MBSE Colloquium: Chris Paredis, "NSF Program Overview: ESD and SYS Programs"

Monday, October 6, 2014
11:00 a.m.
1146 AV Williams Building
Kimberly Edwards
kedwards@umd.edu

Model-Based Systems Engineering Colloquium
NSF Program Overview: Engineering and Systems Design (ESD) and Systems Science (SYS)

Chris Paredis
Program Director
Engineering and Systems Design (ESD) and Systems Science (SYS) programs
National Science Foundation

Roundtable
2:00 p.m., 1146 AVW

Host
John Baras

| video |

Abstract
This presentation provides an overview of the Engineering and Systems Design (ESD) and Systems Science (SYS) programs at the National Science Foundation.  I will start by presenting my conceptual model of systems engineering and design, identifying what I believe are the core issues in our research area.  From there the two programs will be introduced and differentiated from each other.  For each program, the role and scope of the program are defined, and several examples and possible directions for future research are provided.  The presentation will end with some logistical details about the programs and an opportunity for Q&A. The overall goal is to increase the success of potential investigators when submitting proposals to the ESD or SYS programs.

Biography
Dr. Chris Paredis is Program Director for the Engineering and Systems Design (ESD) and Systems Science (SYS) programs at the National Science Foundation.  He is also Professor of Mechanical Engineering in the G.W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering, and in the H.M. Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering at Georgia Tech, Atlanta, USA.  He is a Woodruff Faculty Fellow and Director of the Model-Based System Engineering Center. He holds graduate degrees in Mechanical Engineering from the Catholic University of Leuven (Belgium) and in Electrical and Computer Engineering from Carnegie Mellon University.
Dr. Paredis' research focuses on Model-Based Systems Engineering, combining aspects of decision theory, information technology, simulation, and systems theory to support the design of complex mechatronic systems. In these areas, he has published more than 140 refereed book chapters, journal articles and conference papers.  He has made significant contributions to the development of the theory, methods and tools for decision making in design and systems engineering, and has developed several decision support tools using the SysML and Modelica languages.  As Director of the Model-Based Systems Engineering Center, he leads a group of 11 faculty members towards the development of a next generation of systems engineering methods that are value-driven, model-based and human-centered.
He is active within the Object Management Group (OMG), where he served on the SysML Revision Task Force and where he has led the development of the SysML-Modelica Transformation Specification. He was a founding board member of the North America Modelica Users' Group, and is a member of the Technical Advisory Board for Integrated Model-Centric Engineering Program at NASA/JPL.  He is past Chair of the ASME Computers and Information in Engineering division and has served as Conference Chair for the 2013 Conference on Systems Engineering Research (CSER'13) and the 2007 Computers and Information in Engineering Conference (CIE'07).
Dr. Paredis has served as Associate Editor for the SAE Journal of Commercial Vehicles and the ASME Journal of Mechanical Design.  He currently serves as co-Editor of the ASME book series, "Advances in Computers and Information in Engineering Research."  He received the 2007 CETL/BP Junior Faculty Teaching Excellence Award, the 2007 SAE Ralph R. Teetor Educational Award, and the 2011 ASME CIE Excellence in Research Award.

Audience: Graduate  Undergraduate  Faculty  Post-Docs  Alumni  Corporate 

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