The Classification Society Distinguished Dissertation Award
supported by Chapman and Hall/CRC

The Award will be for the best PhD (or approximately equivalent doctoral)
dissertation nominated by an annual deadline. The theme is clustering,
classification, related areas of data analysis, encompassing both associated
theory and/or applications.

The Award is administered by the Classification Society (CS). An evaluation
committee is set up by CS to evaluate the nominated theses. This committee
should have between 3 and 5 members. The chair of the committee is appointed
by the CS President. The committee is selected by the committee chair, in
conjunction with the CS President, and is approved by the CS Board.

In 2008-2009, the evaluation committee is: Samantha Prins (Dept. of
Mathematics & Statistics, James Madison University), Fionn Murtagh (chair,
Dept. of Computer Science, Royal Holloway, University of London), Douglas
Steinley (Dept. of Psychological Sciences, University of Missouri-Columbia)
and Rebecca Nugent (Dept. of Statistics, Carnegie Mellon University).

Members of the evaluation committee must declare any potential conflict of
interest. A member of the evaluation committee cannot play any role in
regard to evaluating his/her own PhDs, nor also in regard to nominations
where there has been a direct collaborative link (e.g. through joint
publications).

Nominations will be through the evaluation committee chair. It may be useful
to have printed copies sent to committee members, but in any case
web-accessible versions have to be made available. The evaluation panel may
seek one or two external referee reports for each nominated dissertation.

Typical criteria for nomination for the Award include: (i) the most
innovative or impressive work in theory/methodology, or the most innovative
or well developed application(s); and (ii) the literature review has to be
thorough.

Nominations are to be received by 1 January each year, from the author
(PhD), their advisor/supervisor, or other related person. Nomination
includes the name and contact points, an online copy of the dissertation,
and a short description of why the dissertation merits the award (see
above). A decision is made by the evaluation committee by 1 April. The
evaluation committee can recommend one award; an award and a runner-up; two
joint winners; or other combinations if they think it appropriate.

For the next submission deadline, 1 January 2009, nominated PhDs have to
have been successfully completed in the 2008 calendar year. 

Awards are ratified by the CS Board. Publicity is made in the CS and other
newsletters, and on relevant websites. The short-list of nominated
dissertations will also be openly published.

For non-English language theses, it is requested to provide an extended
abstract, and (where relevant) pointers to papers associated with the thesis
that have been published.

In 2009 the Award totals US$500 in book vouchers from Chapman and Hall/CRC.
The winner will be invited to make a presentation in a special plenary
session at the CS Annual Meeting. Up to $500 of the Award winner's travel
expenses to the Annual Meeting will be covered by CS.

Contact for information and nominations: prinssc (at) jmu (.) edu 


CS: http://thames.cs.rhul.ac.uk/~fionn/classification-society/

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