School of Computer Science

http://www.scs.gatech.edu

Hassan Ekbatani

Research Scientist II

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Rocky Dunlap

Research Scientist II

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George Baah

Post Doctorate

Email:
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Rocky Dunlap

Research Scientist II

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Carlos Batist

Financial Admin III

Office:
266 Ferst Drive, Rm. 3415
Email:
cbatist [at] cc [dot] gatech [dot] edu (Send Email)

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Benjamin Powell

Financial Manager II

Office:
KACB 3414
Email:
bpowell [at] cc [dot] gatech [dot] edu (Send Email)

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Richard Lipton

Professor and Frederick G. Storey Chair in Computing

Biography

A member of the National Academy of Engineering, Dr. Lipton's professional career has been primarily in academia. He has held faculty appointments at Yale University, the University of California at Berkeley and Princeton University before joining the faculty in the college of Computing at Georgia Tech. In addition to his computer science academic appointments, Dr. Lipton was the founding director of a computer science research laboratory for the Panasonic Corporation and is currently a chief consulting scientist at Telcordia (formerly known as Bellcore).

 

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Holly Rush

Financial Admin III

Biography

Responsible for project management for School of Computer Science projects:

  • Manage Sponsored, GTF and other related projects for Computer Science faculty
  • Proposal development and submission
  • Reconciliation of projects related to Computer Science faculty
  • Pcard Coordinator for School of Computer Science 

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Milena Mihail

Associate Professor

Biography

In the late 1980s, Dr. Mihail was one of a handful of researchers that pioneered the theory of rapidly mixing Markov chains, fundamental stochastic processes in probability theory with applications throughout science and technology. In a pathbreaking departure from traditional "asymptotic" mathematical analysis (where does the process converge), theoretical computer science raises the question of "mixing rates" (how fast does the process converge). There are two combinatorial techniques to quantify convergence rates: "coupling" and expansion or conductance." Dr.

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Marilyn Wolf

Adjunct Professor, ECE

Biography

Marilyn Wolf received her Bachelor's, Master's, and Doctoral degrees in electrical engineering from Stanford University in 1980, 1981, and 1984, respectively. She was with AT&T Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, N.J. from 1984 to 1989 and was with Princeton University from 1989 until 2007. In July 2007, Dr. Wolf joined Georgia Tech as the Rhesa "Ray" S. Farmer, Jr. Distinguished Chair in Embedded Computing Systems and Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar.

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