C U R R I
C U L U M V I
T A E
DAVID E.
HIEBELER
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
333 Neville Hall, University of Maine
Orono, ME 04469-5752
Tel: 207-581-3924; Fax: 207-581-3902
http://www.math.umaine.edu/faculty/hiebeler
RESEARCH
- Mathematical population ecology and epidemiology; studying the effects of
spatially structured environmental heterogeneities on population
dynamics and the evolution of dispersal, using computational and
mathematical stochastic spatial models. Cellular automata and complex
adaptive systems; agent-based models.
EDUCATION AND AWARDS
- Cornell University, Ithaca NY 1995 2000
- PhD in Applied Mathematics, August 2001. Thesis title:
Populations and the Evolution of Dispersal on Spatially
Structured Heterogeneous Landscapes.
- US Environmental Protection Agency STAR graduate fellowship,
1997 2000
- NSF training grant fellowship in ``The Dynamics of
Heterogeneous Ecological and Evolutionary Systems,''
1995 1997
- Harvard University, Cambridge MA 1993
1995
- M.S. in Applied Mathematics, June 1995
- Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy NY
1986 1990
- B.S. in Computer Science, magna cum laude, December 1990.
ACADEMIC POSITIONS HELD
|
Associate Professor
|
Fall 2008 present
|
|
Assistant Professor
|
Fall 2002 Fall 2008
|
|
Dept. of Mathematics and Statistics
|
University of Maine
|
- Courses taught: Intro. to Principles
of Statistical Inference (MAT232),
Linear Algebra (MAT262),
Capstone Course in Math (MAT401), Differential Equations and
Dynamical Systems (MAT451), Numerical Analysis
(MAT487), and various topics courses (MAT400 and MAT500)
including Modeling & Simulation, Complex Adaptive Systems,
and Advanced Linear Algebra.
|
Adjunct Faculty
|
Summer 2008 present
|
|
Mathematical, Computational and Modeling Sciences Center
|
Arizona State University
|
|
Visiting Lecturer
|
Fall 2000 Spring 2002
|
|
Dept. of Biometrics
|
Cornell University
|
- Courses taught: Intro. to Biometry I (BTRY101), Intro. to
Biometry II (BTRY102)
GRANTS AND AWARDS
- NSF CAREER award DMS-0746603, ``Dynamics of Hierarchical
Household-Structured Epidemiological Models'', 9/1/2008 --
8/31/2013. $400,000 ($300,000 from NSF Division of Environmental
Biology, and $100,000 from Division of Mathematical Sciences).
- NSF research grant DMS-0718786, ``Spatial Population
Models in Spatiotemporally Correlated Environments'',
9/1/2007 -- 8/31/2010. $179,997, ($120,000 from NSF Division of
Mathematical Sciences, and $60,000 from Division of Environmental
Biology).
- IT Faculty Technology Stipend, ``Bug-Sim: Foraging for Food in
Spatially Structured Virtual Worlds,'' Spring/Summer 2007.
$1250, UMaine Dept. of Information Technologies.
- Faculty Summer Research Fund award, ``Pair Approximations of
Biological Invasion Models on Clustered Heterogeneous Landscapes,''
summer 2005. $7500, UMaine Office of the Vice President for Research.
- IT Faculty Technology Stipend, ``Development of a `Complex
Systems' Demonstration Simulation Suite,'' Spring/Summer 2004.
$1250, UMaine Dept. of Information Technologies.
- Sea Grant for ``An Agent-based Model of the Maine Lobster
Fishery,'' 2/1/04 -- 1/31/07. Jim Wilson (PI), David Hiebeler
(co-PI), Yong Chen (co-PI). $93,000 Sea Grant Funds, plus other
matching funds. 25% of credit for this grant is
allocated to me.
- Learning Circles grant, ``Beginning Development of a Demonstration
Simulation Toolbox,'' November 2003. PI: David Hiebeler
(Math); co-PI's: Larry Latour (Computer Science), Raymond
O'Connor (Wildlife Ecology), Jim Wilson (Marine Sciences and
Resource Economics), and Liying Yan (PhD student, Computer
Science). $500, UMaine Center for Teaching Excellence.
