Author(s)
James J. Cochran
Dr. James J. Cochran is Professor of Applied Statistics and the Rogers-Spivey Faculty Fellow, and Associate Dean for Research, at The University of Alabama. Born in Dayton, Ohio, he got his B.S., M.S., and M.B.A. from Wright State University and his Ph.D. from the University of Cincinnati. Cochran has been at The University of Alabama since 2014 and has been a visiting scholar at Universidad de Talca, the University of South Africa, Stanford University, , and Pole Universitaire Leonard de Vinci. James has published more than 40 papers in the development and application of operations research and statistical methods. He has published in several journals, including The American Statistician, Management Science, Communications in Statistics Theory and Methods, Journal of Combinatorial Optimization, European Journal of Operational Research. He got the 2008 INFORMS Prize for the Teaching of Operations Research Practice, 2010 Mu Sigma Rho Statistical Education Award, and 2016 Waller Distinguished Teaching Career Award from the American Statistical Association.
He was elected to the International Statistics Institute in 2005, was named a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 2011 and was named a Fellow of INFORMS in 2017. Dr. Cochran received the Founders Award in 2014, the Karl E. Peace Award in 2015 from the American Statistical Association, and the INFORMS President's Award in 2019.
Jeffrey D. Camm
Professor Jeffrey D. Camm is the Inmar Presidential Chair and Associate Dean of Business Analytics in the School of Business at Wake Forest University. Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, he holds a B.S. from Xavier University and a Ph.D. from Clemson University. Prior to joining the faculty at Wake Forest, Dr. Camm was on the faculty of the University of Cincinnati. He has also been a visiting scholar at Stanford University and a visiting professor of business administration at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College.
Jeff has published over forty papers in the general area of optimization applied to problems in operations management and marketing. He has published his research in Science, Operations Research, Management Science, Interfaces, and other professional journals. He was named the Dornoff Fellow of Teaching Excellence at the University of Cincinnati and he was the 2006 recipient of the INFORMS Prize for the Teaching of Operations Research Practice.
Jeffrey W. Ohimann
Michael J. Fry
Dr. Michael J. Fry is the Academic Director of the Center for Business Analytics in the Carl H. Lindner College of Business and a Professor of Operations, Business Analytics, and Information Systems (OBAIS) and at the University of Cincinnati. He got a B.S. from Texas A&M University, and M.S.E. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Michigan. He has been at the University of Cincinnati since 2002, where he served as Department Head from 2014 to 2018, and has been named a Lindner Research Fellow. He has also been a visiting professor at the University of British Columbia and Cornell University.
Dr. Fry has published more than 25 research papers in journals such as Manufacturing & Service Operations Management, Operations Research, Naval Research Logistics, IIE Transactions, Transportation Science, Critical Care Medicine, and INFORMS Journal of Applied Analytics. He serves on editorial boards for journals such as INFORMS Journal of Applied Analytics (formerly Interfaces), Production and Operations Management, and Journal of Quantitative Analysis in Sports.
Professor Fry's research interests are in applying analytics to the areas of sports, supply chain management, and public policy operations. He has worked with many different organizations for his research, including Starbucks Coffee Company, Great American Insurance Group, Dell, Inc., the State of Ohio Election Commission, the Cincinnati Fire Department, the Cincinnati Bengals, and the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Gardens. In 2008, he was named a finalist for the Wagner Prize for Excellence in Operations Research Practice and he has been recognized for both his teaching and research excellence at the University of Cincinnati. In 2019, he led the team that was awarded the INFORMS UPS George D. Smith Prize on behalf of the OBAIS Department at the University of Cincinnati.
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