1991-1993 Catalog - Catalogs - West Virginia University
1991-1993 Catalog - Catalogs - West Virginia University 1991-1993 Catalog - Catalogs - West Virginia University
No more than six hours of 1 90-1 99 course work may be used to fulfill the 35- hour,upper-division requirement in statistics, computer science, and mathematics; no morethan 10 hours of 190-199 course work in any field may be used to fulfill the 60-hour,upper-division requirement.Recommended Electives: Any course listed above and Stat. 190, 195, 361, 362;C.S. 26, 56, 76, 126; Math. 18, 113, 163, 213, 224, 251, 252, 255; E.E. 201; I.E. 250.Minor in StatisticsAny student admitted to a degree program in the College of Arts and Sciencesmay take a minor in Statistics by satisfying the following:• Completion of at least three hours of statistics theory (Stat. 261 or 361 ).• Completion of an additional 12 hours of statistical theory or applications selectedfrom among Stat. 201, 212, 213, 221, 231, 262 or 362 and 341.• All grades must be C or higher in order to satisfy these requirements. Note thatMath. 1 6 is a prerequisite for Stat. 261 ; Math. 1 7 is a prerequisite for Stat. 361FacultyProfessorsDonald F. Butcher, Ph.D. (Iowa St. U.). Chair, Statistics and Computer Science.Design and analysis of experiments, Monte Carlo simulation, Regression analysis.Erdogan Gunel, Ph.D. (SUNY-Buffalo). Statistics. Bayesian inference, Categoricaldata analysis, Biometry.E. James Harner, Ph.D. (Cornell U.). Statistics. Robust estimation, Statisticalcomputation, Modelling observational studies.Franz X. Hiergeist, Ph.D. (U. Pitt). Computer Science. Mathematics of computation.Wayne A. Muth, Ph.D. (Iowa St. U.). Associate Chair, Computer Science. Simulation,Mathematical modeling, Computer performance.Y. V. Ramana Reddy, Ph.D. (WVU). Computer Science. Artificial intelligence,Knowledge based simulation, Computer graphics.William V. Thayne, Ph.D. (U. III.). Statistics. Statistical genetics, Regression analysis.Edwin C. Townsend, Ph.D. (Cornell U.). Statistics. Linear models, Regressionanalysis.George E. Trapp, Ph.D. (Carnegie-Mellon U.). Computer Science. Numerical analysis,Mathematical programming, Network models.Stanley Wearden, Ph.D. (Cornell U.). Statistics. Biometrics, Statistical genetics,Population biology.Associate ProfessorsJohn M. Atkins, Ph.D. (U. Pitt). Computer Science. Design of database managementsystems, Analysis of algorithms, Mathematics of computation.Daniel M. Chilko, M.S. (Rutgers U.). Statistics. Statistical computing, Computergraphics.William H. Dodrill, M.S. (Columbia U.). Computer Science. Microcomputerapplications, Applications in medicine.Shirley M. Dowdy, Ph.D. (U. Notre Dame). Assoc. Dean, Acad. Affairs; Statistics.Sampling, Statistical methods, Software for statistical education.D. Michael Henry, Ph.D. (TCU). Computer Science. Databases, Cryptography, Microinterfacing.Gerald R. Hobos, Jr., Ph.D. (Kans. St. U.). Statistics. Nonparametric statistics,Regression analysis.James D. Mooney, Ph.D. (Ohio St. U.). Computer Science. Operating systems, Textprocessing, Computer architecture.Frances L. Van Scoy, Ph.D. (U. Va.). Computer Science. Programming languages andcompilers, Software development environments, Parallel processing.144 College of Arts and Sciences
Assistant ProfessorsMagdalena Niewiadomska-Bugaj, Ph.D. (Adam Mickiewicz U., Poznan). Statistics.Discriminate analysis, Statistical expert systems, Statistical computing.David A. Eichmann, Ph.D. (U. Iowa). Computer Science, Database systems,Programming languages, Software development environments.Raghu R. Karinthi, Ph.D. (U. Md.). Computer Science. Solid modelling, Automaticfeature extraction, Al process planning.Sitaraman Muralidharan, Ph.D. (Ohio St. U.). Computer Science. Softwareengineering, Data structures, Software reuse.Sumrtra M. Reddy, Ph.D. (WVU). Computer Science. Knowledge representation, Ada.Kankanahalli Srinivas, Ph.D. (N.M. St.U.). Computer Science. Artificial intelligence,Connectionism/Neural networks, Parallel processing.Visiting Assistant ProfessorAsesh K. Das, Ph.D. (Visua-Bharati U.) Computer Science. Expert systems, Intelligenttutoring and knowledge-based simulation.LecturersAlan Butcher, M.S. (WVU). Computer Science. Knowledge based simulation.James Foltz, B.S. (WVU). Computer Science. Systems programming.Winsome D. Mundy, M.S. (WVU). Computer Science. Software engineering.Ravi Raman, M.S. (WVU). Computer Science. Rule based programming.Statistics 145
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- Page 121 and 122: 9C. Blaine Cecil, Ph.D. (WVU). Adju
- Page 123 and 124: W. Reynolds McLeod, Ph.D. (U. Md.).