PUBLICATIONS
-
Refereed articles
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``Implications of Creation,''
Idealistic Studies, 23 (1), Winter 1993.
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``Stochastic Spatial Models: From
Simulations to Mean Field and Local Structure
Approximations,'' Journal of Theoretical Biology
187, 307--319 (1997), and presented at the
annual meeting of the Ecological Society of America,
Providence RI, Aug. 1996.
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``Populations on Fragmented Landscapes
with Spatially Structured Heterogeneities: Landscape
Generation and Local Dispersal,'' Ecology
81(6), 1629--1641 (2000). Also presented at the
annual meeting of the Society for Mathematical Biology,
Raleigh NC, Aug. 1997.
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``Competition Between Near and Far Dispersers in
Spatially Structured Habitats,'' Theoretical
Population Biology, 66(3), 205--218 (2004).
doi:10.1016/j.tpb.2004.06.004
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``Spatially Correlated Disturbances in a
Locally Dispersing Population Model,'' Journal of
Theoretical Biology, 232(1), 143--149 (2005).
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``A Cellular Automaton SIS Epidemiological
Model with Spatially Clustered Recoveries,'' presented at the
workshop on Modelling of Complex Systems by Cellular
Automata, at the International Conference on
Computational Science, Atlanta GA, May 2005. Also
published in refereed conference proceedings in Lecture
Notes in Computer Science, 3515, 360--367
(2005).
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``Dynamics and Resistance to Neighborhood
Perturbations of Discrete- and Continuous-Time Cellular
Automata,'' Journal of Cellular Automata,
1(2), 125--139 (2006).
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``Moment Equations and Dynamics of a
Household SIS Epidemiological Model,'' Bulletin of
Mathematical Biology, 68(6), 1315--1333
(2006).
- D.E. Hiebeler and Amanda K. Criner, ``Partially Mixed
Household Epidemiological Model with Clustered Resistant
Individuals,'' Physical Review E, 75,
022901 (2007).
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``Competing Populations on Fragmented
Landscapes with Spatially Structured Heterogeneities:
Improved Landscape Generation and Mixed Dispersal
Strategies,'' Journal of Mathematical Biology,
54(3), 337--356 (2007).
- D.E. Hiebeler and Benjamin R. Morin, ``The Effect of Static and
Dynamic Spatially Structured Disturbances on a Locally
Dispersing Population,'' Journal of Theoretical
Biology, 246(1), 136--144 (2007).
doi:10.1016/j.jtbi.2006.12.024
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``Transient Dynamics and Quasistationary
Equilibria of Continuous-time Linear Stochastic Cellular
Automata Voter Models with Multiscale Neighborhoods,''
Advances in Complex Systems, 10
(suppl. no. 1), 145--165 (2007).
-
Other selected professional publications and
presentations
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``A Brief Overview of Cellular Automata
Simulation Packages,'' Physica D 45, 1990.
- D.E. Hiebeler and R.C. Tatar, ``Cellular Automata and
Discrete Physics,'' published as chapter 12 of
Introduction to Nonlinear Physics, edited by Lui
Lam (Springer-Verlag, 1997), and presented at the
Winter School on Nonlinear Physics, San Jose, CA,
Jan. 1990.
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``The Swarm Simulation System and
Individual-Based Modeling,'' presented at and published
in the proceedings of Decision Support 2001: Advanced
Technology for Natural Resource Management, Toronto,
Sep. 1994. Also published as Santa Fe Institute working
paper 94-12-065.
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``Spatially Structured Discrete
Population Models,'' presented at the International
Conference on Mathematical Biology held in Hangzhou,
China, May 1997, and published in Advanced Topics in
Biomathematics, edited by Lansun Chen, Shigui Ruan,
and Jun Zhu (World Scientific, 1998).
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``Dispersal on Structured Fragmented
Landscapes,'' poster presented at the EPA STAR
Graduate Fellowship Conference, July 1999.
