| .. Faculty Awards .. |

Last updated: 06/24/2008

         
 

Dr. Chaovalitwongse was awarded an International patent (US 7,373,199), titled "Optimization of Multi-Dimensional Time Series Processing for Seizure Warning and Prediction".


Dr. Altiok was part of two panels on "Port Development in South Jersey" organized by the South Jersey Development Council.

The panel discussions focused on the port expansion projects and the impact of port expansion on South Jersey communities and the State's economy. The panelists included Kris Kolluri, Commissioner, NJDOT, T. Altiok, Rutgers University, Thomas Carver, Exec. Director, Casino Reinvestment Development Authority, NJ and John Matheussen, CEO, Delaware River Port Authority.


Dr. Özel has been awarded a grant from the National Science Foundation Division of Civil, Mechanical, and Manufacturing Innovation. This research award of $186,039 will support a collaborative research project entitled "Improving Machinability of Titanium Alloys using Physics-based Simulation Modeling" between July 1, 2008 and June 30, 2011.


Dr. M. Baykal-Gursoy together with her collaborators E. Boros (RUTCOR), Rick Lathrop(Center for Remote Sensing&Spatial Analysis, N. Fefferman (DIMACS), Dina Fonseca and Randy Gaugler (Center for Vector Biology), and Mark Robson (New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station) have been awarded a 2008 Academic Excellence Fund (AEF) for the establishment of the Rutgers University Climate and Health Research Initiative (CHRI). The research team will focus on investigating and minimizing the impact of extreme climatic events on human health.


Drs. Boucher and Elsayed, along with Drs. Martin and Elnahrawy of Computer Science Department, have been awarded the Collaborative Computing Research grant from Rutgers' Computing Coordination Council, "Improving Healthcare Utilization using Real-Time Tracking". The research team will develop and implement a system that combines real-time electronic tracking of hospital assets using RFID tags with scheduling of the use of these assets to improve hospital services. The target application is a regional in-patient cancer center.


Dr. Chaovalitwongse (PI) and his collaborators (Co-PIs: BME Professor E. Micheli-Tzanakou, BME Professor N. Boustany, UMDNJ-RWJMS Neurosurgery Professor R. Lehman, UMDNJ-RWJMS Neurology Professor B. Wu) have been awarded the Collaborative Computing Research grant from Rutgers' Computing Coordination Council. The seed fund of $50,000 will support a collaborative research project entitled: "Spatio-Temporal Data Mining in Brain Disorder and Cognitive Function Study". Dr. Chaovalitwongse will lead the team to exploit advances in optimization, signal processing, and statistical approaches to improve the current technology of brain diagnosis. Several medical applications will be studied, including Epilepsy, Parkinson's Disease, Alzheimer's Disease, and other brain disorders.


Drs. Chaovalitwongse and Pham, together with ECE Professor M. Parashar, CS Professor T. Nguyen and MIS Professor H. Xioang, have been awarded a 2008 Academic Excellence Fund (AEF). The funding of $75,000 will support Rutgers' Center of Excellence for Cyber-Security and Information Assurance (CSIA).


Dr. James T. Luxhoj, "Safety Risk Analysis of Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) Integration into the National Airspace System (NAS): Phase 2," ($157,983): Principal Investigator, Federal Aviation Administration, September 1, 2007 - August 30, 2008.


Dr. Mohsen A. Jafari, "Protecting Intelligent Distributed Power Grids Against Cyber Attacks," Siemens, $360,000, November 01, 2007 - October 31, 2009, (Co-PI with M. Muller).


Dr. Mohsen A. Jafari, "Decision Support Systems for Roadway Safety," USDOT/Federal Highway Commission, $250,000, November 01, 2007 - April 30, 2009.


Dr. Mohsen A. Jafari, "Seed Money for Research in Distribution Systems," Siemens, $40,000, December 01, 2007 - November 30, 2008.


Dr. Mohsen A. Jafari, "Traffic Safety," USDOT/FHUA/CAIT, $350,000, September 01, 2007 - August 30, 2008.


Dr. Elsayed A. Elsayed, "Investigation of Aircraft Separation Standards and Navigational Equipment on the Oceanic Airspace Capacity and Safety," FAA, $168,000, Award No. 06-G-016, September 5, 2007- August 28, 2008.


Dr. Elsayed A. Elsayed, "Implementation of Continuous Sheet Folding Technology," Titan Folding Technologies, $100,446, September 1, 2007-Decemeber 31, 2008 (Co-PI with B. Basily).


Dr. Elsayed A. Elsayed, "Investigation of Decision Support Systems for Aviation Safety Evaluation," FAA, $162,000 Award No. 07-G-001, December 1, 2007-November 30,
2008.


Dr. Özel received a research grant from United Technologies Research Center, Investigations on Influence of Machining Induced Strain, Stress and Temperature Fields on White-Etch Layer Formation in IN-100 Super Alloy, Phase I & Phase II, Principal Investigator, (5/2007-12/2007): $26,057.


