$2,000 was awarded in support of a session that I co-organised at the Winter 2023 CMS Meeting.
$1,000 was awarded in support of a session that I co-organised at the Summer 2022 CMS Meeting.
$2,500 was awarded in support of the Stinson66 conference that I co-organised. This conference took place at the Fields Institute in Toronto in June 2022.
NSERC has awarded me a grant of $27,000 per year to conduct research under the title of "Combinatorial Designs, Graphs, and Networks."
$1,000 was awarded in support of a session that I co-organised at the Summer 2021 CMS Meeting.
In June 2017 I was awarded $10,000 towards the support of a Post-Doc.
This fellowship from the University of Queensland provided assistance for a research visit that I made there in early 2017.
NSERC has awarded me a grant of $22,000 per year to conduct research under the title of "Combinatorial Designs and Graph Theory." The original 5-year grant was subsequently extended with an additional year of funding.
In early 2015 I was awarded $10,000 towards the support of a Post-Doc.
NSERC has awarded me a grant of $20,000 per year to conduct research under the title of "Designs, Colourings and Hypergraphs."
NSERC awarded me a grant of $12,000 per year to conduct research under the title of "Combinatorial Algorithms, Structures and Applications." This grant, which was awarded as a 5-year grant, was superceded after two years by a new grant.
In June 2006 it was announced that an application that I had submitted (jointly with S.Kocabiyik and Y.Peng) to the CFI's Leaders Opportunities Fund was awarded $116,456 in support of "Resources for Large-Memory Computational Problems in Mathematics and Statistics".
Additional funding of $185,710 was provided through the Industrial Research and Innovation Fund (IRIF) operated by the province of Newfoundland and Labrador.
This grant is in support of "Connectivity and Conservation in Marine Fishes." The research team consists of Paul Snelgrove (who is the principal investigator) and five additional researchers. We were awarded the full amount of our request: $563,480 over three years.
The website for this project is located here.
This grant is in support of "High Performance Computing Resources for Mathematical and Statistical Research." The amount awarded was $44,234. I was the principal investigor for the grant application, which had three co-applicants (S.Kocabiyik, Y.Peng, and N.Shalaby).
NSERC awarded me a grant of $10,000 per year to conduct research under the title of "Problems in Graph Theory and Combinatorics."
In 2002 MITACS (the NCE for Mathematics of Information Technology and Complex Systems) funded, as a Seed Project, a proposal led by Jeannette Janssen of Dalhousie University and which included me as a participating researcher. Our project, Modelling and Mining of Networked Information Spaces aims to develop methods to analyse and subsequently exploit the link structure of networked information spaces (such as the directed graph that can be associated with the world wide web) in order to efficiently extract information.
In 2003 MITACS promoted our project to a Full Project, in conjunction with the `Communication and Information Networks Research Consortium.'
In 2002, Robert van den Hoogen (of St. Francis Xavier University) and I received a grant of $5,000 from the CMS Endowment Fund in support of a professional development workshop that we co-organised in conjunction with the 2002 CMS Summer Meeting.
In 2003 we received a subsequent grant that will provide support of $5,000 for each of two more years.
During the summer of 1999, I was the project leader in preparing a multi-departmental application to the Canada Foundation for Innovation. In October 1999, the CFI approved the proposal, awarding $75,500 to make possible the acquisition of a Beowulf high-performance computing cluster as well as other computing infrastructure. The project's start date was retro-active to 1998.
Tied to the CFI award was a $20,000 contract with the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency, under the Canada/Newfoundland Comprehensive Economic Development Agreement. The funds from ACOA were also used in support of the Beowulf computing cluster.
NSERC has awarded me a grant of $7,350 per year to conduct research under the title of "Graph decomposition and cycle properties."
This grant consisted of 3 hours of release time during the Fall 1997 semester. The reduction in teaching load, from 4 to 3 classes, afforded me some time in which to pursue research.