Thomas L. Magnanti
Quick Facts
Biography
Thomas L. Magnanti (born 1945) is an American engineer and Institute Professor and former Dean of the School of Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Magnanti is currently President of the Singapore University of Technology and Design established in collaboration with MIT.
Biography
Magnanti received an undergraduate degree in Chemical Engineering from Syracuse University (1967) and master's degrees in both Statistics (1969) and Mathematics (1971) from Stanford University, where he also received his doctorate in Operations Research (1972).
Dr. Magnanti is Institute Professor and former Dean of the School of Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has served on thesis committees for approximately 70 doctoral students, supervising over 25. He became the president of Singapore's fourth university, Singapore University of Technology and Design in 2011.
Magnanti has been Editor-in-Chief of the journal Operations Research.
Magnanti is a member of the National Academy of Engineering and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He was a founding co-director of MIT's Leaders for Manufacturing Program (now the Leaders for Global Operations program) and the System Design and Management (MIT) program. He is a past President of the Operations Research Society of America (ORSA) and of the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS).
He has received honorary doctorates from Linköping University, the Université de Montréal, and the Université Catholique de Louvain. He has also won the MIT Billard Award and ORSA George E. Kimball Medal for distinguished service.
Work
Magnanti's teaching and research interests are in applied and theoretical aspects of large-scale optimization and operations research, specifically on the theory and application of large-scale optimization, particularly in the areas of network flows, nonlinear programming, and combinatorial optimization. He has conducted research on such topics as production planning and scheduling, transportation planning, facility location, logistics, and communication systems design. He is also known for pioneering an educational philosophy that combines engineering and management.
Other awards
- Journal Networks: Glover-Klingman Prize| best paper published during the year (2005)
- American Academy of Arts and Sciences: Fellow (2000)
- Operations Research Society of America: Lanchester Prize| Best Publication in Operations Research (1993)
- National Academy of Engineering: Member (1991)
- MIT: Irwin Sizer Award for Significant Innovations in MIT Education (2001)
- Linköping University: Honorary Doctorate
- University of Montreal: Honorary Doctorate
- Université Catholique de Louvain: Honorary Doctorate
- The Technion: Honorary Doctorate
Publications
- Applied Mathematical Programming
- Network Flows: Theory, Algorithms and Applications
- Lagrange and Fenchel Duality Are Equivalent, Mathematical Programming, 7, 253-258, 1974.
- Network Design and Transportation Planning: Models and Algorithms (with R. T. Wong), Transportation Science, 18(1), 1-55, 1984.
- Extremum Properties of Hexagonal Partitioning and the Uniform Distribution in Euclidean Location (with M. Haimovich), SIAM Journal on Discrete Mathematics, (1), 50-64, February 1988.
- Separable Concave Optimization Approximately Equals Piecewise Linear Optimization (with Dan Stratila), IPCO Proceedings, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 3064, 234-243, 2004.
- Strong Formulations for Network Design Problems with Connectivity Requirements (with S. Raghavan), Networks, 45 (2): 61-79, 2005.
- An Intersecting Tree Model for Odd-Diameter-Constrained Minimum Spanning and Steiner Trees (with Luis Gouveia and Cristina Requejo), Annals of Operations Research, 146: 19-39, 2006
- Variable Disaggregation in Network Flow Problems with Piecewise Linear Costs (with K. Croxton and B. Gendron), Operations Research 55 (1):146-157, 2007.