Contributors to this Issue
1982; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 20; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/03155986.1982.11731857
ISSN1916-0615
AutoresNívio Ziviani, Frank Wm. Tompa, Eshrat Arjomandi, Michel Nedzela, Yves Balcer, Peter Bell, Christian Lardinois, Christian Lardinois, W.K. Grassmann, Moshe Friedman,
ResumoClick to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Additional informationNotes on contributorsNivio ZivianiNivio Ziviani is an assistant professor in the Departamento de Ciencia da Computagao of the Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil, where he has been since 1972. He received the B SC degree in mechanical engineering from the Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais in 1971 and the M SC in computer science from the Pontificia Universidade Catolica doRio de Janeiro in 1976. He is currently a PH D candidate in computer science at the University of Waterloo. His research interests include the analysis of algorithms, computational complexity, and data structures.Frank TompaFrank Tompa has been on the faculty of the Department of Computer Science at the university of Waterloo since 1974. Prior to that time, he received both the sc B and sc M degrees in applied mathematics from Brown University in 1970 and the PH D from the Universityof Toronto in 1974. Throughout his career his primary research and teaching interests have been in the fields of data structures, programming languages, and data bases, with particular emphasis on the description of data at various interface levels and on the selection of efficient storage structures. Recently he has become associated with theUniversity of Waterloo’s Computer Communications Network Group, through which he is working on the design of improved support software for Telidon, the Canadian videotex system. Eshrat ArjomandiEshrat Arjomandi graduated from the University of Toronto with a PHD (Computer Science) in 1975. During 1975 she was employed as a visiting assistant professor at the University of Toronto. She is currently an associate professor in the Department of Computer Science at York University, where she has been since 1976.Michel NedzelaMichel Nedzela est Doyen adjoint de la Faculté d’Administration de l’Université d’Ottawa. II est diplômé de l’Ecole Centrale des Arts et Manufactures de Paris et de Stanford University. Ses principaux domaines de recherche sont la modélisation des processus sociaux et les applications des applications des processus stochastiques. II est l’auteur d’un volume de recherche opérationnelle publié aux Presses de l’Université du Québec.Yves BalcerYves Balcer, who holds both a PH D in Operations Research (Stanford University) and a PH D in Economics (Massachussets Institute of Technology), is currently assistant professor of economics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and research associate at the Institute for Research on Poverty. He has served as an adviser to the federal Task Force on Pension Policy (Ottawa) and the Royal Commission on the Status of Pensions (Toronto). He as published several articles in the Journal of Economic Theory, Journal of Public Economics, Operations Research and Journal of Risk and Insurance, and his current research interests are social insurance, economics of uncertainty, taxation, and private pensions.Peter BellPeter C. Bell is Assistant Professor of Management Science at the School of Business Administration, The University of Western Ontario. He received a BA (and MA) from Oxford University and was awarded MBA and PH D degrees from the Graduate School of Business at the University of Chicago, where he specialized in management science and economics. His published work includes articles in the Journal of the Operational Research Society, Operations Research, Management Today, and the INFOR Speciallssue — Practice and Implementation (with R. Knight and H. Lane). His current research interests includecapacity expansion problems, multistage productionprocesses, forecasting and operational research in banking, and he is a member of CORS, ORS, TIMS, and AEA.Christian LardinoisChristian Lardinois is conducting research at the Centre de Recherche sur Ies Transports, Université de Montreal. Born in Belgium on 21 August 1951, he received a civilengineering diploma from the Polytechnic School of Mons, Belgium. He completed a master degree,in 1977, and a PH D, in 1980, at the Faculté de l’Aménagement of the University of Montreal. His current interests deal with operational research and mathematical models in urban-regional planning and in energy systems analysis.Christian LardinoisChristian Lardinois est attaché de recherche à la Centre de Recherche sur Ies Transports, Université de Montréal. Né en Belgique le 21 août 1951, il y a obtenu en 1973 un diplôme d’ingénieur civil à la Faculté Polytechnique de Mons. II a terminé ses étudesde maîtrise (1977) et de PH D (1980) en aménagement à l’Université de Montréal. Ses travaux portent sur la recherche opérationnelle et les modéles mathématiques en planification urbaine et régionale, ainsi que dans le domaine de l’analyse des systémes relatifs à l’énergie.W.K. GrassmannW.K. Grassmann received his PH D in Operations Research at the University of Zurich, Switzerland. After his studies he held a position at Swissair, the Swiss flag carrier, where he worked on problems in forecasting, inventory control, and queueing. Many of his suggestions were later implemented and some are still in use. In 1969 he joined the Faculty of the University of Saskatchewan as an Associate Professor of Computational Science, a position he still holds. He has written a book entitled Stochastic Systems for Management, which was published by American Elsevier. He has also written numerous papers on queueing theory and related areas, which have appeared or scheduled to appear in Operations Research, INFOR, the Journal of the Operations Research Society, the International Journal of Management Science (Omega), the European Journal of Operations Research, and other journals.His current research areas are queueing theory and simulation.Moshe FriedmanMoshe F. Friedman (“Inventory Lot Size Models with General Time Dependent Demand and Carrying Cost Functions”) is Professor in the Management Science Department of the University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida. Dr Friedman received his BA, MA, and PH D in Statistics and Operations Research from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He spent a year as a post-doctorate fellow with IBM Research in San Jose, CA, and was affiliated with Arizona State University and the Operations Research Center of Bell Laboratories before joining the University of Miami. Dr Friedman has published in all major professional journals of Operation Research (Management Science, Operations Research, OperationalResearch, European Journal of Operations Research, SIAM, Transportation Research) andis an associate editor of Computers and Operations Research and guest editor of its special issue “Recent Developments in Inventory Theory.” He engaged extensively in professional consulting to institutions like the Chase Manhattan Bank and IBM Brazil, among others. His current professional interests are in inventory theory, transportation problems, mathematical programming, and computer applications.Dr Friedman is a member of ORSA and TIMS.
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