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Contacts
UT Austin-Portugal Program
Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
2829-516 CAPARICA
Portugal
Telephone: +351 212 948 300
Fax: +351 212 954 461
E-mail: utaustinportugal@fct.mctes.pt
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Media Requests
Sofia Santos
Press Officer
UT Austin-Portugal
International Collaboratory for Emerging Technologies, CoLab
Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia,
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
2829-516 Caparica
Mobile: +351 93 852 73 30
Email: sofia.santos@fct.mctes.pt
Prentiss Riddle
IC² Institute
+1 512-475-8970
priddle@icc.utexas.edu
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About the UT Austin-Portugal Program
Overview
This document describes the long-term collaboration to be established between The University of Texas at Austin (UTAustin) and Portuguese research and higher education institutions, as agreed between the Portuguese Science Foundation (FCT) and UTAustin, on the basis of the Assessment Report submitted in February 2007 by UT-Austin to the Government of Portugal. The goal of the assessment was to identify beneficial partnerships in targeted areas of mutual interest for educational and research excellence as well as accelerated economic development within Portugal as an enabler for new jobs and sustainable wealth creation. Based on a 5-month (March-July 2006) assessment of a range of potential areas of cooperation it was decided to initially focus on two program areas: i) the development of an interdisciplinary research and advanced training program in Digital Media, including the development of Master and PhD programs; and ii) the creation of a University Technology Enterprise Network (UTEN). During August-November 2006 two additional program areas were considered for interdisciplinary research and advanced training, namely: Mathematics and Advanced Computing. In addition, it was decided to launch the necessary institutional framework to explore additional fields for cooperation and to enter into an open collaborative framework in order to foster collaborative actions in other emerging scientific fields, including nano and molecular science, robotics, and biotechnology. All program efforts will be subject to continuous monitoring, evaluation, and adjustments within the collaboration.
Consequently, an important component of the UTAustin-Portugal Program lies in its institutional framework. As such, all the activities launched under the auspices of the UTAustin-Portugal Program by UTAustin and by the FCT and partner institutions should be focused on creating a single governance structure, designated as the “International Collaboratory for Emerging Technologies”, or CoLab, which will be launched without a legal personality and has two poles: one in Portugal, the CoLab@Portugal, and other at UTAustin, the CoLab@UTAustin.
The activities of CoLab are divided in three major groups:
- Interdisciplinary research and advanced education activities in areas encompassing digital media, advanced computing and mathematics;
- On-job training for entrepreneurs and technology transfer officers and related technology commercialization activities, including internships and an exchange program for entrepreneurs and technology transfer officers, in a way to form a “University Technology Enterprise Network”, UTEN; and
- Continuous identification and promotion of cooperation in emerging technologies between UTAustin and Portuguese institutions.
Interdisciplinary research and advanced education
The first group above includes three different areas with the vision to foster interdisciplinary research and advanced education, in a way to help generate new knowledge leading to wealth creation. The goal is to develop a close agenda bringing together Digital Media, Advanced Computing and Mathematics, so that CoLab can build on existing competences and foster a new scientific agenda at an international level. The various components are described in the following paragraphs.
Digital Media
The Digital Media Program will focus on education, research, and business development in digital information content and new media production and distribution including:
- Digital and interactive media, and new distribution systems for small and large screens and over the Internet
- Online journalism
- Interactive documentaries and interactive systems
- Wireless technologies and systems for new media distribution leading to platforms to enhance digital inclusion, and learning systems for unskilled people with special emphasis on the handicapped and elderly
Master and PhD Programs will be formed at the New University of Lisbon and The University of Porto in collaboration with The College of Communication at The University of Texas at Austin. Digital Media emerging challenges in entrepreneurship and technology venturing will be associated with new media technology commercialization in international markets across a variety of initiatives.
The emphasis will be on the full value chain associated with advanced digital media. The overall goal is to have students explore media technologies and their design implications as well as evolving connections between technology, design, social and cultural domains, and business development. The curriculum for the planned MA degree will be stronger in hands-on production and experimentation, while the PhD degree will add theory and critical discourse to these subject areas that will function as core courses in the first two years of a PhD program. Courses in research methods will be important for both degrees and will encourage students to develop innovative and creative research projects.
Contributions to information society policy and pilot experiments in Portugal will also be explored through the participation of the Portuguese Knowledge Society Agency (UMIC), in particular in the areas of inclusion, accessibility to the handicapped and elderly, interactive leaning environments, citizenship and public participation, rich interactive content development.
