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Mathematica Trainer and Consultant: Michael D. Weiss


Address
7797 Heatherton Lane
Potomac, MD 20854-3264

email: mdweiss@verizon.net

phone: 301-299-3144


Background

Dr. Michael D. Weiss has been actively involved with Mathematica since 1995. He has used Mathematica in his own research to study the economic and environmental implications of precision agriculture. He offers training and consultation services to government, academic, and other institutions; private industry; and individuals.

Dr. Weiss holds a B.A. in mathematics from Brandeis University, a Ph.D. in mathematics from Brown University, and a postdoctoral M.A. in economics from the University of Maryland, College Park. He has served as a mathematics professor at Wayne State University, as an operations research analyst in private industry, and as a staff member (1976-97) of the Economic Research Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, where his research, both theoretical and applied, emphasized the application of mathematics to economic problems. During his government tenure, he served regularly as a consultant on mathematical methods to government and university researchers. During 1998-99, he was Adjunct Associate Professor in mathematics at the University of Maryland University College.

Since 1992, Dr. Weiss has served as a Visiting Lecturer of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM). During 1993-98, he was President of SIAM's Washington-Baltimore Section.

Dr. Weiss's research interests and publications encompass both theory and applications. They have included such subjects as ergodic theory, the theory of fuzzy sets, the economic theory of behavior under risk (from a functional analysis perspective), food safety and the economics of information, spatial statistics, nonlinear and chaotic dynamics, and computer modeling in agricultural economics.

Dr. Weiss's career has been profiled in several "careers in mathematics" publications of the Mathematical Association of America as well as in Who's Who in America. He now serves as an independent consultant.


Consulting Information

Dr. Weiss has used Mathematica since 1995 and has been a Mathematica consultant since 1997.
  • Expertise
    • General consulting (Mathematica, mathematical methods)
    • Economics
    • Risk analysis

  • Major Clients
    • Leading U.S. government science and technology agencies (e.g., National Institute of Standards and Technology)
    • High-technology corporations

  • Education
    • B.A. in Mathematics, Brandeis University, 1964
    • Ph.D. in Mathematics, Brown University, 1970
    • M.A. in Economics, University of Maryland, College Park, 1984

  • Computer Language Experience in Addition to Mathematica
    • Fortran
    • Speakeasy/Fedeasy

  • Platform Experience
    • Windows
    • Some Unix

  • Languages Spoken
    • English

  • Geographic Area of Operation
    • Available worldwide
    • Normally located in the Washington, D.C., area


Consulting Case Studies

Consulting Case Study 1
Under contract to a major U.S. government science and technology agency, I conducted individual consulting sessions with 14 scientists and engineers over a three-day period. The purpose was to assist each researcher with the use of Mathematica in his or her own projects. This work drew on my capabilities in both Mathematica and mathematics. For example, in one session my experience with spatial statistics enabled me to recommend a specific geometric approach to a problem in materials science as well as to show where in Mathematica the needed technical tools could be found. Likewise, in several other sessions in which researchers presented me with mathematically complex Mathematica programs related to their own specialized research, I was able to "cut through" to the essentials, discern why their programs were running slowly, and present improved programming techniques to increase computational efficiency. In yet another session, a physicist required help in using Mathematica to interpret the output of a particular scientific instrument. For this individual, I prepared a sample Mathematica program that automatically processed the instrument's output and displayed the result in the form of a surface. This solution not only met his immediate needs but also demonstrated Mathematica techniques that he could use more broadly.

Consulting Case Study 2
I was engaged to assist an economist at a major U.S. government international economics agency in applying Mathematica in his research. After reviewing one of his projects, I was able to demonstrate to him that the basic approach he had adopted was mathematically fallacious. As a result, he made major revisions in an article he was preparing for publication, improving the quality of his work and avoiding a potentially embarrassing error. At the same time, he was able to incorporate the Mathematica methods I taught him.



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