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Dr. Torsten Mütze joins the FoCS group and the department as a new Assistant Professor

Torsten Mutze

The Department is welcoming our new Assistant Professor Dr. Torsten Mütze, who will be associated with the Division of Theory and Foundations (FoCS) and the Centre for Discrete Mathematics and its Applications (DIMAP).


Before joining Warwick, Torsten held postdoctoral researcher positions at TU Berlin, Georgia Institute of Technology, and ETH Zürich. He obtained his PhD in Computer Science from ETH Zürich in 2011, under the guidance of Angelika Steger.

His research is primarily in the foundations of computer science and discrete mathematics. Specifically, he is interested in combinatorial algorithms, random graph processes, Ramsey theory, and combinatorial games. For more information about his research, please see his web page at http://www.tmuetze.de.
Fri 28 Jun 2019, 15:49

Multiple academic positions in Computer Science

The Department of Computer Science has multiple Assistant Professor, Associate Professor or Reader vacancies in Computer Science, with the closing date on June 17, 2019.

The call is open to candidates working in all areas of Computer Science including those related to Theory and the FoCS group (and also DIMAP) research focus. If you are interested in joining one of the best Theory groups in Europe you're welcome to apply!

If you want to learn more, then informal enquires can be addressed to the Head of Department, Prof. Ranko Lazic, or Prof. Artur Czumaj, or any member of the FoCS group.

Tue 04 Jun 2019, 16:09

PhD positions at FoCS group (apply by March 31, 2019)

PhD positions are available in the Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) at the Department of Computer Science, University of Warwick, UK.
The Theory and Foundations group in the department is inviting applications from those interested in theoretical computer science. The group works on various aspects of theoretical computer science such as:


  • algorithmic aspects of game theory and economics,
  • approximation algorithms,
  • automata and formal languages,
  • computational complexity,
  • cryptography and quantum computing,
  • discrete mathematics, combinatorics, and their applications,
  • graph and network algorithms,
  • logic and games,
  • online and dynamic algorithms,
  • parallel and distributed algorithms,
  • parameterized complexity and structural graph theory,
  • random structures and randomized algorithms,
  • sublinear and streaming algorithms,
  • string algorithms.

The group has strong ties with the Centre for Discrete Mathematics and its Applications (DIMAP), established in 2007 jointly with Warwick Mathematics Institute and Warwick Business School. Together with DIMAP, the group is one of the leading theory groups in Europe, with regular publications in top
international conferences and journals in theoretical computer science.

The Department of Computer Science at Warwick offers an excellent research environment. It was ranked 1st in the UK for scientific output and 2nd overall in the latest UK research assessment in Research Excellence Framework (REF) in 2014.
The University of Warwick is one of the founding members of the Alan Turing Institute.

The university campus is located on the border of two counties, West Midlands and Warwickshire, is about one hour train ride from London, and 15 minutes from Birmingham International Airport.

The applicants interested in theoretical computer science are expected to have a strong background in discrete mathematics, algorithms, or related topics with undergraduate and/or Master's degrees in Computer Science, Mathematics, or related disciplines. The position(s) will be fully funded, and the successful applicant(s) will be receiving a stipend at rate in line with current Research Councils UK rates.

If you are interested in this opening, please apply online by 31 March 2019 following the guidelines on the following page. Please indicate clearly your interest in Theory and Foundations and mention one of the group members as a potential supervisor.
To apply, go to:
https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/dcs/admissions/postgraduateresearch/researchstudentships/?newsItem=8a17841a6919e0e40169245ae94b0bb7

You are encouraged to informally contact group members you might want to work with prior to that.

Permanent members of the group:

Sat 16 Mar 2019, 16:53

Best Paper Award at STOC 2019

Petri net representation of a population protocol (Blondin et al., LICS 2018)The contribution The Reachability Problem for Petri Nets is Not Elementary by Wojciech Czerwinski, Slawomir Lasota, Ranko Lazic, Jerome Leroux and Filip Mazowiecki has won a Best Paper Award at the 51st Annual ACM Symposium on the Theory of Computing, to be held on June 23-26, 2019 in Phoenix, AZ.