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``Modeling Invasions Between Near and Far
Dispersers on Structured Heterogeneous Landscapes,''
presented at the Beijing International Symposium on
Biological Invasions, Beijing, June 2004.
- D.E. Hiebeler and Amanda Criner (undergraduate research
assistant), ``Household Epidemiological Models With
Clustered Resistant Individuals,'' poster presented at
the joint Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics
/ Society for Mathematical Biology (SIAM/SMB) Conference
on the Life Sciences, Raleigh, NC, Jul. 31 -- Aug. 4,
2006.
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``What do Birds, Plants and Internet
Worms have in Common? Mixed Dispersal on Clustered
Heterogeneous Landscapes,'' invited colloquium at the
Colby College Mathematics Dept., March 2007.
-
Non-professional publications
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``The Little Monkey's Adventure,''
(fiction, in Chinese), published in Xiao Peng You
magazine, Shanghai, China, Sep. 1996.
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``Why Did the Deer Stomp His Foot,''
(nonfiction, in Chinese) published in Xiao Peng You
magazine, Shanghai, China, June 1998.
- Biweekly columnist for the Cornell Daily Sun newspaper,
Fall 1999 Spring 2000.
- D.E. Hiebeler, `` Career Automata,'' Science's Next Wave, Feb. 6, 2004. Invited autobiographical article about the path leading to my research career.
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``A Foreign Bigfoot Searches for Shoes,''
(nonfiction, in Chinese with translation assistance from
Yanlin Ding), in Xin1 Min2 Wan3 Bao4 ("Xinmin Evening
News" newspaper), Shanghai, China, Oct. 29, 2005.
- D.E. Hiebeler, ``Measure Maine's Coast,'' Letter to the
Editor published in the Bangor Daily News,
Friday June 2, 2006. Letter regarding fractal geometry.
SERVICE
- Manuscript referee for the following journals since Fall 2002:
- American Naturalist (2), Annals of Applied Probability,
Bulletin of Mathematical Biology,
Communications in Nonlinear Science
and Numerical Simulations, Ecological Modelling (4), Ecology,
Ecology Letters,
Ecosystems (3), Epidemiology and Infection, International
Journal of Applied Mathematics
and Statistics, Journal of Mathematical Biology, Journal of
Mathematics and Culture, Journal of Theoretical Biology (6),
Landscape Ecology, Physica A, Physics Letters A, Plant
Ecology, SIAM Journal on Applied Dynamical Systems (2),
Theoretical Population Biology (4)
- Grant proposal reviewer for the following agencies:
- Israel Science Foundation, May 2006
- National Science Foundation: ad hoc reviews in Sep 2006,
Mar 2007, Feb 2008
- National Science Foundation: review panel member in April 2008
- Invited member of the Scientific Committee for ACRI, the
Seventh International Conference on Cellular Automata for Research and
Industry (Perpignan, France, Sept 20-23, 2006).
- Research advisor and lecturer at the
Mathematical and Theoretical Biology Institute (MTBI) at Arizona
State University, summers of 2006 and 2007.
- Member of External Advisory Board for the Ecosystems
Informatics IGERT program at Oregon State University, Fall
2006--Spring 2007.
STUDENT ADVISING
Advisor for the following graduate students:
- Ben Morin (M.A., Mathematics and Statistics), Fall 2004--Spring
2006.
Advisor for the following undergraduate honors projects:
- Jennifer Houle (B.A., Mathematics and Statistics), Fall
2005--Spring 2006.
Member of the following graduate student committees:
- Current:
- Andrew Paradis (PhD, Physics), Fall 2004--present.
- Thomas Stone (PhD, Physics), Spring 2008--present.
- Previous:
- Medea Steinman (M.S., Wildlife Ecology), Fall
2003--Spring 2004.
- Debra Kenneway (M.S., Physics), Fall 2003--Fall 2004.
- Dianna Queheillalt (PhD, Wildlife Ecology), Fall
2003--Spring 2005.
- Fred Beaudry (PhD, Wildlife Ecology), Fall 2003--Fall 2007.
- Liying Yan (PhD, Interdisciplinary Program), Summer
2004--Spring 2007.
