- James Sethian
Infobox Scientist
name = James Sethian
image_width = 220px
caption = Photographed by Adalien Hulmer (2004)
birth_date = birth date|1954|5|10
birth_place =Washington, D.C. ,USA
nationality = flagicon|US American
field =Mathematics
work_institutions =UCB , Courant Inst. Princeton Univ.
doctoral_advisor = Alexander Chorin,Peter Lax
known_for =Level set method Fast marching method Image segmentation Applied mathematics
prizes =Norbert Wiener Prize (2004)James Albert Sethian is a professor of
mathematics at theUniversity of California, Berkeley , and the head of the Mathematics Group [http://math.lbl.gov/] at theU.S. Department of Energy 'sLawrence Berkeley National Laboratory . He received his PhD from the University of California at Berkeley in 1982 under the direction of Alexander Chorin. Afterwards he was an NSF postdoctoral fellow at theCourant Institute , underPeter Lax . He returned to Berkeley in 1985 where he is now a full professor.Sethian was elected member of the
National Academy of Engineering (NAE) in 2008.Sethian has acted as Interim Director Research at Thinking Machines Corporation, as well as held visiting positions at the National Center for Atmospheric Research and the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
Work
Sethian has worked on numerical algorithms for tracking moving interfaces for over three decades, starting with his seminal 1982 work on curve and surface propagation in combustion, and his 1985 work on entropy conditions, curvature, stability of numerical algorithms. This work led to development of
level set method in 1988, which was developed jointly withStanley Osher . These are numerical algorithms for tracking moving interfaces in complex situations, and have proved instrumental in a wide collection of applications, including semiconductor processing,fluid mechanics ,medical imaging ,computer graphics , andmaterial sciences .Jointly with D. Adalsteinsson, Sethian then introduced the idea of adaptivity to level set methods, in which computational labor is focussed on the evolving front: their Adaptive Narrow Band level set method and its variants are what makes level set methods efficient and practical, and arethe most common form of these techniques in practice today.
Together with
Alexander Vladimirsky , Sethian developed a class of Dijkstra-like ordered upwind methods for solving staticHamilton-Jacobi equation s. In the case of an Eikonal equation, the first method to do so was developed by Jon N. Tsitsiklis using a control-theoretic approach: followed shortly by Sethian's work on high order finite difference Dijkstra-like Fast Marching Methods. Ravikanth Malladi and Sethian pioneered the application of these techniques to image segmentation, Ron Kimmel and Sethian introduced them to robotic navigation, and Mihai Popovici and Sethian were the first to use them as fast wave solvers in geophysical seismic imaging.Together with Sergey Fomel, Sethian invented Escape Arrival Methods for computing multiple arrivals in wave propagation and geophysical imaging.
Algorithms based on the work of Sethian and his colleagues are now part of everyday production code in throughout science and engineering. They inform engineers how to design more precise ink jet plotters, allow physicians to analyze brain and cardiac images, aid oil companies in locating petroleum reserves, tell process engineers how to build reliable computer chips.
He maintains the "level set methods and fast marching methods" webpage [http://math.berkeley.edu/~sethian/] , which is a popular resource for these methods, and provides a variety of applets, movies, and explanations for both the popular and technical audiences.
Awards
Sethian was elected member of the
National Academy of Engineering in 2008 for the development of efficient methods of tracking moving interfaces. He received theNorbert Wiener Prize in Applied Mathematics in 2004, jointly awarded by the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematicians (SIAM) and the American Mathematical Society (AMS). This prize was awarded "for an outstanding contribution to applied mathematics in the highest and broadest sense." Sethian was honoured "for his seminal work on the computer representation of the motion of curves, surfaces, interfaces, and wave fronts, and for his brilliant applications of mathematical and computational ideas to problems in science and engineering." Previous recipients include Richard Bellman, Peter Lax, Alexandre Chorin, Tosio Kato, Gerald Whitham, Arthur Winfree, andHarold Widom .In addition to numerous other awards and honours, Sethian is a renowned speaker and teacher: he received the SIAM I.E. Block Community Lecture Prize.
Books
* "Vortex Methods and Vortex Motion"
* "Level Set Methods: Evolving Interfaces in Geometry, Fluid Mechanics, Computer Vision and Materials Sciences"
* "Level Set Methods and Fast Marching Methods"External links
* [http://math.berkeley.edu/~sethian/ Sethian's home page] at Berkeley
*MathGenealogy |id=31564
* [http://ap.lbl.gov/Science-Articles/Archive/Math-Sethian-Wiener-Prize.html Sethian receives the Norbert Wiener Prize]
* [http://www.itk.org/HTML/Applications.htm ITK] in real-world medical imaging applications.
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