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Smith
Boasts Six INFORMS Fellows

Michael Ball |

Larry Bodin |

Michael Fu |

Howard Frank |

Saul Gass |

Bruce Golden |
Michael Fu, professor of management
science, and Lawrence Bodin, professor
emeritus of management science, have
been named as fellows for 2008 by the
Institute for Operations Research and
the Management Sciences (INFORMS). This
singular honor, awarded to about 2
percent of the organization’s 11,000
members, has now been held by six
members of the Smith School’s decision
and information technologies department.
In addition to Fu and Bodin, Saul Gass,
professor emeritus of management
science; Michael Ball, Orkand Professor
of Management Science; Bruce Golden,
France-Merrick Chair in Management
Science; and Dean Howard Frank are past
INFORMS fellows.
INFORMS Fellows are recognized for
their significant contributions to the
advancement of the field of operations
research, which uses data and
mathematical techniques to solve
specific business problems. Gass, a
pioneer in the field, helped develop the
technique of linear programming, a
simple but powerful tool that allowed
researchers to create computer programs
to model a large range of tremendously
complex business problems.
Gass influenced succeeding
generations of researchers at the Smith
School, including Lawrence Bodin,
Michael Fu, Bruce Golden, and Michael
Ball.
Bodin consulted with major delivery
companies to develop models and
algorithms to find the solution of
routing problems over geographic data
bases, particularly the problems that
are encountered when the solution has to
be embedded on top of a street network.
The systems he helped develop are being
used by some of the major delivery
companies, newspaper delivery companies,
public utilities and sanitation
companies. "I am very pleased to have
been named an INFORMS Fellow," says
Bodin. "There are only about 200 of
INFORMS' 11,000 members who have been
named INFORMS Fellows. I feel it is a
wonderful honor to be given this
recognition for my accomplishments."
Fu, who was recently named a
University of Maryland Distinguished
Scholar-Teacher and holds a joint
appointment with the Institute for
Systems Research and an affiliate
appointment with the Department of
Electrical and Computer Engineering,
both in the Clark School of Engineering,
works on simulation modeling and
analysis, production/inventory control,
applied probability and queueing theory,
with application to manufacturing and
finance. He recently worked with
the FDIC using Monte Carlo simulation to
estimate default risk for its 6,000
member banks in order to set future
premium levels to charge for FDIC
insurance. “I feel extremely honored and
grateful to be one of the 30 INFORMS
Fellows selected worldwide this year,”
says Fu.
Ball, who also holds a joint
appointment within the Institute for
Systems Research (ISR) in the Clark
School of Engineering, works in the area
of network optimization and integer
programming, particularly as applied to
problems in transportation systems and
supply chain management. His research
has had a significant influence on both
the policy and practice of the Federal
Aviation Administration, where his
models for optimizing takeoffs and
landings at airports found an
enthusiastic welcome.
Golden’s research interests include
heuristic search, combinatorial
optimization, networks, and applied
operations research. He recently worked
with the University of Maryland
Hospital’s cardiac surgery department to
optimize the number of beds in the
intensive care unit, where there is one
nurse per bed, and the remote telemetry
unit, where less staff is required. The
model was able to save the hospital
millions of dollars, and get people into
needed surgery more quickly.
Howard Frank, who is also a member of
the National Academy of Engineering,
earned his INFORMS Fellow award by
virtue of research begun during his
early academic career at the University
of California at Berkeley and further
explored during his subsequent career in
both the private and public sectors. His
research examined the theory of large
scale network analysis and design and
the development of packet-switching, one
of the key innovations that made the
modern Internet possible.
Taken together, the research
represented by the Smith School’s
INFORMS Fellows show the strength of
Smith’s DIT faculty and the relevance of
our research across many industries. And
it also demonstrates why the Smith
School has achieved international
recognition as a research powerhouse and
an influential center of ideas and
innovation.
▓ Rebecca
Winner, Office of Marketing
Communications, & Loretta Goodridge, MBA
Candidate 2008 |