Nagle Lecture Series

2011 Nagle Lecture

Przemyslaw Prusinkiewicz
Plants, Computers and Math
April 7, 2011

Description of the Talk

Until recently, the development and forms of plants were perceived as discouragingly complex. This perception is now dramatically changing through a confluence of new experimental and mathematical modeling techniques. In my presentation, I will use interactive simulations and visualizations to address the interwoven topics of development and modeling: the quest for mechanisms and processes through which plants acquire their form, and mathematical notions and computational methods that integrate experimental data into mechanistic explanations. Examples will bridge different scales of plant organization, from the molecular to whole-plant and ecosystem levels, including cell division and differentiation patterns, development of leaves and flowers, and the arrangement of plant organs, branching plant structures and entire plants in space. The role of diverse mathematical concepts drawn from the theory of algorithms and formal languages, algebraic topology, differential geometry, and numerical analysis will be highlighted.

Description of the Speaker
Przemyslaw Prusinkiewicz

Przemyslaw Prusinkiewicz

Dr. Przemyslaw Prusinkiewicz is a Professor of Computer Science at the University of Calgary, Canada. He holds M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees from the Technical University of Warsaw.

Dr. Prusinkiewicz is a pioneer of computational modeling, simulation and visualization of plant development and co-author of a book, “The Algorithmic Beauty of Plants”, which opened this area to a wide audience. His current research is focused on computational models of development that link molecular-level processes to the macroscopic form of plants.

Professor Prusinkiewicz is a recipient of the Association for Computing Machinery SIGGRAPH Computer Graphics Achievement Award and the Canadian Human Computer Communications Society Achievement Award for his work pertaining to the modeling and visualization of biological structures. For further information, see the Algorithmic Botany web site.


The Organizing Committee of the NLS consists of Nataša Jonoska, Dmitry Khavinson, Brendan Nagle (Co-Chair), Richard Stark (Co-Chair) and Vilmos Totik. The Committee thanks the USF Department of Mathematics and Statistics and the College of Arts and Sciences for sponsoring this event.