Dr. Baykal-Gursoy received a research grant from Rutgers Transportation Coordinating Council/Federal Transit Administration. Managing Incidents and Emergencies in Transportation, Rutgers TCC/FTA Grant, Principal Investigator, (9/2007-8/2008): $30,000.


Dr. Pham gave a keynote lecture on Mortality Modeling - Bioenvironmental Issues and Perspectives at the U.S. – Korea Workshop: Understanding Bioenvironmental Complexity, July 9 – 10, 2007, Seoul, Korea.


Dr. Pham was selected to be a Member of IEEE Computer Society Fellow Evaluation Committee, May – July 2007.


Dr. Pham served as an Honorary Chair of the ISSAT International Conference on Reliability and Quality in Design, August 2-4, 2007, Seattle, WA.


Dr. Pham served as a General Chair of the International Conference on Modeling of Complex Systems and Environments, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, July 16-18, 2007.


Dr. Tortorella has been selected to be a Member of The President’s National Security Telecommunications Advisory Committee.


Dr. Tortorella received IEEE Communications Society Technical Committee on Quality and Reliability 2007 Chairman's Award.


Dr. Luxhøj was promoted to Full Professor of Industrial and Systems Engineering.


Dr. Luxhøj is the recipient of the 2006-2007 Rutgers Engineering Governing Council’s Excellence in Teaching Award for the Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering.



Dr. Luxhøj received a Phase 2 award for the research grant from the Federal Aviation Administration.

Dr. Luxhøj received a Phase 2 award in the amount of $157,983 for the research grant “Safety Risk Analysis of Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) Integration into the National Airspace System (NAS)” from the Federal Aviation Administration. This brings the total award to $301,028 for the period July 1, 2006 – August 30, 2008.


Dr. Chaovalitwongse was awarded a United States patent (US 7,263,467 B2), titled “Multi-Dimensional Multi-Parameter Time Series Processing for Seizure Warning and Prediction".


 

Dr. Boucher and Dr. Ali Yalcin (Rutgers ISE alumnus) received the IIE/Joint Publishers Book-of-the-Year Award

Dr. Boucher and Dr. Ali Yalcin (Rutgers ISE alumnus) have been selected to receive the IIE/Joint Publishers Book-of-the-Year Award. The Board of Trustees officially approved the 2007 slate of award winners at their meeting at the end of March, 2007. This honor will be bestowed upon Dr. Boucher and Dr. Ali Yalcin during the Industrial Engineering Solutions 2007 Conference, to be held May 19 - 23, 2007 at Renaissance Hotel Nashville/Nashville Convention Center.


Dr. Pham and Dr. Chaovalitwongse Awarded Cisco Grant

Professor Hoang Pham and Professor W. Art Chaovalitwongse were awarded $93,000 by Cisco for an Academic Research & Technology Initiatives grant entitled “Optimization and Statistical Framework for Mining and Categorizing Correlated Text Records”. Professors Pham and Art are developing a novel text mining paradigm for categorizing and grouping similar/correlated text records employing advances and rigorous theories in statistics, data mining, and optimization. The outcome of this project could revolutionize the practice in investigating real word text records like medical records, defect records, etc


Dr. Altiok selected in the Inaugural Class of Distinguished Alumni

NC State ISE selects Dr. Altiok as one of twelve members of the inaugural class of Distinguished Alumni of the Edward P. Fitts Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering at North Carolina State University. These individuals will be recognized during the department's 75th Anniversary Celebration to be held on November 3rd in the McKimmnon Center on the NCSU campus.


Dr. Albin elected IIE Fellow

Dr. Susan L. Albin has been elected as a Fellow of Institute of Industrial Engineers (IIE). This award is in recognition of outstanding leaders of the profession that have made significant, nationally recognized contributions to industrial engineering. There have been 250 members awarded this honor, which is the highest classification of IIE membership. Dr. Albin received the award at the IIE National Meeting in Orlando, FL on May 21, 2006.

Founded in 1948, IIE is the world's largest professional body dedicated to the development of industrial engineering. The Institute now has more than 15,000 members and 280 chapters worldwide.


Dr. Özel appointed to IJMMM editorial board

Dr. Özel has been appointed to the editorial board of the International Journal of Machining and Machinability of Materials.


  Rutgers ISE's Art Chaovalitwongse awarded prestigious NSF CAREER award

Dr. W. Art Chaovalitwongse, assistant professor of industrial and systems engineering, has received a 2006 a Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award from the National Science Foundation (NSF) for his research and education on optimization and data mining approaches for epilepsy research. The prestigious NSF CAREER award is to young faculty members for their career-development and teaching activities, as upcoming academic leaders in the 21st century. As part of the award, NSF will provide $400,000 in funding over the next five years (through 2011).
 
 

Art will use the award to support his research project, titled "Novel Optimization Methods for Cooperative Data Mining with Health-care and Biotechnology Applications". It is a research program to advance and apply quantitative and qualitative approaches to the study of epilepsy and brain disorders. Art’s research program is motivated by the fact that uncontrolled epilepsy poses a significant burden to society due to associated healthcare cost ($12.5 billion in the U.S. alone). His project is aimed at the development of an automated seizure prediction system and brain abnormal activity classifier. To achieve this goal, optimization-based data mining approaches will be developed to quantitatively analyze the brain activity through electroencephalogram (EEG) data. Art proposes to develop novel DM techniques to excavate hidden patterns/relationships from the brain’s electrical activity, which will give a greater understanding of brain functions (as well as other complex systems) from a system perspective.