Advanced Computing
Advanced and grid computing enables the integration of widely dispersed computers, data repositories, and scientific instruments into a connected cyber-infrastructure that allows scientists, engineers, and information technology workers to become more productive through collaboration. The collaboration of researchers at UT-Austin and Portuguese Associate Laboratories (namely LIP and LAETA) and universities (namely The University of Minho, The New University of Lisbon, The University of Coimbra, the Instituto Superior Tecnico of the Technical University of Lisbon and other Portuguese universities) will include developing a PhD Program in Computer Science/Informatics with a particular focus on advanced and grid computing. The emphasis will be on using existing Portuguese PhD programs as opposed to creating a standalone new PhD degree. Students enrolled in this new UT-Austin/Portugal program will need to (i) attend specialized and advanced courses; (ii) study and work in research environments at the participating universities and their associated research centers, (iii) work on research projects that are related to advanced computing; and (iv) if appropriate prepare a PhD dissertation related to advanced computing and the framework of the joint research agendas identified by the participating research groups at UT-Austin and the participating Portuguese universities.
All research programs will include faculty and student exchange, co-supervision of PhD students and hosting of exchange Post-Doc fellows. An annual workshop on advanced computing will be co-organized between UT-Austin and Portugal and will include a PhD doctoral consortium. The collaboration will also support a series of seminars by visiting and in-residence faculty and using the Internet will focus on Advanced Computing. UT-Austin, The University of Minho, The New University of Lisbon, and The University of Coimbra as well as other Portuguese universities, involved in the joint doctoral program, including the Instituto Superior Tecnico of the Technical University of Lisbon, University of Porto and The University of Aveiro, research centers, and companies will consider the following research areas:
- Computational Science: modeling, simulation, optimization, performance analysis and tuning, numerical methods for parallel and distributed computing;
- Computer System: paradigms and algorithms, system performance analysis, middleware, tools and technologies, and development of useful environments to the user.
- Applications: applications in science, engineering, economics, civil protection and risk management;
Furthermore, these Portuguese universities, research centers, and companies will also collaborate with the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) at UT-Austin on deployment and operational issues for advanced computing, such as software, tools evaluation and secure access. All projects will include education, training, and outreach activities and will consider opportunities for technology transfer.
Contributions to policy measures connected to the Portuguese National Grid Initiative, launched in 2006 and prepared by the Knowledge Society Agency (UMIC), will be assured through the participation of this agency.
Mathematics
The project in the area of mathematics is aimed to develop advanced programs of research and education in specific areas of mathematics of common interest and expertise to:
- Reinforce the scientific and learning capabilities in Portugal, as well as to promote the internationalization of research and graduate programs in leading Portuguese universities;
- Stimulate mobility and scientific interaction of graduate students, researchers and post-docs among institutions;
- Attract to the involved Universities strongly motivated students who are able to integrate advanced research programs in Mathematics and applications;
- Optimize resources, by promoting a PhD program that involves the major universities in Lisbon and in Coimbra.
The cooperative initiative involves the Institute for Computational Engineering and Science (ICES) and the Department of Mathematics at UT-Austin and mathematical research centers and groups in four Portuguese universities, namely at the School of Sciences of UL (FCUL), the Instituto Superior Tecnico of UTL (IST-UTL), the School of Sciences and Technology of UNL (FCTUNL), and the School of Sciences and Technology of U. Coimbra (FCTUC).
University Technology Enterprise Network (UTEN)
A University Technology Enterprise Network (UTEN) will work to accelerate wealth and job creation in targeted, science-based, new-generation Portuguese industries and firms, and will develop increasingly interrelated programs across organizational and institutional boundaries to support the common objective of world-class research and education leading to accelerated science and technology-based enterprise innovation and commercialization. It will be based on:
- Systematic on-job training and competence building of technology-transfer professionals from Portuguese institutions, together with continuous providing of internships in the Austin Technology Incubator, the IC2 Institute and relevant leading institutions in Austin and the United States, as well as by a continuous exchange program with technology transfer offices in Portugal;
- Systematic on-job training and competence building of technology-based entrepreneurs to be selected from Portuguese research and academic institutions in order to accelerate processes of science and technology commercialization, emphasizing overcoming key challenges in technology entrepreneurship;
- Enhanced access to U.S. and international markets, namely through assistance to be provided by the Austin Technology Incubator and the IC2 Institute.
UTEN will be initially composed of a virtual network of 15 Portuguese universities and their technology transfer offices, research centers, and incubators involved in S&T commercialization, as well as select S&T parks with relevant university research activities, and the national Innovation Agency, AdI. They will work with the Austin Technology Incubator and the IC² Institute at The University of Texas at Austin to:
- Have a unified management structure
- Coordinate activities and programs across institutional entities
- Leverage existing regional infrastructure and personnel located at the participating Portuguese institutions.
