"Live your life, do your work, then take your hat." - Henry David Thoreau
In 1972 he began teaching and doing research in the School of Computer Science at McGill University in the areas of information theory, pattern recognition, and computational geometry. During the summers of 1975 and 1977 he was a Visiting Scholar at the Information Systems Laboratory, Stanford University. The sabbatical year 1980-81 he spent as a Visiting Scientist at the Applied Mathematics Research Center of the University of Montreal. During the spring of 1986 he was a Visiting Scholar at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences of New York University. During the fall of 1988 he was a British Columbia Advanced Systems Institute Fellow at Simon Fraser University. In the spring of 1989 he was a Visiting Professor in the Mathematics Department at the University of West Indies, Cave Hill, Barbados, and during the summer of 1989 he was a Visiting Scientist in the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science at the University of Amsterdam. He spent the sabbatical year 1995-96 in Australia and Spain. In the fall of 1995 he was a Vice-Chancellor's Research Best Practice Fellow at the University of Newcastle. In the spring and summer of 1996 he held Visiting Professor appointments in the Departments of Applied Mathematics at the Universidad Politecnica de Madrid and the Universidad Politecnica de Catalunya in Madrid and Barcelona, respectively. On September 1, 2007 he was promoted to Professor Emeritus. In 2009 he was awarded a Radcliffe Fellowship by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University for the 2009-1010 academic year. Presently he is a Visiting Scholar in the Department of Music at Harvard University, as well as a Visiting Scholar and Lecturer in the Department of Computer Science at Tufts University.
Dr. Toussaint has been a council-member of the North
American
Branch of the Classification Society, an Editor of the journal
Discrete
& Computational Geometry, an Associate Editor of the journals:
Pattern
Recognition, the IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, the
Visual
Computer,
and the IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine
Intelligence. Presently, he is Associate Editor of Computational
Geometry:Theory and Applications, and Associate Editor of the International
Journal of Computational Geometry and Applications. He is also an
Editor
of the Journal of Mathematics and the Arts, and the journals: Forma
and
Revista
Investigacion Operacional. He also serves on the Advisory Board of
the IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence.
He is a former member of the Pattern Recognition Society and a
current
member of the New York Academy of Sciences. He has edited two
books
published by North Holland, Computational Geometry in 1985 and Computational
Morphology in 1988. He has also served as a guest editor for four
journal
special issues on computational geometry:
The Visual Computer (the
May issue of 1988 and issue No. 8 of 1994),
The Proceedings of the IEEE
(September 1992) and Pattern
Recognition Letters (September 1993). In 1978 he was the
recipient
of the Pattern Recognition Society's Best Paper of the Year Award
and in 1985 he was awarded a Senior Killam Research
Fellowship
by the Canada Council to carry out a two- year research project on
movable
separability of sets. In 1996 he was awarded the Canadian Image
Processing
and Pattern Recognition Society's Service Award for his
"Outstanding
Contribution to Research and Education in Computational Geometry." In
May 2001 he was awarded the David Thomson Award for excellence
in
graduate supervision and teaching at McGill University. In February
2005
he became a Collaborator in The Centre for Interdisciplinary
Research
in Music Media and Technology in the Schulich School of Music at
McGill
University.
In 2009 he was awarded a Radcliffe Fellowship
by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University for
the 2009-1010 academic year. During the 2010-2011 academic year he was
a Research Scholar in the Music Department at Harvard University doing
research on music cognition with Professor Olaf Post.
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7-Sentence-CV
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Godfried T. Toussaint is a
Professor and Head of Computer Science at University of New York Abu
Dhabi in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. He
received a Ph.D. in Electrical
Engineering in 1972 from the University of British Columbia in
Vancouver,
Canada. In 1972 he began teaching and doing research in the
School
of Computer Science at McGill University in Montreal, Canada, in the
areas
of information theory, pattern recognition, computational geometry,
instance-based
learning, music information retrieval, and computational music theory.
On September 1, 2007 he was promoted to Professor Emeritus. In 2005 he
also became a Collaborator in the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research
in
Music Media and Technology, in the Schulich School of Music at McGill
University.
He is a founder of several conferences and workshops, an editor of
several
journals, has received numerous awards, and has published more than 360
papers.
In 2009 he was awarded a Radcliffe Fellowship
by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University for
the 2009-1010 academic year.
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200-Word-CV
------------------
Godfried T. Toussaint is a
Professor and Head of Computer Science at University of New York Abu
Dhabi in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. He
received a Ph.D. in Electrical
Engineering in 1972 from the University of British Columbia in
Vancouver,
Canada. Since then he has been teaching and doing research in the
School
of Computer Science at McGill University in Montreal, in the areas of
information
theory, pattern recognition, textile-pattern analysis and design,
computational
geometry, instance-based learning, music information retrieval, and
computational
music theory. On September 1, 2007 he was promoted to Professor
Emeritus.
In 2005 he became a Collaborator in the Centre for Interdisciplinary
Research
in Music Media and Technology, in the Schulich School of Music at
McGill
University. In 1978 he was the recipient of the Pattern Recognition
Society's
Best
Paper of the Year Award and in 1985 he was awarded a Senior
Killam
Research Fellowship by the Canada Council. In May 2001 he was
awarded
the David Thomson Award for excellence in graduate supervision
and
teaching at McGill University. He is a founder of several conferences
and
workshops, an editor of several journals, has appeared on television
programs
to explain his research on the mathematical analysis of flamenco
rhythms,
and has published more than 350 papers.
In 2009 he was awarded a Radcliffe Fellowship
by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University for
the 2009-1010 academic year.
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