The research program described in his CAREER proposal is very crucial to decision making processes in real world problems. Success of this research will advance the state-of-the-art in the field of optimization in data mining, and have a greatly significant impact on medical research. The research scope in this proposal touches upon several emerging optimization and data mining problems, which are driven by ever growing computational power. The proposed research has shown a broad impact on many research fields including computer science, operations research, computational biology, and logistics. The scope of this project itself will broaden opportunities and enable the participation of all citizens – women and men, underrepresented minorities, and especially persons disabled by epilepsy. Success of this proposal in seizure prediction research will relieve the anguish from this life-threatening disease and improve the life quality of at least 2 million Americans (14 millions worldwide), who are currently suffering from epilepsy regardless of race, age, or gender.

The CAREER project will undertake various efforts in curriculum development, student mentoring (DIMACS Research Experience for Undergraduates), industrial collaboration (ExxonMobil, Dash Optimization, St. Peter’s University Hospital), and outreach activities (e.g., conferences, workshops, trainings). Art will be working with neurologists from the comprehensive epilepsy center at St. Peter’s University Hospital.

Art joined the department of Industrial and Systems Engineering as an Assistant Professor in January 2005. He received his B.E. degree in Telecommunication Engineering from KMITL (Thailand) in 1999, and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Industrial and Systems Engineering from University of Florida in 2000 and 2003, respectively. He has authored or co-authored more than 26 journal papers/book chapters and 37 conference publications and holds two international patents and two U.S. patents.


   
   

Dr. Özel received the Best Paper Award in the 8th CIRP International Workshop on Modeling of Machining Operations.

The award was presented at the 2005 CIRP International Workshop, that was held in 10-11 May, 2005, in Chemnitz, Germany. The paper was titled "Finite Element Method Simulation of Machining of AISI 1045 Steel with a Round Edge Cutting Tool".


Dr. Pham received IEEE Fellow Award

Hoang Pham, Professor of Industrial and Systems Engineering at Rutgers University, was recently elected a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), the world’s largest professional technical organization with over 360,000 members worldwide. Pham is being honored for notable contributions to analytical techniques for modeling the reliability of software and systems. Pham was among 268 worldwide members of IEEE elected as Fellows in 2005. Pham is the author of over 80 journal articles, 2 books, 4 edited-books, and editor-in-chief of the International Journal of Reliability, Quality and Safety Engineering and associate editor of the IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics Pham’s recent research interests focus on modeling the reliability and vulnerability of complex systems in high risk environments.


Dr. Elsayed received the 2005 Golomski Award

They received the 2005 Golomski Award for the outstanding paper in the 2004 Proceedings of the Annual Reliability and Maintainability Symposium, by their paper entitled
Zhao, W. and Elsayed, E. A., “An Accelerated Life Testing Model Involving Performance Degradation."


Wanpracha (Art) Chaovalitwongse won the William Pierskalla Best Paper Award in Operations Research and Health Care Applications by the INFORMS (Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences). (http://www.informs.org/Prizes/ HealthPrize.html)

The award was presented at the 2004 INFORMS annual meeting held in Denver, CO. The paper was titled "Seizure Warning Algorithm Based On Optimization And Nonlinear Dynamics." The paper was presented by Art, and authored by P.M. Pardalos, W. Chaovalitwongse, L.D. Iasemidis, J.C. Sackellares, D.-S. Shiau, P.R. Carney, O.A. Prokopyev, and V.A. Yatsenko. This paper was recently published in Mathematical Programming Series B Vol. 10, No. 2.


Susan Albin received the IIE Transactions on Quality and Reliability Engineering 2001-2002 Best Paper Award.

The award will be presented at the 2003 Annual Meeting of IIE in Portland, Oregon. The paper, "A Hierarchical Method for Evaluating Products with Quantitative and Sensory Characteristics," is co-authored by Prof. Flavio Fogliatto, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. He was a graduate of the Rutgers ISE doctoral program and Dr. Albin served as his thesis advisor.


Thomas O. Boucher was the recipient of the 2002 Wellington Award from the Institute of Industrial Engineers.

This is a lifetime achievement award given for "outstanding contributions in the field of engineering economy".


David W. Coit won the William A. J. Golomski Award for Best Paper by an IIE member at the 2002 Reliability and Maintainability Symposium (RAMS) in Seattle, WA.

The award was presented at the 2003 RAMS, Tampa, FL. The paper was titled "Reliability Improvement of Airport Ground Transportation Vehicles Using Neural Networks to Anticipate System Failure." The paper was presented by Prof. Coit, and authored by Alice Smith, David Coit and Curtis McCullers.


Dr. Luxhøj received a $1.16 million research contract from the NASA Langley Research Center to develop a probabilistic decision support system to evaluate new technology and to assess aviation safety system risk.

   
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