- Rodney Jacobs (M.S., Computer Science), Spring
2005--Fall 2005.
- David Patrick (PhD, Wildlife Ecology), Fall 2005--Spring 2007.
- Chenglu Dai (M.A., Mathematics and Statistics), Fall
2007--Summer 2008.
Member of the following undergraduate honors thesis committees:
- Current:
- Chelsea Lucas (Ecology & Environmental Sciences), Spring
2008--present.
- Previous:
- Roy Gott (Computer Science), Fall 2003--Spring 2004.
- David Gosselin (Computer Science), Fall 2006.
- Matt Dube (Mathematics), Fall 2006--Spring 2007.
- Benjamin Lakin (Mechanical Engineering), Fall
2006--Spring 2007.
- Jing Ling (Computer Engineering), Fall 2006--Spring
2007.
- Mark Larsen (Computer Science), Fall 2006--Fall 2007.
- Robert Lawlis (Mathematics), Spring 2008.
Research mentor on undergraduate research projects for the following
additional students:
- Current:
- Ashley Coe (Wildlife Ecology), Fall 2007--present.
- Isaac Michaud (Mathematics),
Fall 2007--present.
- Nick Millet (Mathematics), Fall 2007--present.
- Previous:
- Sean Floyd (Mathematics), Spring 2003.
- Amanda Criner (Mathematics), Fall 2004--Fall 2006.
- David Gosselin (Computer Science), Fall 2005--Spring
2006.
OTHER TEACHING EXPERIENCE
|
Teaching Assistant
|
Fall 1999
|
|
BIOGD481: Population Genetics
|
Cornell University
|
|
Teaching Assistant
|
Fall 1997
|
|
CS100b: Introduction to Computer Programming (in Java)
|
Cornell University
|
|
Teaching Assistant
|
Spring 1995
|
|
AM111: Introduction to Scientific Computing
|
Harvard University
|
OTHER WORK EXPERIENCE
|
Research Assistant and Programmer
|
Oct 1992 Sept 1993, summer 1994
|
|
Santa Fe Institute, Santa Fe, NM
|
- Designed and implemented the prototype Swarm simulation environment
for agent-based modeling (see
www.swarm.org).
- Worked with researchers and students using the Swarm system for
conducting experiments in economic modeling, emergence of hierarchical
structures in artificial chemistries, and social insect behavior.
|
Applications Engineer
|
Dec 1990 Oct 1992
|
|
Thinking Machines Corp., Cambridge, MA
|
|
Programmer, Research Scientist, and Co-founder
|
March 1990 May 1990
|
|
Automatrix, Inc., Rexford, NY
|
- Wrote low-level software to control CAM-PC, a plug-in Cellular
Automata Machine for PC's.
- Developed cellular automata applications for physical modeling
and physics education.
|
Research Assistant and Programmer
|
May 1989 August 1990
|
|
Center for Nonlinear Studies, Theoretical Division, and Advanced
Computing Lab
|
|
Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM
|
- Developed lattice-based modeling software on Connection Machine
supercomputer.
|
Engineering Assistant and Programmer
|
March 1989 May 1989
|
|
Sub-contracted to the General Electric R&D Center,
Schenectady, NY
|
|
Unix Consultant
|
Sept 1987 May 1989
|
|
Information Technology Services, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,
Troy, NY
|
|
Research Assistant
|
Aug 1987 Dec 1988
|
|
Computer Science Department, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,
Troy, NY
|
COMPUTER SKILLS
- Languages/software:
- C, Matlab, R, Perl, C++, Java, csh, LaTeX, HTML, PostScript.
- Systems:
- Strong Linux skills, Solaris/SunOS/BSD Unix, X11, Microsoft Windows.
PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS
- Ecological Society of America
- Society for Mathematical Biology
OTHER
- Citizenship:
- USA by birth.
- Languages:
- English, Mandarin Chinese (approximately fourth-year level,
written and spoken).
Dave Hiebeler <hiebeler@math.zzz.edu> (change 'zzz' to 'umaine' to send e-mail -- sorry, but spam harvesters are out there)