Aaron Denney, Ph.D. student (in the Department of Physics and Astronomy). Working on quantum computation.
Haixia Jia, Ph.D. student. Working on hard instances of satisfiability problems. M.S. with distinction, 2005, and recipient of a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship.
Vamsi Kalapala, M.S., graduated in 2005. Thesis: Results on Phase Transitions and Scale Invariance. Now at the American Museum of Natural History.
Vishal Sanwalani, Ph.D., graduated in 2005. Thesis: Applications of the Probabilistic Method to Random Graphs. Now a postdoc at the University of Waterloo.
Douglas Strain, M.S., graduated in 2005.
Manuel Lameiras Campagnolo, Ph.D., graduated in 2001. Thesis: Computational Complexity of Real-valued Recursive Functions and Analog Circuits. Now faculty at the Technical University of Lisbon.
Qian Liang, M.S., graduated in Spring 2003. Thesis: The Evolution of Mulan: Some Studies in Game-Tree Pruning and Evaluation Functions in the Game of Amazons. Now at Microsoft.