Last week I had the pleasure of taking part in the INFORMS conference in Seattle, which took place October 20 through October 23. It was a whirlwind conference since my research group had 5 presentations. I gave an invited talk on a paper on defense critical supply chain networks and labor, which was recently published in the Handbook of Management of Threats. Thanks to Shima Mohebbi for inviting me to speak in her game theory session. My 3 PhD students also presented papers. Dana Hassani spoke on our recent paper, now published online in the INFORMS journal Transportation Science, and co-authored with Kyiv School of Economics colleagues Oleg Nivievskyi and Pavlo Martyshev. Samira Samadi spoke on our work with my PhD student Ismael Pour on spatial price equilibrium models with commodity losses. And two days after her presentation in Seattle, the paper was published! Ismael delivered a paper co-authored with Ladimer S. Nagurney and me on a spatial price network equilibrium paradox. For both Samira and Ismael it was their first INFORMS conference!
The panel that I spoke on was a "Committee's Choice" one and it was a great honor to join fellow panelists Tom Magnanti and Linus Schrage, both of whom need no introductions. Chris Ryan was an excellent moderator. The panel was on What Our Past Can Tell Us About Our Future. I took the perspective of Herstory.
There were editorial board meetings for several journals that I serve as an Associate Editor of (Journal of Global Optimization and Optimization Letters plus the International Transactions in Operational Research) - it was great to see fellow editorial board members.
Another highlight was having my Labor and Supply Chain Networks book and the Handbook for the Management of Threats displayed at the Springer booth at the Exhibit Hall.
I thoroughly enjoyed talks and the INFORMS Fellows lunch. 3 of my nominees got elected this year and there were 12 Fellows, so it was extra special to celebrate with them - Hani S. Mahmassani, Celso Ribeiro, and Grazia Speranza. I also very much enjoyed the WORMS lunch.
Several former PhD students, who are successful professors now, joined me: Pritha Dutta and Grace Ke, and Dmytro Matsypura, who traveled all the way from Sydney, Australia. It was delightful to also see Patrick Qiang.
It was terrific to have the UMass Amherst INFORMS Student Chapter recognized with the Magna Cum Laude Award.
The below collage of photos captures some of the highlights.
INFORMS organized so many additional meetings and networking events at this conference, which I also appreciated. We were kept very busy but the conference was very enjoyable with over 7,300 registrants from around the globe! More info on this conference.