Banner B. Project Description

B5. Biographical Sketches

B5.4 Dr. D. E. Stevenson

Dr. Dennis E. Stevenson

Degrees:

Ph.D. (Mathematical Sciences) Clemson University 1983
M.S. (Computer Science) Rutgers University 1965
A.B. (Mathematics) Eastern Michigan University 1975

Academic Experience:

1985 - Associate Professor of Computer Science
1983 - 1985 Assistant Professor of Computer Science
1980 - 1983 Lecturer in Computer Science
1977 - 1979 Part-Time Instructor
Dept. of Mathematics & Comp. Sci.
Fairleigh-Dickinson University

Other related experience:

1969 - 1980 Member of Technical Staff, Bell Telephone Laboratories
1965 - 1969 Captain, Infantry, US Army

Relevant Publications


A Canonical Form for Parallel Programs, Hypercube Concurrent Computers and Applications, pp. 536-540, (Jan 1988).

Considerations in the System Design of Scientific Supercomputer Applications, Proc. 3rd Intl. Conf. on Supercomputing III, pp. 352-357, (May 1988).

A Parallel Implementation of Neville's Algorithm, Computational Atomic and Nuclear Physics at OneGigaflop, Oak Ridge National Laboratory: April 14-16, 1988, Nuclear Science Research Conference Series, vol. 16, C. Bottcher, M. R. Strayer, and J. B. McGrory, eds., NY: Harwod Academic Publishers, pp. 221-118, (1989).

Experiences in Language Development for Distributed Computing, Hypercube Concurrent Computers and Applications, pp. 561-564, (March 1989).

Performance of Mutual Exclusion Algorithms on Hypercubes (with J. M. Westall and R. Toppur), Proc. of DMCC5, (April 1990).

Building the Computation Science Program at Clemson (with R. M. Panoff), Proceedings of Supercomputing '90.

1001 Reasons for Not Proving Your Programs Correct, Philosophy and Computers 1 (1991).

Programs as Knowledge in Computational Science and the Implications for Science, IXth Intl. Congress in Logic, Methodology & Philosophy of Science, (Aug 1991).

A Vector C and Fortran Compiler for the FPS T-Series: experiences with compiling to occam I, Software -Practice & Experience, 371-390, (May 1992).

Frontiers for Computer Science in Computational Science, Proceedings of 30th Annual ACM Southeast Conference, (April 1992).

"Science, Computational Science, and Computer Science: At A Crossroad,'' to appear in Comm. ACM.

The Clemson Computational Science Program, submitted to IEEE Computational Science and Engineering.

Honors and awards:

Provost Research Award

Sisal Scientific Computing Initiative; Cray Research & Lawrence Livermore Natl. Laboratory

Grants:

SCUREF, Undergraduate Faculty Enhancement in Computational Science, $58,958.

SCUREF, High School Involvement in Computational Science, $149,400.

North Carolina Supercomputing Center, The Carolinas Summer Institute of Computational Science, (with Drs. Robert Panoff and Larry Lee), $181,879.

Floating Point Systems, Development of the nC Programming Language, $375,000 (hardware). Clemson University Research Initiative Program, ONR Block Grant to Computer and Mathematical Sciences


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