UT Austin will assist AdI and the management structure of UTEN in Portugal to select entrepreneurs and technology transfer officers on a competitive basis. It is expected that over time UTEN will develop increasingly interrelated programs across organizational and institutional boundaries to support the common objective of fostering world-class research and education leading to accelerated science and technology-based enterprise innovation and commercialization. UTEN will focus on technology commercialization while emphasizing key challenges in technology entrepreneurship and technology venturing for international markets. These activities will include short courses in Portugal and university-based internships in Portugal and at UT-Austin and company-based internships. Cooperative research projects involving Portuguese and UT-Austin faculty and students will focus on critical aspects of S&T research, commercialization, and international market access.
Other areas for future cooperation in emerging technologies
CoLab is launched to provide the necessary institutional framework to explore additional fields for cooperation and to enter into an open collaborative framework in order to foster collaborative actions in emerging scientific fields, involving UT Austin and Portuguese research and higher education institutions. All program efforts will be subject to continuous monitoring, evaluation, and adjustments within the collaboration.
While still in their infancy the fields of nanoscience and nanotechnology have already demonstrated that these research areas will have a tremendous impact on various and important aspects of human life, such as health, the environment, energy, transportation, information technology, and space exploration. Accordingly, this is considered a key emerging program area to be considered for inclusion in the overall UT-Austin/Portugal collaboration.
All program areas will work to build world-class research, education, and training programs that will involve professors and graduate students from the founding universities as well as top international talent. Training and for-credit classes will be offered in Portugal and at UT-Austin. Teaching Assistantships for graduate students will be offered in Portugal and at UT-Austin. Exchange programs will also be offered for Portuguese and UT-Austin faculty. Cooperative research workshops and training and doctoral seminars will be organized. Research projects will involve faculty and graduate students from Portugal and UT-Austin as well as other leading universities. Jointly authored research papers will be submitted to highly ranked, referred journals for publication. The possibility of dual or joint degrees will be pursued. Student recruitment will focus on highly qualified Portuguese students from Portugal and other Portuguese speaking countries as well as highly qualified non-Portuguese speaking students, especially UT-Austin students.
While S&T commercialization and business development will be an important component of all program areas, it will be the focus of the University Technology Enterprise Network (UTEN). A main function of UTEN will be to catalyze and facilitate the coordination and leveraging of S&T resources and assets across Portugal’s regional and national academic, business, and government sectors in the pursuit of accelerated technology/knowledge-based growth.
As envisioned, all selected program areas will be built progressively over a 5-year time horizon through the realization of multilateral partnerships with the ultimate goal of building the necessary critical mass needed for Portugal’s success in S&T research and commercialization in dynamic global markets. During the formation and operation of these cooperative programs, multiple sources of funding, including private sector sources and public sector grants, will be sought to sustain the programs and activities that achieve demonstrable success. Industry affiliates programs will be formed to promote business development services for established and start-up Portuguese firms. Operational structures will be designed to promote successful technology commercialization and business development activities including enhanced international market access, acquisitions, technology licensing, and accelerated start-up success. Operational guidelines will be developed that will specify how for-profit entities will financially support and otherwise contribute to non-profit activities such as education and research as well as benefit participating universities and sustainability of the overall cooperative program between UT-Austin and Portugal.
Technology Partnerships & Industry Affiliations
Technology partnerships and industry affiliations between Portuguese universities and businesses, and Austin and US businesses will be vital for the success of the UT-Austin/Portugal cooperative programs. Such affiliations will significantly benefit the overall collaboration in terms of: (1) knowledge gains; (2) insight into global academic and business operations; (3) network contacts and opportunities; and (4) exposure to US and global markets.
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Governance
An International Collaboratory for Emerging Technologies (CoLab) will be formed to provide overall support and governance for all the UT-Austin/Portugal collaborative programs, as in Figure 6. The CoLab Board of Directors will be composed of the president of the Portuguese S&T Foundation (or a representative), as Chair, the President of the Portuguese Knowledge Society Agency (or a representative), The VP and/or Associate VP for Research at UT-Austin, CoLab Directors from Portugal and UT-Austin. The directors, in Portugal and in Austin, form the Directorate of the Board of Directors.
The CoLab Board of Directors will be assisted by the CoLab Operating Committee, which will include the CoLab Directors in Portugal and in Austin, as well as the Portuguese and UTAustin-based directors of UTEN, Digital Media, Mathematics, and Advanced Computing programs as well as other program areas as added to the overall collaboration such as nano and molecular science and technology. The CoLab Operating Committee will be chaired by the CoLab Co-Directors in Portugal.
