From futrelle at ccs.neu.edu Thu Feb 9 11:18:50 2006 From: futrelle at ccs.neu.edu (Robert Futrelle) Date: Thu Feb 9 11:19:05 2006 Subject: [csu540-f05-rpf] Fwd: [Colloq] REMINDER: Distinguished Speaker Series - Robert Constable, TODAY, 3pm Message-ID: >Envelope-to: facultygroupy@ccs.neu.edu >Date: Thu, 09 Feb 2006 08:51:34 -0500 >From: Rachel Kalweit >To: colloq@lists.ccs.neu.edu >Subject: [Colloq] REMINDER: Distinguished Speaker Series - Robert Constable, > TODAY, 3pm >X-BeenThere: colloq@lists.ccs.neu.edu >Reply-To: rachelb@ccs.neu.edu >List-Id: "http://www.ccs.neu.edu/colloquium/index.html" > >List-Unsubscribe: , > >List-Archive: >List-Post: >List-Help: >List-Subscribe: , > >Sender: colloq-bounces@lists.ccs.neu.edu > >College of Computer and Information Science Colloquium >Distinguished Speaker Series >Thursday, February 9, 2006 >3:00 pm >Raytheon Amphitheater, Egan Research Center > >Speaker: >Robert L. Constable >Cornell University > >Title: >"Transforming the Academy: Knowledge Formation > in the Age of Digital Information" > >Bio: >ROBERT CONSTABLE is a graduate of Princeton University where he worked >with Alonzo Church, one of the pioneers of computer science. He did his >PhD at Wisconsin with Stephen Cole Kleene, a PhD student of Church and >another pioneer of computer science. >Professor Constable joined the Cornell faculty in 1968. He has >supervised over forty PhD students in computer science. He is known for >his work connecting programs and mathematical proofs which has led to >new ways of automating the production of reliable software. This work is >known by the slogan "proofs as programs," and it is embodied in the >Nuprl ("new pearl") theorem prover. He has written three books on this >topic as well as numerous research articles. Since 1980 he has headed a >project that uses Nuprl to design and verify software systems, instances >of which are still operational in industry and science. Currently he is >working on extending this programming method to concurrent processes, >realizing the notion of "proofs as processes." >In 1999 he became the first dean of the Faculty of Computing and >Information Science, a unit which includes the Computer Science >Department, as well as Information Science, Statistics, Computational >Biology, Graphics, and Computational Science. Dean Constable was the >department chair of Computer Science from 1993 to 1999. > > > > >_______________________________________________ >Colloq mailing list >Colloq@lists.ccs.neu.edu >https://lists.ccs.neu.edu/bin/listinfo/colloq > > > >_______________________________________________ >Colloq mailing list >Colloq@lists.ccs.neu.edu >https://lists.ccs.neu.edu/bin/listinfo/colloq