Logo

Menu:

Latest News:

Jian Peng received Microsoft Fellowship

TTIC congratulates Jian Peng, a TTIC third-year Ph.D. student who was awarded the prestigious Microsoft Research Ph.D. Fellowship this month (February 2010). The Microsoft Research Ph.D. Fellowship is a two-year fellowship program for outstanding Ph.D. students, and supports men and women in their third and fourth years of Ph.D. graduate studies.

The fellowship award will cover 100 percent of recipient’s tuition and fees for two academic years (2010 and 2011), provide a stipend to cover living expenses while in school, a travel allowance for recipients to attend professional conferences or seminars, and offers recipients the opportunity to complete one salaried internship over the duration of the year following the award.

Jian works with TTIC’s professor Jinbo Xu on mathematical modellings in computational biology. His other research interests include machine learning and algorithms. For more information about Jian, check out his webpage.


Dr. Greg Shakhnarovich hosted a regional computer vision meeting, the 3rd Illinois Vision Workshop, on Tuesday, December 1. About fifty people from the Midwest and farther away participated. Among the institutions and companies represented, in addition to TTIC, were the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign, the University of Illinois Chicago, Northwestern, the University of Michigan, University of Missouri, UC Berkeley, Microsoft Research, Carnegie Mellon, Eastman Kodak, and Cornell.


Karen Livescu is the recipient of a grant funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), on which she is the Principal Investigator (PI). The grant is in collaboration with co-PIs Jeff Bilmes (University of Washington) and Eric Fosler-Lussier (Ohio State University). The award covers three years and focuses on statistical models of speech based on articulatory features (such as locations of the tongue, lips, and so on).


Other TTIC News

More info:

Faculty

Students

Post Doctoral

Board

LAAC

Administrative

Faculty Alumni

Faculty - Dr. Alexander Razborov
PhD - Steklov Mathematical Institute

Professor, Part Time

Alexander Razborov

Alexander Razborov received his B.S. degree from Moscow State University in 1985 and his PhD and Doctoral degrees from the Steklov Mathematical Institute in Moscow (1987 and 1991, respectively). He has been on the Steklov faculty since that. In 2000-2008 Dr. Razborov was holding a visiting position at the Institute for Advanced Study, and in 2008 he joined the CS Department at the University of Chicago as a Professor.

Dr. Razborov's primary research area is complexity theory, and he is specifically interested in circuit complexity, proof complexity, quantum computations and communication complexity. Previously he made contributions to combinatorial group theory, and currently he is also exploring some areas in discrete mathematics like extremal combinatorics.