CV

Prof. Daishin UEYAMA

Faculty of Engineering, Musashino University

3-3-3 Ariake Kohtoh-ku Tokyo 135-8181 Japan

Education

M.Sc. Science and Technology, Ryukoku University, Shiga Japan, 1995

Ph.D. Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo Japan, 1998

Areas of interest

1. Pattern formation in reaction-diffusion systems

  • Biological pattern formation
  • Bifurcation analysis of reaction-diffusion equation
  • Precipitation pattern formation (Liesegang phenomenon)

2. Computer-aided analysis

  • Numerical simulations
  • Numerical tracking of the solution of reaction-diffusion equation
  • Parallel computing for the large system

Languages

English, Japanese (native language)

Academic experience

2017.4 - Professor, Faculty of Engineering, Musashino University

2013.10-2017.3 Professor, School of Interdisciplinary Mathematical Sciences, Meiji University

2013.4-2013.9 Associate Professor, School of Interdisciplinary Mathematical Sciences, Meiji University

2008.4-2013.3 Associate Professor, School of Science and Technology, Meiji University

2006.7-2008.3 Lecturer, School of Science and Technology, Meiji University

1998.4-2006.6 Research Associate, Graduate School of Science, Hiroshima University

1998.4-1999.3 Research Associate, Faculty of Science, Hiroshima University

List of the five most important publications:

H. Notsu, D. Ueyama and M. Yamaguchi,

A self-organized mesh generator using pattern formation in a reaction-diffusion system, Applied Mathematics Letters 26(2) (2013), pp.201-206.

C.-C. Chen, L.-C. Hung, M. Mimura and D. Ueyama,

Exact traveling wave solutions of three species competition-diffusion systems, DCDS-B 17(8) (2012), pp.2653-2669.

I. Lagzi and D. Ueyama,

Pattern transition between periodic Liesegang pattern and crystal growth regime

in reaction-diffusion systems, Chemical Physics Letters 468 (2009), pp.188-192.

H. Shoji, K. Yamada, D. Ueyama and T. Ohta,

Turing patterns in three dimensions, Phys. Rev. E 75(4)(2007), 046212.

Y.Nishiura and D.Ueyama,

A Skeleton Structure of Self-replicating Dynamics,

Physica D 130 (1999), pp.73-104.