David P.Williamson

David P. Williamson

Professor
Operations Research and Information Engineering
236 Frank H.T. Rhodes Hall
Professor and Chair
Information Science
236 Gates Hall

Biography

David P. Williamson is a Professor at Cornell University in the School of Operations Research and Information Engineering. He received his Ph.D. in Computer Science from MIT under Professor Michel X. Goemans in 1993. After a postdoc at Cornell under Professor Éva Tardos, he was a Research Staff Member for IBM Research at the T.J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, New York. From 2000 to 2003, he was the Senior Manager of the Computer Science Principles and Methodologies group at IBM's Almaden Research Center in San Jose, California. He moved to Cornell University in 2004.

His research focuses on finding efficient algorithms for hard discrete optimization problems, with a focus on approximation algorithms for problems in network design, facility location, and scheduling. Other interests include algorithms for information networks.

Research Interests

Professor Williamson works in the area of discrete optimization. In particular, he designs efficient heuristics with provable performance guarantees for NP-hard optimization problems; these heuristics are known as approximation algorithms. He has worked on approximation algorithms for a broad range of problems of interest in the operations research community, including network design, scheduling, facility location, clustering, ranking, and other related problems. Currently he is focusing his research efforts on the traveling salesman problem and on simple approximation algorithms.

Teaching Interests

Most recently, Williamson has taught ORIE 6334, a graduate-level course on spectral graph theory and algorithms, and ORIE 3310, a second semester optimization course for juniors.

Service Interests

Williamson is the former Editor-in-Chief for the SIAM Journal on Discrete Mathematics.

Selected Publications

Selected Awards and Honors

  • SIAM Fellow (Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics) 2016
  • ACM Fellow (Association for Computing Machinery) (ACM) 2013
  • Lanchester Prize for best contribution to operations research and the management sciences published in English (INFORMS) 2013
  • College of Engineering Teaching Excellence Award (Cornell University) 2016
  • Professor of the Year (ORIE Undergraduate Voted) (ORIE) 2016

Education

  • B.S. (Mathematics), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1989
  • M.S. (Computer & Information Science), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1990
  • Ph.D. (Computer & Information Science), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1993

Websites