The CoLab Directors based in Portugal and at UT-Austin will assist with coordination of existing programs and activities and will also be responsible for identifying additional areas of intervention and cooperation in education, research, and technology commercialization. The CoLab Directors will report to the Portuguese government through the Portuguese S&T Foundation and to The University of Texas at Austin through the VP and Associate VP for Research.
UTEN, Digital Media, Mathematics, and Advanced Computing will each have directors in Portugal and in Austin, as described above in this document and schematically represented in Figure 6. All program areas will have Joint Operating Boards as well as industry affiliates and internship programs. All programs will be monitored for possible adjustments to and improvements to the collaborations which are intended to develop over 5-years for continuing and sustainable collaborations. Important to this effort will be an External Review Committee (ERC) composed of international academic, business, and government representatives. The ERC will be charged with evaluating and providing recommendations for all UT-Austin/Portugal cooperative programs.
Portugal’s pole of the “International Collaboratory for Emerging Technologies – CoLab” (i.e., CoLab@Portugal), shall be resident in the FCT until such time as another unit is designated by the FCT to serve in this role. Following the Assessment Report submitted by UTAustin to the Government of Portugal in February 2007, the FCT will designate the School of Science and Technology of Universidade Nova de Lisboa (i.e., FCTUNL) as the first coordinating unit in Portugal that is responsible for launching CoLab in Portugal and leading the implementation and coordination of Portuguese partner institutions’ activities in the UTAustin-Portugal Program, namely in the areas of digital media, advanced computing and mathematics, as well as to guarantee the continuous identification and promotion of future cooperation in emerging technologies among UTAustin and Portuguese institutions.
In addition, FCT will also designate the Portuguese Innovation Agency (i.e., AdI) to guarantee, within CoLab, a national secretariat to coordinate the specific activities towards the “University Technology Enterprise Network” described in this agreement.
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During the assessment exercise the various teams from UTAustin had the opportunity to meet several Portuguese counterparts and discuss their relative involvement in the UT-Austin/Portugal programs. In this context, the following people has been identified to guarantee launching CoLab and the UTAustin-Portugal Program.
CoLab Board of Directors
CoLab´s Board of Directors is composed of the following six members:
- The President of the Portuguese Science and Technology Foundation, FCT, João Sentieiro, Professor, (who shall chair the Board);
- The President of the Portuguese Knowledge Agency, UMIC, Luis Magalhães, Professor;
- VP for Research, as designated by the President of UTAustin, Juan Sanchez, Professor;
- Robert Peterson, Professor, Associate VP for Research, as designated by the President of UTAustin;
- António Câmara, as Director of CoLab@Portugal, professor at the School of Science and Technology of Universidade Nova de Lisboa (i.e. FCT/UNL);
- David Gibson, The Director of CoLab@UTAustin (i.e., the UTAustin Director).
Directorate of the Board of Directors
- António Câmara, Director of CoLab@Portugal, professor at the School of Science and Technology of Universidade Nova de Lisboa (FCT/UNL);
- David Gibson, The Director of CoLab@UTAustin (i.e., the UTAustin Director).
