving Software Development Process and Project Management with Software Project Telemetry, Qin Zhang, chair: Philip Johnson -- (abstract)
            • Eventstream: Software to Facilitate Research in Program Comprehension, Christoph Aschwanden, chair: Martha Crosby

              2005

              • Automated Translation of Dynamic Programming Problems to JAVA code and their Solution via an Intermediate Petri Net Representatio, Holger Mauch, chair: Art Lew
                Research in a nutshell

                The department has over 30 faculty members, conducting research in areas including: algorithms, artificial intelligence, robotics, biomedical informatics and bioinformatics, computational neuroscience, computer vision, databases, high performance computing, human-computer interaction, library and information science, machine learning, mathematical finance, mobile and ubiquitous computing, renewable energy, security and information assurance, and software engineering.


                The department brings in an average of $3-4 million dollars of extramural funding per year.