Difference between revisions of "People/Nikos-Chrisochoides"

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[[File:Nikos_CoS_ODU_2020.png|250px|thumb|left|frameless|CRTC Principal Investigator: Nikos Chrisochoides]]
 
[[File:Nikos_CoS_ODU_2020.png|250px|thumb|left|frameless|CRTC Principal Investigator: Nikos Chrisochoides]]
  
<b> Short Bio </b>: Nikos Chrisochoides is the Richard T. Cheng Endowed Chair Professor of Computer Science, an Eminent Scholar at Old Dominion University, and a Visiting Professor in the Medical School at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (AUTh), Greece. In addition, he is a John Simon Guggenheim Fellow in Medicine & Health (2007) in the US and Canada, was elected a Nuclear Femtography Fellow in the US, and is a Distinguished Visiting Fellow in the Royal Academy of Engineering in the UK. Nikos received his Ph.D. in 1992 from Computer Science at Purdue University. From 1992 to 1997, he worked in Upstate NY, where he was the inaugural Alex Nason Fellow at Northeast Parallel Architectures Center in Syracuse and a Research Scientist at the Advanced Computing Research Institute at Cornell University. In 1997, he joined the Computer Science & Engineering Dept. at Notre Dame, where he received his NSF CAREER Award.  In 2000, he joined the College of William and Mary, where he was awarded the Alumni Memorial Professorship. He has held visiting positions at MIT, Harvard Medical School, and Brown University. He participated as PI, Co-I, and Senior Personnel on projects with more than $16 million (with more than $10M as a PI) in high-performance scientific and medical image computing, and he has about 250 publications.
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<b> Short Bio </b>: Nikos Chrisochoides is the Richard T. Cheng Endowed Chair Professor of Computer Science (2010), an Eminent Scholar at Old Dominion University (2019), and a Visiting Professor in the Medical School at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (AUTh), Greece (2023). In addition, he is a John Simon Guggenheim Fellow in Medicine & Health (2007) in the US and Canada. He was elected an SIAM IMR Fellow (2024) and Nuclear Femtography Fellow (2020) in the US and a Distinguished Visiting Fellow in the Royal Academy of Engineering in the UK (2012). Nikos received his Ph.D. in 1992 from Computer Science at Purdue University. From 1992 to 1997, he worked in Upstate NY, where he was the inaugural Alex Nason Fellow at Northeast Parallel Architectures Center in Syracuse and a Research Scientist at the Advanced Computing Research Institute at Cornell University. In 1997, he joined the Computer Science & Engineering Dept. at Notre Dame, where he received his NSF CAREER Award (1998).  In 2000, he joined the College of William and Mary, where he was awarded the Alumni Memorial Professorship. He has held visiting positions at MIT, Harvard Medical School (2005), and Brown University (2004). He participated as PI, Co-I, and Senior Personnel on projects with more than $16 million (with more than $10M as a PI) in high-performance scientific and medical image computing, and he has about 250 publications.

Latest revision as of 11:05, 10 March 2024

CRTC Principal Investigator: Nikos Chrisochoides

Short Bio : Nikos Chrisochoides is the Richard T. Cheng Endowed Chair Professor of Computer Science (2010), an Eminent Scholar at Old Dominion University (2019), and a Visiting Professor in the Medical School at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (AUTh), Greece (2023). In addition, he is a John Simon Guggenheim Fellow in Medicine & Health (2007) in the US and Canada. He was elected an SIAM IMR Fellow (2024) and Nuclear Femtography Fellow (2020) in the US and a Distinguished Visiting Fellow in the Royal Academy of Engineering in the UK (2012). Nikos received his Ph.D. in 1992 from Computer Science at Purdue University. From 1992 to 1997, he worked in Upstate NY, where he was the inaugural Alex Nason Fellow at Northeast Parallel Architectures Center in Syracuse and a Research Scientist at the Advanced Computing Research Institute at Cornell University. In 1997, he joined the Computer Science & Engineering Dept. at Notre Dame, where he received his NSF CAREER Award (1998). In 2000, he joined the College of William and Mary, where he was awarded the Alumni Memorial Professorship. He has held visiting positions at MIT, Harvard Medical School (2005), and Brown University (2004). He participated as PI, Co-I, and Senior Personnel on projects with more than $16 million (with more than $10M as a PI) in high-performance scientific and medical image computing, and he has about 250 publications.