Focus Area Directors and Joint Operating Boards
Digital Media
- Director in Portugal: António Camara, Professor, School of Science and Technology of Universidade Nova de Lisboa (i.e., FCTUNL), who will be assisted by two co-Directors, Pimenta Alves, at INESC-Port and the University of Porto and Nuno Correia, at the School of Science and Technology of Universidade Nova de Lisboa (i.e., FCTUNL);
- Director at UTAustin: Sharon Strover, Professor, Chair RTF Department, UTAustin College of Communication
- Joint Operating Board:
- António Camara, who may be represented by one of the two co-Directors, Artur Pimenta Alves and Nuno Correia, as above;
- Sharon Strover, as above
- Rosenthal Alves, Journalism, College of Communication, UTAustin
Advanced Computing
- Director in Portugal, Alberto Proença, Professor at Universidade do Minho, who will be assisted by two, co-directors, Pedro Medeiros, at FCTUNL and Luís Silva, at the School of Science and Technology of University of Coimbra;
- Director at UTAustin: Keshav Pingali, Professor, Chair of Advanced and Distributed Computing, Department of Computer Science;
- Joint Operating Board:
- Alberto Proença, who may be represented by one of the two co-Directors, Pedro Medeiros and Luís Silva, as above;
- Keshav Pingali, as above
- Pedro Ferreira, Representative from the Portuguese Knowledge Agency, UMIC
Mathematics
- Director in Portugal: Diogo Gomes, Instituto Superior Técnico, Technical University of Lisbon
- Director at UTAustin: Luis Caffarelli, Department of Mathematics, UTAustin
- Joint Operating Board:
- Diogo Gomes; as above
- Luis Caffarelli, as above
- Luís Nunes Vicente, University of Coimbra
- Irene Martinez Gamba, UTAustin
University Technology Enterprise Network, UTEN
- Director in Portugal: José Manuel Mendonça, Professor, University of Porto and INESC-Porto, who may be represented by the co-Director, Teresa Mendes, University of Coimbra and Instituto Pedro Nunes;
- Director at UT Austin: David Gibson, Associate Director, IC2 Institute
- Joint Operating Board:
- José Manuel Mendonça, who may be represented by the co-Director, Teresa Mendes, as above;
- to be defined, Director at UTAustin
- Lino Fernandes, President, Portuguese Innovation Agency, AdI
- Isaac Barchas, Director of the Austin Technology Incubator, ATI
CoLab Operating Committee
- António Camara, Director of CoLab@Portugal
- David Gibson, The Director of CoLab@UTAustin
- António Camara, Director for Digital Media in Portugal, who may be represented by one of the two co-Directors, Artur Pimenta Alves or Nuno Correia, as above
- Sharon Strover, Director for Digital Media at UTAustin
- Alberto Proença, Director for Advanced Computing in Portugal, who may be represented by one of the two co-Directors, Pedro Medeiros and Luís Silva, as above
- Keshav Pingali, Director for Advanced Computing at UTAustin
- Diogo Gomes, Director for Mathematics in Portugal
- Luis Caffarelli, Director for Mathematics at UTAustin
- José Manuel Mendonça, Director for UTEN in Portugal who may be represented by the co-Director, Teresa Mendes
- David Gibson, Director for UTEN at UTAustin
Coordination and national secretariats in Portugal
FCT will designate the School of Science and Technology of Universidade Nova de Lisboa (i.e., FCTUNL) as the first coordinating unit in Portugal that is responsible for launching CoLab in Portugal and leading the implementation and coordination of Portuguese partner institutions’ activities in the UTAustin-Portugal Program, namely in the areas of digital media, advanced computing and mathematics, as well as to guarantee the continuous identification and promotion of future cooperation in emerging technologies among UTAustin and Portuguese institutions.
In addition, FCT will also designate the Portuguese Innovation Agency (i.e., AdI) to guarantee, within CoLab, a national secretariat to coordinate the specific activities towards the “University Technology Enterprise Network”, described in this agreement.
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MIT Professors in Portuguese high schools
During the next five years, "Ciência Viva"
(Lively Science) will take professors of the MIT (Massachussetts Institute of Technology)
to high schools.
The first session of this initiative took place on November 16th, at 10h30.
David Marks, Co-Director of the MIT and Steve Connors, both of the Laboratory of
Energy and Environment of the MIT, gave a lecture in the High School of Amadora,
where students and professors responsible for "Ciência Viva" projects in the area
of the renewable energies also participated.
The pupils of the Basic School D. Francisco Manuel de Melo will also have the
opportunity to show their hand-made constructions based on solar energy. The
next session will be in charge of Dava Newman, MIT Professor in the area of
Bioengineering, and will take place on November 21, during the Week dedicated
to Science and Technology.
Location
http://www.esec-amadora.rcts.pt/
Contact
Rosalia Vargas
Tel: 218917100
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MIT-Portugal Program meets the high school of Amadora
During the next five years, the MIT-Portugal Program, in association with “Ciência Viva” will take professors of the MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) to high schools in Portugal. The first session of this initiative took place on November 16th, at 10h30, at the Basic School D. Francisco Manuel de Melo, at Amadora.
The session objectives and the Portuguese context were provided by Dr. Rosália Vargas, the “Ciência Viva” Program Director and by Prof. Paulo Ferrão, the MIT-Portugal Program Director.
The MIT faculty, David Marks, Co-Director of the MIT Laboratory for Energy and Environment and Steve Connors, gave a lecture on renewable energies, in a session that has attracted more than 300 students, who raised a great number of questions and promoted an enthusiastic debate on the future of the renewable energies in Portugal.
During the session, David Marks and Stephen Connors interacted, giving a dynamic to the answers and making it agreeable and relaxing. At the end, the applauses were not only for the MIT Professors who found this initiative stimulating, but also to the students, who have demonstrated to be very proficient and interested in learning more about science and technology.
