Presenter
William Tang

Biography
Prof. William M. (Bill) Tang of Princeton University is Lecturer with Rank of Professor in the Department of Astrophysical Sciences at Princeton University. He is also Participating Faculty at the Center for Statistics and Machine Learning, Executive Committee member for the Princeton Institute for Computational Science & Engineering (PICSciE), and Principal Research Physicist at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, the DOE national laboratory for Plasma Physics and Fusion Energy research—where he served as Chief Scientist from 1997 to 2009. A Fellow of the American Physical Society, he has received awards including NVIDIA Corporation’s 2018 Global Impact Award “for groundbreaking work in using GPU-accelerated computing to unleash deep learning neural networks for dramatically increasing the accuracy and speed in predicting dangerous disruptions in fusion systems,” and the IEEE Computer Society’s 2024 Sidney Fernbach Memorial Award – “for pioneering contributions to fusion energy research accelerated by high-performance computing and deep learning.” He was also previously honored with the Distinguished Achievement Award (2006) for “outstanding leadership in fusion research and contributions to fundamentals of plasma science” by the Chinese Institute of Engineers-USA. His scientific leadership roles have included serving on the International Scientific Advisory Committee for Switzerland’s National Supercomputing Center (CSCS) and as the current Chairman for their “PASC” Scientific Advisory Board. He is also the PI (principal investigator) for projects including the “Accelerated Deep Learning Discovery in Fusion Energy Science” Early Science Project at the Argonne National Laborory on their current Exascale system AURORA. He was also the PI for the Intel Parallel Computing Center of Excellence awarded to “PICSciE” at Princeton University (2014-2018). Professor Tang has been the author of more than 200 peer-reviewed journal publications with over 17,000 Google Scholar citations, and his PhD students include recipients of the US Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers in 2000 and 2005.
Presentations