The Polykarp Kusch Lecture Series
Concerns of the Lively Mind
Research in Management Science
and the Importance of Mathematics
Dr. Alain Bensoussan
Lars Magnus Ericsson Chair
Naveen Jindal School of Management
Thursday, April 4, 2024
2-3 p.m.
Student Services Building Addition Auditorium
(SSA 13.330)
Engineering and technology are driving innovations and creating new operational challenges for corporations and federal agencies. Mathematics — and its role in management science research — has become a vital tool in addressing these obstacles, making complex systems easier to understand and helping leaders make informed decisions.
Dr. Alain Bensoussan
Dr. Alain Bensoussan is a Lars Magnus Ericsson Chair, professor of operations management and the director of the International Center for Decision and Risk Analysis (ICDRiA) in the Naveen Jindal School of Management. In 2004, he joined UT Dallas and founded ICDRiA, which develops risk management research on large-investment industrial projects.
His research focuses on stochastic control, risk analysis and decision-making. Bensoussan develops a comprehensive approach to risk analysis, to recognize technical and socioeconomic risks simultaneously. He has experience in aerospace and information technology industries. His current focus is on the energy sector. He has published 13 books and more than 400 papers and proceedings.
Bensoussan, professor emeritus at the University of Paris Dauphine, was chair professor of Risk and Decision Analysis at Polytechnic University of Hong Kong (2009 to 2012) and the City University of Hong Kong (2013 to 2023). He also was World Class University Distinguished Professor at Ajou University in South Korea from 2010 to 2014.
Bensoussan served as president of National Institute for Research in Computer Science and Control (1984 to 1996) and the French Space Agency (1996 to 2003). He was also chairman of the European Space Agency Council from 1999 to 2002. Bensoussan is a member of the French Academy of Sciences, French Academy of Technologies, Academia Europaea and International Academy of Astronautics.
Bensoussan received the IEEE Systems Control Award in 2024 and the W.T. and Ida Reid Prize from the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM) in 2014. His other honors include a Von Humboldt Research Award and a NASA Distinguished Public Service Medal. He is a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society, IEEE and SIAM. Bensoussan also has been recognized by the Legion of Honor and the National Order of Merit in France and the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany.
Dr. Polykarp Kusch
Dr. Polykarp Kusch was Nobel laureate in physics in 1955 and came to The University of Texas at Dallas in 1972.
At UT Dallas, he was Regental Professor and served on the physics faculty. His distinguished science career was complemented by his superb teaching. He delighted students with his presentations of physics experiments in his “Phenomena of Nature” classes.
Before coming to UT Dallas, Dr. Kusch had served as professor, vice president, provost and dean of faculties at Columbia University.
When he retired in 1982, UT Dallas established a program of annual lectures with the theme “Concerns of the Lively Mind” to honor Dr. Kusch.
Kusch Lectures
2024 | Alain Bensoussan | Research in Management Science and the Importance of Mathematics |
2023 | Mark W. Spong | Robotics: Past, Present, Future |
2022 | Robert Stern | UTD Geologic Studies of the Mariana Trench and the Challenger Deep |
2021 | Denise Park | The Amazing Aging Mind: A Scientific Journey |
2019 | Alex R. Piquero | Nothing Fake Here: Debunking the Immigration/Crime Relationship |
2018 | Zsuzsanna Ozsváth | Our Journey Home: My Life and Work in Dallas |
2017 | Hobson Wildenthal | The Lifecycle of a Science from Conception to Metamorphosis |
2016 | Suresh P. Sethi | Conflicts in Supply Chains and Contracts that Restore Efficiency |
2015 | R. David Edmunds | Defending the Omaha Nation |
2014 | Ray H. Baughman | Nanotechnology for Fun and Profit |
2013 | Bhavani Thuraisingham | Reactively Adaptive Malware |
2012 | Aage Møller | The Malleable Brain |
2011 | Ram Rao | From Perfection to Retail Competition |
2010 | Rainer Schulte | Life as Translation |
2009 | John Hoffman | The Phoenix Mission to Mars |
2008 | George McMechan | 3-D Imaging of Earth’s Energy Resources |
2007 | Alice J. O’Toole | How We Represent and Recognize Faces |
2006 | Edward J. Harpham | Adam Smith’s Lost World of Gratitude |
2005 | Lawrence J. Overzet | Industrial Plasmas: Enabling the Future |
2004 | Clay Reynolds | A Cow Can Moo: The Irony of the Artistic Lie |
2003 | Roderick A. Heelis | Our Space Environment |
2002 | Rajiv Banker | Pay for Performance: Myth or Reality? |
2001 | Emily Tobey | The Bionic Ear: Connecting Technology to Societal Change |
2000 | Stephen Rabe | Debate Without End: Vietnam – 25 Years After |
1999 | Irving Hoch | Urban Population and the Quality of Life |
1998 | Hanna Ulatowska | Narrative in Human Experience |
1997 | A. Dean Sherry | From Molecules to Man: A History of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) |
1996 | Hal Sudborough | Permutatios, Pancakes and Philogeny |
1995 | Robert Xavier Rodriguez | The Mystery of the Two Worlds |
1994 | Frank Bass | The Evolution of a General Theory of the Diffusion of Technological Innovations |
1993 | Bert Moore | Passions of the Mind |
1992 | Gerald Scully | Institutional Technology and Economic Progress |
1991 | Brian J. L. Berry | Deeper Societal Structures – Glimpses Through a Macroscope |
1990 | William Hanson | Our Solar System: A Perspective |
1989 | Robert Corrigan | Tragedy – The Tragic, and The Historical Moment |
1988 | Sandy Friel-Patti | The University in the Community |
1987 | R. Chandresakaran | Education of High Quality: Can This be Achieved? |
1986 | Wolfgang Rindler | Gravitation: From Newton to Einstein |
1985 | Anthony Champagne | Science and the Edges of Life |
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