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Workshop on Sustainable Energy Systems
On November 17th, a Workshop on Sustainable Energy Systems was organized at the premises of EFACEC in Carnaxide.
Energy security and long-term environmental management were only two of the many emerging challenges discussed in the session, including renewable energies and energy efficiency, which can be highly beneficial to Portuguese, EU, and other stakeholders.
It was concluded that the MIT-Portugal Program should contribute to increase energy efficiency at a National level, by educating the future leaders that may design new energy systems tailored to fulfil the nation’s specific needs for energy services. These efforts, aimed at the long-term transformation of the energy infrastructure also include such issues as ageing infrastructure components, shifting investment responsibilities under competitive energy markets, and the need to identify—and protect—vulnerable energy system nodes and modes. In additional to novel, detailed, and transferable knowledge on future sustainable energy systems, society and industry will need top level educated individuals in these areas.
Therefore, it was concluded that a Workshop on these subjects is utterly convenient as a starting point for this effort. This event took place in EFACEC and was also jointly organized with ProForum. The number of participations exceeded 150 representatives from companies, academia and R&D; institutions.
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MIT-Portugal Program meets high school Emídio Navarro – Almada
Following the MIT-Portugal Program and Ciência Viva’s initiative “MIT meets schools”, Professor Dava Newman gave a lecture on Human Space flight. The presentation included simulators, astronauts’ suits and all sort of subjects concerning Space were discussed during this session.
The session was stimulating and interactive, as a volunteer from the audience dressed the astronaut suit, which Dava had designed.
At the end, the MIT Professor still tried to answer the many questions, which, by lack of time, were left without an answer.
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External Review Committee Members
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Prof. Roland Clift
Enginneering Systems
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Prof. Nick Oliver
EDAM (Enginnering Design and Advanced Manufacturing
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Dr. Robert Skinner
Transportation Systems
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Prof. César Dopazo
Sustainable Energy Systems
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Prof. Peter Cavanagh
Bio-Enginnering Systems
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Prof. Henk Sol
Prof.dr. Henk G. Sol, born in 1951, graduated in 1974 "cum laude" from the University of Groningen, The Netherlands, with a MSc in Operations Research and Information Systems. He obtained a Ph.D. "cum laude" from the University of Groningen on the subject of ‘Simulation in Information Systems Development’ in 1982.
He was involved in the development and control of a Masters Program in Information Systems within the School of Economics and Management Science of the University of Groningen from 1974 to 1984.
Prof. Sol became a chaired professor of ‘Information Systems Development’ at Delft University of Technology in 1984, where he developed the Department of Information Systems to one of the leading Information Engineering Schools in Europe.
From 1992 – 1998 he was founding Dean of the new School for Engineering, Policy Analysis and Management. He prepared the merger, in 1998, into the Faculty of Technology, Policy and Management.
In 1992 Prof. Sol was appointed as Chaired Professor of ‘Systems Engineering’ at Delft University of Technology.
In 1999 Prof.Sol was appointed as Scientific Director of Delft Institute for Information Technology in Service Engineering and of the Airport Development Center.
From 2000 tot 2003 Prof.Sol was again Dean of the Faculty of Technology, Policy & Management and Chaired Professor of Systems Engineering, in particular Business Engineering and ICT.
His research focuses on the development of services enabled by ICT, management information systems, decision support systems and telematics. Currently his research interest shifts towards designing information-intensive, innovative organizations. He is a well-known author with a few hundred publications in these fields.
Under his responsibility 50 Ph.D. dissertations were finished.
Prof. Sol organized numerous international conferences and workshops and gave a great many invited presentations.
He serves on the editorial roles with journals as Decision Support Systems, Electronic Journal of E-commerce, Organizational Science, Communications of AIS and Information and Management.
He is member of IFIP TC 8, W.G. 8.1, 8.2, 8.4 and various other professional organizations. He received the IFIP Outstanding Service Award as well as the IFIP Silver Core.
He is one of the founding fathers of AIS and one of its first vice-presidents.
He has acted as a management consultant for a large range of national and international organizations since 1972. He is chairman/member of the (Supervisory) Board of Directors of several companies.
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Prof. Roland Clift
Roland Clift is Distinguished Professor of Environmental Technology and Founding Director of the Centre for Environmental Strategy (CES). His research specialisation is in the broad field of Environmental System Analysis, including Life Cycle Assessment, Industrial Ecology and Sustainable Energy Systems.
