Shoeleather Journalism in the Digital Age

Shoeleather Journalism
in the Digital Age

Jorge Nocedal is the 2024 SIAM John von Neumann Prize Lecturer

Photo of jorge Nocedal
Jorge Nocedal
Jorge Nocedal delivers Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics address
Staff Reports | Digital Free Press

Jorge Nocedal has been awarded the 2024 John von Neumann Prize — the highest honor and flagship lecture of Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics.

The privilege is in recognition of Mr. Nocedal’s fundamental work in nonlinear optimization, both in the deterministic and stochastic settings. The talk is Tuesday, July 9, at the 2024 SIAM Annual Meeting, according to a press release.

Mr. Nocedal’s research comprises numerous contributions to quasi-Newton methods, interior-point methods, and the theoretical foundations of stochastic gradient methods, which SIAM representatives tell the Digital Free Press are pivotal to machine learning.

His leadership resulted in the creation of L-BFGS-B and KNITRO, two software products that remain highly influential in a broad range of applications. He is the co-author of the textbook Numerical Optimization, which has become a modern classic in applied mathematics.

SIAM awards the John von Neumann Prize annually to an individual for outstanding and distinguished contributions to the field of applied mathematics and for the effective communication of these ideas to the community. It is one of SIAM’s most distinguished prizes, officials there say.

“I am very excited to receive such a prestigious award,” Mr. Nocedal said in a prepared statement. “Optimization is everywhere. It drives weather forecasts and creates machine learning models. I am very happy to see that my algorithms and software are used in dozens of disciplines, including many outside science and engineering.”

Jorge Nocedal is the 2024 SIAM John von Neumann Prize Lecturer

Mr. Nocedal was born in Mexico City. His parents grew up in great poverty and worked their way into the upper middle-class.

He studied physics at the National Autonomous University of Mexico. During his freshman year, he interned in the Astronomy Institute, where he was assigned to help design a new telescope using an optimization program. In this fortuitous manner, he was exposed to the field that he would pursue throughout his whole career: optimization.

Mr. Nocedal received a Ph.D. in mathematical sciences at Rice University before returning to Mexico to teach at his alma mater, UNAM, for three years. Following that, he moved to the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences in New York where he became a research associate. He never consciously planned to stay in the United States but after getting married while in New York, the next logical step for Mr. Nocedal was to take a job at Northwestern University, particularly because of its appealing proximity to Argonne National Laboratory.

It was there that he met Stephen J. Wright, who would become his book co-author.

Mr. Nocedal is the Walter P. Murphy Professor in Industrial Engineering and Management Sciences and Applied Mathematics, and the Director of the Center for Optimization and Statistical Learning at Northwestern University. His association with Northwestern has been a happy one, as the university has been on an upwards trajectory for decades. He moved from the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department to the Department of Industrial Engineering and Management Sciences (IEMS), so that all optimization work at Northwestern would be consolidated there.

He became department chair of IEMS, which was a very rewarding experience for him.

“Advances in the field have been gigantic and I am proud that I contributed a bit. A problem with 1,000 decision variables was considered very challenging when I was a student, whereas now we can solve problems with millions of variables, even amid uncertainty,” Mr. Nocedal said.

“That triple combination of high dimensionality, nonlinearity, and uncertainty seemed insurmountable at some point, yet now, we have a better understanding of what makes some algorithms fail and what makes others amazingly resilient. These advances would not have been made possible if I had not considered theory, algorithmic design, and software development as three indispensable components.”

As a SIAM member for 42 years, Mr. Nocedal says he regards SIAM as his primary research society. He has actively participated in SIAM for decades, including being named a 2010 SIAM Fellow, as well as co-founding the SIAM Journal on Optimization and serving as an associate editor (1990-2014) and editor-in-chief (2010-14). He also served as an associate editor of SIAM Review (2006-09) and was awarded the 2012 George B. Dantzig Prize and 2021 Lagrange Prize in Continuous Optimization.

Additionally, Mr. Nocedal has served on the SIAM Outstanding Paper Prizes Committee (2007-08), the George B. Dantzig Prize Committee (2017-18; 2020-21), and the SIAM Fellows Selection Committee (2018-20).

This prize was established in 1959 to honor John von Neumann, a Hungarian American mathematician, physicist, and computer scientist, whose seminal work helped lead to the founding of modern computing.

Learn more about SIAM’s John von Neumann Prize HERE.

SUSD Ad

Category Sponsor

Learn About the Author

Published On:

Category Sponsor

MS (Golf) Ad (336 x 280 px) (2)

Newsletter Sign Up

Scottsdale Daily Beat - Logo

Could we interest you in Community Updates? How about Enterprise Business Reporting & Real Property & Homes?

You belong in SUSD 300x250
Honor Health
Chamber Forward 2024 Square
Cover_Spring-2024-SUSD-Showcase-magazine
Experience Scottsdale September 2024