The ARC Centre of Excellence for Mathematical and Statistical Frontiers (ACEMS) is proud to announce that it has just officially added Monash University as its seventh member university.
The Centre, of course, is headquartered at The University of Melbourne. Monash joins the Queensland University of Technology (QUT), The University of Adelaide, The University of Queensland, the University of New South Wales (UNSW), and the University of Technology Sydney (UTS) as the other Collaborating Organisations.
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Assoc Prof Tim Garoni, Monash Univ
“I’m very excited that Kate Smith-Miles and Scott Sisson are now Chief Investigators and that Tim Garoni’s membership with ACEMS is now via his home Monash University, rather than an offshoot of the Melbourne node,” says Prof Peter Taylor, Director of ACEMS.
“Kate, Scott and Tim are three of the most exciting mid-career mathematicians/statisticians in the country who, furthermore, are already demonstrating the leadership qualities that will take ACEMS, and the rest of the mathematical sciences community, forward in the years to come,” says Prof Taylor.
One of the strengths Tim Garoni says he brings to ACEMS is his work in the mathematical and statistical modelling of traffic.
“This is a good example of where stochastic modellers are working with statisticians on merging the big data and big models paradigms. These collaborations that have formed because of ACEMS are an important step in making our stochastic traffic model a practical tool for transport planners,” says Assoc Prof Tim Garoni.
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Prof Kate Smith-Miles
“I work in a diverse range of sub-fields within the mathematical sciences including optimisation, statistics, machine learning and applied mathematics. These are areas that are normally quite separate in the sense that they have their own conferences and societies, without much overlap,” says Prof Smith-Miles.
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Prof Scott Sisson, UNSW
Monash University also has three high-profile researchers involved with ACEMS as Associate Investigators. They are Prof Rob Hyndman, Prof Gael Martin, and Prof Di Cook.
“We already had people here at Monash who were involved with ACEMS, so it’s nice for those relationships to be more formalised, so that we can build on them,” says Prof Smith-Miles.
ACEMS Director Peter Taylor said the moves to promote Kate Smith-Miles and Scott Sisson to Chief Investigator and to make Monash a Collaborating Organisation, were the right moves to keep ACEMS moving forward.
“This demonstrates how seriously we take succession planning, as well as research quality,” says Prof Taylor.
In all, ACEMS now has 19 Chief Investigators spread across its seven member institutions.