Prior to his present appointment, Professor Clift was Head of the Department of Chemical and Process Engineering at the University of Surrey for 10 years. He is a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, of the Institution of Chemical Engineers and of the Royal Society of Arts, and an Honorary Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Waste and Environmental Management. He is also Visiting Professor in Environmental System Analysis at Chalmers University, Gothenburg, Sweden and a Director of the Merrill Lynch New Energy Technologies investment trust. In 2005 he completed a 9 year term as a member of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution, and acted as Expert Adviser to an enquiry by the House of Lords Science and Technology Committee in “Energy Efficiency”. In 2006,he begins appointment as a member of the Science Advisory Council of the Department of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra). He is a past member of the UK Ecolabelling Board, and of the Royal Society/Royal Academy Working Group set up at the instigation of the Department of Trade and Industry to examine, inter alia, the risk and regulatory issues raised by nanotechnology.
In 1994 Professor Clift was awarded an OBE for his services to science and technology. In 2003 he was recognised as a Distinguished Professor by the University of Surrey and also received the Royal Academy of Engineering’s Sir Frank Whittle Medal “for outstanding and sustained engineering achievement contributing to the well being of the nation”. Professor Clift was honoured in the 2006 New Year's Honours as a Commander of the British Empire (C.B.E.) for his services to the environment.
Selected Recent Publications:
Clift, R. (2006) Climate Change and Energy Policy: The Importance of Sustainability Arguments, Energy, 32, pp.262-268.
Clift, R. (2006) Sustainable development and its implications for chemical engineering. Chemical Engineering Science, 61, pp 4179-4187.
“Sustainable Development in Practice – case studies for engineers and scientists”; ed. A. Azapagic, S. Perdan and R. Clift, John Wiley and Sons (2004).
“Slurry Transport using Centrifugal Pumps”, 3rd ed.; K. C. Wilson, G. R. Addie, A. Sellgren and R. Clift, Springer-Verlag (2005).
“Bubbles, Drops and Particles”; R. Clift, J. R. Grace and M. E. Weber, Academic Press (1978), republished by Dover (2005).
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Prof. Nick Oliver
Projects
Enterprise and Innovation
New Product Development Performance in the UK and Japanese Automotive Industries
The Learning Factory
Professor of Management, Judge Institute
CMI Professional Practice
Personal Background
MA (Edinburgh), PhD (Open). Researcher, Open University Systems Group 1981-85; Lecturer in Organizational Behaviour, Cardiff Business School 1985-92; joined the Judge Institute, Cambridge University, 1992; currently Professor of Management at the Judge Institute. He has led a series of international benchmarking studies in the automotive industry, looking at both product development and manufacturing performance.
Publications
Delbridge, R., Lowe, J. and Oliver, N. (2000) 'Shopfloor responsibilities under lean team working.' Human Relations, Vol 53, No 11, pp 1459-1479.
Oliver, N., Ikeda, M., Nakagawa, Y. and Primost, D. (2001) 'Trends in production and product development in the Japanese automotive industry.'International Journal of Automotive Technology and Management, Vol 1, No 1, pp 53-60.
Anderson, J. and Oliver, N. (2001) 'Collaberative new product development in multi-customer context: challenges for Western auto component suppliers.' International Journal of Vehicle Design, Vol 25, No 4. pp 261-274
Oliver, N. and Delbridge, R. (2002) 'The Characteristics of High Performing Supply Chains.' International Journal of Technology Management. Vol 23, No 1/2/3. pp 60-73.
Kerrin, M. and Oliver, N. (2002) 'Collective and individual improvement activities: the role of reward systems.'Personnel Review Vol 31, No 3, pp 320-337.
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Dr. Robert E. Skinner, Jr.
Robert Skinner has been the Executive Director of the Transportation Research Board (TRB) of the National Academies of Sciences and Engineering since 1994. TRB is a non-profit organization that promotes transportation innovation by sponsoring professional meetings and publications, administering applied research programs, and conducting policy studies. It serves as an independent adviser to the federal government and others on scientific and technical questions of national importance.
the staff director for congressionally mandated studies. He has overseen studies on a diverse range of topics including highway design, highway safety, truck size and weight regulations, high-speed passenger rail, maritime transportation policies, and airline deregulation.
Prior to joining TRB in 1983, Mr. Skinner was a Vice President of Alan M. Voorhees and Associates, a transportation consulting firm, for which he managed the firm's activities in the eastern United States.
Mr. Skinner earned his bachelor's degree in civil engineering from the University of Virginia in 1969 with high distinction. He earned a master’s degree in civil engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1971. A registered professional engineer, Mr. Skinner received the James Laurie Prize from the American Society of Civil Engineers.
