Students, past and present
Ph.D. students supervised:
-
Kirk McMullan 2006 (left school
without degree)
-
James Devin Henson, USC 2006 "Optimization
problems from genome sequence rearrangements"
-
Henry Chen, USC 2001 (left school
without degree)
-
Jason Burns,
USC 2000, "Graph subdivision problems"
(Ph.D. in Mathematics MIT, 2007)
-
Szilard Bokros,
USC 1999, "Implementing the Short
Quartet Methods"
(currently he is working at a private
company)
-
Li Chong, USC 1998,
"Minimum spanning trees and more: algorithms and analysis"
-
Csaba Szász, Eötvös
Loránd University, 1996 "Tournaments"
-
Gábor
Hetyei,
Eötvös Loránd
University, 1988, "Catalan numbers"
(currently he is a faculty of
the University of North Carolina at
Charlotte)
-
József Solymosi,
Eötvös Loránd
University, 1988,
"Combinatorial Problems in Finite Ramsey Theory"
(currently he is an Assistant Professor at the
University of British Columbia )
-
Bernd Radtke,
JATE, now University of
Szeged, 1985,
"Flow and circulation problems: effective algorithms and combinatorial
consequences"
-
Lenke Körmöczi,
JATE, now University of
Szeged, 1984,
"Expander graphs in the theory of algorithms"
-
Zoltán
Blázsik,
JATE, now University of
Szeged, 1984,
"Interconnection of probability theory and combinatorics",
(currently he is a faculty at the University of Szeged)
Substantial joint research with Ph. D. students of others
(resulting in publications though formally I did not
supervise them):
-
Yong Zhang
(Ph.D. in CSE, 2005,
USC), (currently he is an
Associate Professor at the
Eastern Mennonite University,
-
Éva Czabarka
(Ph.D. in Math, 1998,
USC), (she is an
Assistant Professor at the
Department of Mathematics of the
University of South Carolina,
earlier at the
Department of Mathematics of the
College of William & Mary),
-
Ali A.
Kooshesh (Ph.D. in Comp. Sci., 1990,
University of New Mexico),
(currently he is a faculty at Sonoma State University)
-
Joseph McCanna (Ph.D. in Math, 1990,
University of New Mexico),
(was a faculty at
Western Michigan University,
Kalamazoo, currently musician)
-
Thomas Porter (Ph.D. in Math, 1990,
University of New Mexico),
(currentely he is a Professor at
Southern Illinois University at
Carbondale