This work, which was supported by a Leverhulme Research Fellowship, shows that the central verification problem for Petri nets is much harder than has been known since the landmark result of Richard Lipton in 1976. Petri nets, also known as vector addition systems, are a long established model of concurrency with extensive applications in modelling and analysis of hardware, software and database systems, as well as chemical, biological and business processes.

Sat 16 Mar 2019, 12:53

Dr. Charilaos Efthymiou joins the FoCS group and the department as a new Assistant Professor

Charis

In January 2019, Dr. Charilaos Efthymiou joined the Department of Computer Science at the University of Warwick, as a member of the Division of Theory and Foundations (FoCS) and of the Centre for Discrete Mathematics and its Applications (DIMAP).


Before joining us, Charilaos held research positions in various universities including Goethe University of Frankfurt, Germany, as a DFG Fellow, College of Computing at Georgia Institute of Technology, USA, and School of Informatics a the University of Edinburgh, UK. This is not his first time at the University of Warwick, he has been a post-doc researcher at DIMAP (2010-2012). Charilaos completed his PhD at the University of Patras, Greece, in 2009.

His research is in the intersection of theory of algorithms, discrete mathematics and statistical physics. Specifically, he studies how powerful notions from statistical physics, e.g., phase transitions, affect the performance of algorithms for various problems in computer science and mathematics.

More information about Charilaos can be found on his personal web-page https://sites.google.com/site/charisefthymiou/.

Wed 16 Jan 2019, 17:11

Dr. Tom Gur is a new Assistant Professor in the FoCS group and the Department

Tom Gur
Before joining us, Tom held a postdoctoral researcher position in the Theory Group at UC Berkeley (2017–2019). He obtained his PhD in Computer Science and Mathematics from the Weizmann Institute of Science, under the guidance of Oded Goldreich, in 2017.
His research is primarily in the foundations of computer science and discrete mathematics. Specific interests include computational complexity, sublinear-time algorithms, cryptography, coding theory, and quantum information.
For more information about his research, please see his web page at https://www.dcs.warwick.ac.uk/~tomgur/.
Wed 16 Jan 2019, 16:57

2018 Open Mind Prize awarded to Andrzej Grzesik

Andrzej Grzesik, a very official and serious pictureThe 2018 Open Mind Prize was awarded to Andrzej Grzesik, a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Computer Science and a member of the DIMAP centre. The Open Mind Prize is awarded biennially during the Polish Combinatorial Conference to a junior Polish researcher for outstanding research in combinatorics. Andrzej completed his PhD in 2015 at Jagiellonian University in Kraków and joined the University of Warwick in October 2017. His research achievements include solutions to two extremal graph theory problems posed by Erdős and a conjecture of Lovász concerning finitely forcible graph limits.

Tue 25 Sep 2018, 01:24

A hat trick at the 45th ICALP

ICALP 2018 logoIn the Logic, Semantics, Automata and Theory of Programming track of the 45th International Colloquium on Automata, Languages, and Programming (ICALP), three out of 30 accepted papers are by members of the department. ICALP is one of the most selective and longest established international conferences in computer science, and the flagship annual event of the European Association for Theoretical Computer Science. The papers are:

  • Reducing CMSO Model Checking to Highly Connected Graphs by Ramanujan M. S., Daniel Lokshtanov, Saket Saurabh and Meirav Zehavi
  • O-Minimal Invariants for Linear Loops by Shaull Almagor, Dmitry Chistikov, Joel Ouaknine and James Worrell
  • When is Containment Decidable for Probabilistic Automata? by Laure Daviaud, Ranko Lazić, Marcin Jurdziński, Filip Mazowiecki, Guillermo Perez and James Worrell
Thu 19 Apr 2018, 20:07

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