James Lindesay
, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor of Physics, Howard University. Dr. Lindesay's
research interest include work in theoretical and computational physics, quantum field theory
and particle physics, condensed matter physics, atmospheric physics and astrophysics, and
biophysics and medical physics. Dr. Lindesay recently co-authored with Leonard Susskind,
An Introduction to Holographic Universe: Black Holes, Information and the String Theory
Revolution.
Pierre Noyes
, Ph.D., is a Professor (Emeritus) of Physics, Stanford University. Dr. Noyes research interests
are in the area of relativistic few-body problem in nuclear and particle physics; foundations
of physics; combinatorial hierarchy; BIT-STRING physics: a discrete model for masses,
coupling constants, and cosmology from first principles.
Eduardo Sontag
, Ph.D., is Professor of Mathematics with the Department of Mathematics at
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. Dr. Sontag is also a Member of the
Graduate Faculties of the Department of Computer Science and of the Department of Electrical
and Computer Engineering. He is also the director of SYCON, the Rutgers Center for Systems
and Control, and is a co-founder and Member of the Steering Committee of the BioMaPS Institute
for Quantitative Biology Rutgers University. Dr. Sontag's major current research interests
lie in several areas of systems molecular biology, control theory, and learning and neural
networks.