|
RENOWNED
SCHOLAR MIHAI NADIN JOINS
FACULTY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT DALLAS
Computer
Graphics Pioneer to Head New Institute;
Arrival Strengthens UTD's Arts and Technology Programs
RICHARDSON,
Texas (Nov. 10, 2004) – Dr. Mihai Nadin, a pioneer in the
field of computer graphics and an internationally known scholar
in computer applications for art and design and in human-computer
interactions, has joined the faculty of The University of Texas
at Dallas (UTD) as Ashbel Smith Professor.
Nadin will be affiliated with both the School of Arts and Humanities
and the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science.
His leadership is expected to strengthen the university's degree
programs in arts and technology and the Institute for Interactive
Arts and Engineering, both joint projects of the two schools.
Nadin
will also serve as director of a newly established Institute for
Research in Anticipatory Systems that focuses on “anticipatory
computing,” or embedding the characteristic of anticipation
in software for computers and other devices. The new institute,
known as ANTE, was represented recently in Germany at ORGATEC, the
largest world fair dedicated to the office as both workplace and
environment for creative interaction.
“UTD
is indeed fortunate to have a great scholar with a truly international
reputation join our faculty, said Dr. Hobson Wildenthal, the university's
executive vice president and provost. “Professor Nadin is
known throughout the world for his groundbreaking interdisciplinary
work that ranges across the arts, computer science and cognitive
science.
“Professor
Nadin brings a wealth of academic experience to UTD – including
appointments at such prestigious institutions as the University
of California-Berkeley, Stanford University, the Rhode Island School
of Design and Ohio State University that will serve the university
and its students extremely well,” Wildenthal said. “This
is a key hire for UTD at an important juncture in our drive to become
a top-tier university.”
Dr. Dennis Kratz, dean of the School of Arts and Humanities, called
Nadin “a 21 st century Renaissance man, at home in the humanities
and in science. We expect he will make a significant contribution
to UTD's innovative interdisciplinary effort to explore and exploit
the synergies between art and technology.”
Born and educated in Romania, Nadin was among the very early scholars
to address the relationship between computers and human creativity.
His interests tracked his education; – he has advanced degrees
in computer science and philosophy.
Computational design, or the design of products and processes through
the use of digital means, is a discipline founded by Nadin. He established
and directed the world's first Computational Design Program at the
University of Wuppertal in Germany.
Nadin was recruited to UTD in large measure through the efforts
of Dr. Thomas Linehan, who established the Institute for Interactive
Arts and Engineering when he arrived at the university in 2002.
Linehan worked with Nadin at Ohio State in the mid- to late-1980's
and believed his former colleague would be a perfect match for the
institute's charter.
“It’is
hard to imagine anyone, anywhere with the breadth and depth of knowledge
of Mihai Nadin when it comes to the marriage of art and technology,
which is the focus of the institute,” Linehan said. “Not
only is Mihai a prolific thinker, lecturer, writer and consultant,
but he is also an outstanding teacher – and that will be part
of his role at UTD.”
According to Linehan, Nadin will teach arts and technology, humanities
and computer science courses.
The author of 23 books and countless articles, Nadin has lectured
and written extensively on the mind, anticipation and dynamic systems,
visualization, ubiquitous computing and various aspects of human-computer
and human-technology interaction. He is credited with introducing
various terms and phrases that have found wide usage throughout
society, including “semiotic machine,” “post-industrial
society,” “the civilization of illiteracy and “anticipatory
computing.”
Since his first involvement with the computer in the 1960s, Nadin
has espoused ways to involve computing in education and creativity,
and later, with the advent of desktop computers, in art and design
education. He taught some of the first known classes in many areas
related to computer science.
Nadin holds a Ph.D. degree in aesthetics from the University of
Bucharest and a post-doctoral degree in philosophy, logic and theory
of science from Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich, West Germany.
He earned an M.S. degree in electronics and computer science from
the Polytechnic Institute of Bucharest and an M.A. degree in philosophy
from the University of Bucharest.
About IIAE
UTD’s Institute for Interactive Arts and Engineering was established
to provide students with an opportunity to learn about interactive
advancements in the fields of communication, entertainment, digital
arts, education and training, as well as in scientific and medical
applications. As part of their studies, students, along with faculty,
are charged with inventing new pathways for the converging disciplines
and fields. The institute is a collaborative, interdisciplinary
effort by two of UTD’s seven schools — the School of
Arts and Humanities and the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and
Computer Science.
About UTD
The University of Texas at Dallas, located at the convergence of
Richardson, Plano and Dallas in the heart of the complex of major
multinational technology corporations known as the Telecom Corridor®,
enrolls more than 14,000 students. The school’s freshman class
traditionally stands at the forefront of Texas state universities
in terms of average SAT scores. The university offers a broad assortment
of bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degree programs.
For additional information about UTD, please visit the university’s
web site at www.utdallas.edu.
|