Warren Powell

Warren Powell

Past Awards

2022
Saul Gass Expository Writing Award: Winner(s)
2022 - Winner(s)
Citation:

Professor Warren Powell has been a prolific writer and communicator whose contributions have helped to significantly shape and advance methods of operations research, and whose writings have impacted practice and policy. Author of hundreds of scholarly articles and multiple books, his works have received well over 20,000 citations. Professor Powell’s books on approximate dynamic programming have inspired researchers and shaped the minds of many in our field. His writings have helped build a path to optimal learning methods that have become a focus of whole communities of researchers and practitioners in recent years. Through his relentless efforts to show and explain how to overcome the “curse of dimensionality,” his work has had a major impact on practice in areas ranging from freight transportation to the smart grid. His methodologies have informed research across engineering and computer science disciplines. Also noteworthy is his undying efforts to create a common language to unite works in disparate fields, a notion that no doubt recognizes that exposition is as important as the math in advancing the field together. For these many reasons, Professor Powell’s contributions to operations research have been recognized through numerous awards for his scholarly publications, including the prestigious INFORMS Transportation Science and Logistics (TSL) Society’s Robert Herman Lifetime Achievement Award. For his outstanding contributions to the INFORMS community and operations research, expository excellence in his publications making his work broadly accessible, impact, and the courage to see what is possible, Warren Powell is richly deserving of the Saul Gass Award.



2021
Robert Herman Lifetime Achievement Award: Awardee(s)


2020
(SIG) Outstanding Paper in Urban Transportation Planning and Modeling: Winner(s)
Winning material: Optimal Learning for Urban Delivery Fleet Allocation


2015
Best Paper Award: First Place
Winning material: From Single Commodity to Multiattribute Models for Locomotive Optimization: A Comparison of Optimal Integer Programming and Approximate Dynamic Programming


2010
Best Paper Award: First Place
Winning material: “An Approximate Dynamic Programming Algorithm for Large-Scale Fleet Management: A Case Application”
2010 - First Place


2009
Daniel H. Wagner Prize for Excellence in the Practice of Advanced Analytics and Operations Research: Winner(s)
2009 - Winner(s)


2004
INFORMS Elected Fellows: Awardee(s)


1981
TSL Dissertation Prize: Awardee(s)
Winning material: Stochastic Delays in Transportation Terminals: New Results in the Theory and Application of Bulk Queues