|
Thomas Lindblad got his Ph.D. at the University of Stockholm in 1974, became associate professor two years later. Dr. Lindblad started his research career in nuclear structure and particle physics with a special interest in detector systems. He soon became the head of the section for Measuring Techniques and Information Processing at the Manne Siegbahn Institute of Physics. He was a frequent visitor to laboratories in Oak Ridge, Berkeley, Orsay, Grenoble and Darmstadt. Later professor Lindblad took a special interest in teaching, started Environmental Physics at the Royal Institute of Technology, Department of Physics, where he also was the director of undergraduate studies for several years. During this time his research interests focused on sensor techniques of different kinds and feature extraction of torrent data flows. A special interest was always the use of neural network hardware with applications to these fields and to diagnostics and environmental monitoring.
Jason Kinser received a D.Sc. in Optics and Electro-Optical Systems in 1994 and an M.S. in Physics in 1987. He joined Alabama A&M in 1994 as an associate research professor as a founding member of the Center for Applied Optical Sciences. He joined George Mason University in 1997 and is now an associate professor in the School of Physics and Computational Sciences at GMU. He has been a visiting scientist at the Royal Institute of Technology (Stockholm) and the Korean University (Seoul). He has also been a visiting scientist at Lawrence-Berkeley National Lab and an external examiner at the University of Mauritius. His research interests started with optical and image information processing including pulse image processing and now extends into processing of data existing in multiple domains.
|