Dr. Mingxian Jin

Dr. Mingxian Jin

   Professor in Computer Science

   Office: Science & Technology Building 212

   Phone: (910) 672-1558

   Email: mjin@uncfsu.edu


BIOGRAPHY

Dr. Mingxian Jin is a Professor of Computer Science in the Department of Mathematics & Computer Science at Fayetteville State University. She joined Fayetteville State University in 2004 as an assistant professor.

Dr. Jin's research areas include parallel algorithm design and model evaluation, GPU computing, real-time system scheduling, and simulations of mathematical modeling in biomedical dynamics. She is an active reviewer for journals and conferences. Dr. Jin has published a number of papers in international journals and conference proceedings.

TEACHING

CSC 100 Introduction to Computers
CSC 201 Computer Organization and Assembly Language
CSC 202 Programming in C++
CSC 220 Data Structures
CSC 320 Algorithm Design and Analysis
CSC 323 Database Principles and Design
CSC 350 Computing Service Learning
CSC 390 Web Programming
CSC 403 Social, Ethical and Professional Issues
CSC 470 Software Engineering
CSC 490 Computer Science Capstone/Senior Project

RESEARCH INTERESTS

Parallel algorithm design and model evaluation
GPU computing
Simulations of mathematical modeling in biomedical dynamics
Real-time system scheduling
Software visualization and algorithm animation

SELECTED PUBLICATIONS

Mathematical Modeling and Simulations of the Pathophysiology of Type-2 Diabetes Mellitus, F. Nani, M. Jin, Proceedings of the International Conference on BioMedical Engineering and Informatics (BMEI'15), pp.296-300, IEEE Catalog No. CFP1593D-ART, ISBN: 978-1-5090-0022-7, China, October 2015
Theoretical Analysis and Simulation of Acute and Chronic Phase HIV-1 Dynamics, F. Nani and M. Jin, British Journal of Mathematics & Computer Science 4(11): 1450-1479, 2014. Print
Dynamics of HIV-1 Associated Kaposi Sarcoma During HAART Therapy, F. Nani, M. Jin, in Proceedings of the International Conference on Bioinformatics and Computational Biology 2011 (BIOCOMP'11), ISBN: 1-60132-169-4, July 2011
Relating the Power of the Multiple Associative Computing (MASC) Model with that of Reconfigurable Bus-Based Models, J. Trahan, M. Jin, W. Chantamas, and J. W. Baker, Journal of Parallel Distributed Computing, Vol. 70 No. 5, pp.458-466, Elsevier, May 2010
Timings for Associative Operations on the MASC Model, Mingxian Jin, Johnnie Baker and Kenneth Batcher, in Proceedings of the 16th International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium, abstract on pg. 193, full text on CDROM, April 2001