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- Page 129 and 130: Joy B. Easton, J.D. (WVU). Emerita.
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- Page 175 and 176: HoursArt 200 Studio Major 24Art 100
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No more than six hours of 1 90-1 99 course work may be used to fulfill the 35- hour,upper-division requirement in statistics, computer science, and mathematics; no morethan 10 hours of 190-199 course work in any field may be used to fulfill the 60-hour,upper-division requirement.Recommended Electives: Any course listed above and Stat. 190, 195, 361, 362;C.S. 26, 56, 76, 126; Math. 18, 113, 163, 213, 224, 251, 252, 255; E.E. 201; I.E. 250.Minor in StatisticsAny student admitted to a degree program in the College of Arts and Sciencesmay take a minor in Statistics by satisfying the following:• Completion of at least three hours of statistics theory (Stat. 261 or 361 ).• Completion of an additional 12 hours of statistical theory or applications selectedfrom among Stat. 201, 212, 213, 221, 231, 262 or 362 and 341.• All grades must be C or higher in order to satisfy these requirements. Note thatMath. 1 6 is a prerequisite for Stat. 261 ; Math. 1 7 is a prerequisite for Stat. 361FacultyProfessorsDonald F. Butcher, Ph.D. (Iowa St. U.). Chair, Statistics and Computer Science.Design and analysis of experiments, Monte Carlo simulation, Regression analysis.Erdogan Gunel, Ph.D. (SUNY-Buffalo). Statistics. Bayesian inference, Categoricaldata analysis, Biometry.E. James Harner, Ph.D. (Cornell U.). Statistics. Robust estimation, Statisticalcomputation, Modelling observational studies.Franz X. Hiergeist, Ph.D. (U. Pitt). Computer Science. Mathematics of computation.Wayne A. Muth, Ph.D. (Iowa St. U.). Associate Chair, Computer Science. Simulation,Mathematical modeling, Computer performance.Y. V. Ramana Reddy, Ph.D. (WVU). Computer Science. Artificial intelligence,Knowledge based simulation, Computer graphics.William V. Thayne, Ph.D. (U. III.). Statistics. Statistical genetics, Regression analysis.Edwin C. Townsend, Ph.D. (Cornell U.). Statistics. Linear models, Regressionanalysis.George E. Trapp, Ph.D. (Carnegie-Mellon U.). Computer Science. Numerical analysis,Mathematical programming, Network models.Stanley Wearden, Ph.D. (Cornell U.). Statistics. Biometrics, Statistical genetics,Population biology.Associate ProfessorsJohn M. Atkins, Ph.D. (U. Pitt). Computer Science. Design of database managementsystems, Analysis of algorithms, Mathematics of computation.Daniel M. Chilko, M.S. (Rutgers U.). Statistics. Statistical computing, Computergraphics.William H. Dodrill, M.S. (Columbia U.). Computer Science. Microcomputerapplications, Applications in medicine.Shirley M. Dowdy, Ph.D. (U. Notre Dame). Assoc. Dean, Acad. Affairs; Statistics.Sampling, Statistical methods, Software for statistical education.D. Michael Henry, Ph.D. (TCU). Computer Science. Databases, Cryptography, Microinterfacing.Gerald R. Hobos, Jr., Ph.D. (Kans. St. U.). Statistics. Nonparametric statistics,Regression analysis.James D. Mooney, Ph.D. (Ohio St. U.). Computer Science. Operating systems, Textprocessing, Computer architecture.Frances L. Van Scoy, Ph.D. (U. Va.). Computer Science. Programming languages andcompilers, Software development environments, Parallel processing.144 College of Arts and Sciences