Millennium Magazine_11th Ed

245 Millennium - A Marquis Who’s Who Magazine SCIENCES, PHARMACEUTICALS AND BIOTECHNOLOGY PROFESSOR New Jersey Medical School, Rutgers University Newark, NJ RESEARCH STAFF MEMBER IBM Monroe Township, NJ EMANUEL GOLDMAN, PHD Dr. Fred G. Gustavson received three degrees from RPI and worked at IBM Research from 1963 to 2009. He earned 12 Outstanding Awards for InnovativeTechnical Achievements, is an IEEE fellow, was granted 20 US patents, and had 112 papers published in refereed journals. His thesis and seminal paper on the “third integral of motion” in 1966 applied the famous Kolmogorov Arnold Moser theory. He started research doing pioneering work in Sparse Matrices. In 1980, he became manager of algorithms and architecture at Research. His group found novel ways to compute elementary functions on IBM S/370 machines; their approach became state-of-the-art. Dr. Gustavson’s group then worked on algorithms for the Engineering and Scientific Subroutine Library, got highest performance on IBM computers having registers, cache, and memories, and invented cache blocking. They next devised parallel algorithms for shared memory and IBMRISCmachines. In 1997, he started researching recursive algorithms and new storage layouts of matrices that got better performance than state-of-the-art codes typified by the LAPACK library. With colleagues, he produced new algorithms for Cholesky, dense LU with partial pivoting, QR factorization, least squares and symmetric indefinite factorization. In retirement, he found novel ways of teachingmath and facts to grades K-6. FRED G. GUSTAVSON, PHD Dr. Emanuel Goldman joined the New Jersey School of Medicine at Rutgers University in 1979, first serving as an assistant professor of microbiology. Advancing to associate professor in 1983 and full professor in 1993, he has served in the Department of Microbiology, Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics. Drawing upon over 45 years of experience, he previously served UC Irvine as an associate in medical microbiology and assistant research microbiologist. He holds a PhD in biochemistry from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and completed fellowships in viral oncology and pathology at Harvard Medical School. Sitting on the editorial boards of Applied Environmental Microbiology and Protein Expression and Purification, Dr. Goldman authored “Gene Expression: Lessons from Bacteria with Comparisons to Eukaryotes.” He is co-editor of “Practical Handbook of Microbiology,” now in its fourth edition. An author/co-author of over 75 publications, he has also submitted scientific research papers, including on the transmission of COVID-19. He received a 2017 Celebration of Scholarship Award from Rutgers University Libraries and 2002 Arthur Kahn Memorial Award from the American Association of University Professors.

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTQ5NDA2