Dr. Matthew P. Coleman is a Professor Emeritus of Mathematics at Fairfield University, CT, where he taught from 1989 until his retirement in 2019. He received his Ph.D. in Applied Mathematics from Penn State University in 1989 under the guidance of Dr. Goong Chen. While at Fairfield, Dr. Coleman taught almost every undergraduate course in the curriculum, along with a number of graduate courses. In addition, he was department chair for ten years, did a brief stint as associate dean (though he was happy when it was over!), and was a visitor at Texas A&M, NYU, and National Taiwan University.
Dr. Coleman’s main research area is Control Theory and, more specifically, the vibration and damping of distributed systems. He has published numerous articles in this area, while collaborating with people from numerous universities, in mathematics, physics, and various branches of engineering. In addition, he has authored the first two editions of the textbook "An Introduction to Partial Differential Equations with MATLAB".
Dr. Vladislav Bukshtynov is an Assistant Professor at the Dept. of Mathematical Sciences of Florida Institute of Technology (Florida Tech) since 2015 after finishing his 3-year postdoctoral term at the Dept. of Energy Resources Engineering at Stanford University and having his Ph.D. degree in Computational Engineering & Science at McMaster University in 2012. As a Professor, he actively teaches and advises students from various fields: applied and computational math, operations research, and different engineering majors. His teaching experience includes Multivariable Calculus, Honors ODE/PDE courses for undergrad students, Applied Discrete Math, and Linear/Nonlinear Optimization for senior undergrads and graduates. As a researcher, Dr. Bukshtynov leads his research group with several dynamic scientific directions and ongoing collaborations for various cross-institutional and interdisciplinary projects. His current interests lie in but are not limited to the areas of applied and computational mathematics focusing on combining theoretical and numerical methods for various problems in computational/numerical optimization, control theory, and inverse problems.
Besides being an expert in applying numerous optimization techniques, either analytically or numerically, Dr. Bukshtynov’s expertise includes PDE-based modeling for various engineering applications. For example, he pioneered system reduction techniques using a 4D VAR method and earned the 2012 Cecil Graham Doctoral Dissertation Award from Canadian Applied and Industrial Mathematics Society (CAIMS). At Stanford, he was part of a large collaborative research project to develop efficient computational and optimization algorithms for solving oil field management problems for petroleum reservoir models. At Florida Tech, Dr. Bukshtynov develops novel techniques suitable for reconstructing medical/computational images via solving inverse problems using multiscale simulation and optimization, optimal solution space multilevel parameterization, dynamical re-parameterization, and numerical methods for regularization. In addition, he has profound expertise in HPC programming. His particular strength is his ability to create hybrid computational frameworks by combining and tuning for optimal joint work scientific software of various types. As one of many examples, Dr. Bukshtynov is an author and active developer of EIT-OPT, an all-purpose open-structure multifaceted optimization framework for reconstructing biomedical images and early cancer detection via electrical impedance tomography. In 2023, Dr. Bukshtynov published a book "Computational Optimization: Success in Practice" with CRC Press to share his extensive experience in practical aspects of computational optimization with graduate students of math, computer science, engineering, and all who explore optimization techniques at different levels for educational or research purposes.