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Prof. César Dopazo
PhD Aeronautical Engineer by the Polytechnical University of Madrid (1977). PhD Mechanical Engineer by the University of the State of New York (1973). University professor of Mechanics of Fluids of Centro Politécnico Superior (CPS) of the University of Zaragoza (UZ) from 1981 and Director of the Research laboratory in Technologies of Combustio'n (LITEC), Mixed Center CSIC/UZ/DGA. Director of the Department of Science and Technology of Fluids Materials and of the UZ (1990- 1992 and 1997-1999).
Student Graduated at the University of the State of New York (1970-1973), postdoctoral Investigator in that same University (1974) and in John Hopkins (1974-1975). Visitor Professor of the University of the State of New York (1977) and of the Independent National University of Mexico (UNAM) (1995), as well as Invited Professor of the University of California in Davis (1989), of the University of Southern California (1989) and of the École Centrale de Lyon (1993).
Between 1978 and 1980, Engineer of Departamento Técnico-Económico de Unidad Eléctrica, S.A. (UNESA), company in which he has acted like Consultant from 1980 to 1987. He has been Advisor of the Brookhaven National Laboratory (1979-1985) and of the United Technologies Corporation (USA) (1991-1992).
His activities in investigation and technological development are centered in the fields of the combustion, turbulent flows with chemical reaction, two-phase flows, atomization, industrial dispersion of polluting agents and, in general, aerodynamics and hydrodynamics. In those fields he has managed Projects of R&D; in National and European Programs (JOULE) as well as industrial Contracts of development and demonstration in the Power Sector. He has coordinated Projects BRITE/EURAM Program (1993-1998) on aero engines of low emissions, with participation of several universities and companies (Rolls Royce, BMW-RR, SNECMA, VOLVO Alpha Romeo Avio, MTU, Turbomeca, etc.). His work is refered to in several doctoral theses, numerous publications in international scientific and technological magazines and presentations in congresses.
He has organized several international congresses in the fields of R&D; and he is a member of scientific and organizing committees, international conferences and symposiums. He is evaluator of several international scientific magazines and belongs to the publishing committee of some of them. He has organized conferences and lectured courses in Colombia, Cuba, Mexico, USA and Europe.
He has been a member of the Direction Committee of the École Centrale de Lyon (1984), vowel of the Advisory Council of Investigación (CONAI) of the General Delegation of Aragón (1984- 1990), Coordinator of the Area of Mechanical and Textile Engineering of the National Agency of Evaluación and Prospectiva (ANEP) (1986-1988), vowel of Group V for the reform of curricula of technical lessons (1987-1988), Advisor of the Secretariat of State of Universities and Investigación (SEUI) (1986-1987) in the Project ODIN of super-computing, Delegate of the Ministry of Education and Science in the Committee of Management and Coordination of BRITE/EURAM Program of the European Union (1986-1987) and vowel (Vice-rector) of the Managing Commission of the University Carlos III of Madrid (1990). Spanish representative of the Ministry of Science and Technology in the Global Forum of the Science of the O.C.D.E. (2001-).
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Prof. Peter Cavanagh
Peter R. Cavanagh, Ph.D., D.Sc. (Med.) is the Virginia Lois Kennedy Chairman of Biomedical Engineering at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation (CCF). He came to CCF in 2002 from Pennsylvania State University, where he was Distinguished Professor of Kinesiology, Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Medicine and Behavioral Health.
Dr. Cavanagh’s involvement with space life sciences began in 1987, when he worked on a research project involving the shuttle treadmill with physician-astronaut William Thornton. He subsequently consulted for NASA on a number of issues related to exercise countermeasures. In 1989 Dr. Cavanagh received a grant from NASA to develop a zero-gravity locomotion simulator. He was subsequently appointed as co-chair of the Musculoskeletal Committee of the Human Research Facility Science Working Group (HRF SWG). This team was responsible for the identification and specification of biomechanics and exercise physiology hardware that has since been installed in the HRF racks on the International Space Station. In 1996 Cavanagh was awarded a NASA Life and Microgravity Sciences grant to study the biomechanics of exercise countermeasures. He worked closely with NASA and Lockheed Martin in the evaluation of the treadmill vibration isolation system (TVIS). This involved designing an experiment that flew on STS 84, and he also traveled to Moscow on behalf of NASA headquarters to help successfully negotiate the installation of the TVIS aboard the Russian segment of the International Space Station. In 1998 Dr. Cavanagh was selected as a principal investigator for a flight experiment aboard the International Space Station to explore the relationship between lower-extremity action in space and the loss of bone and muscle. For the last five years, he has worked with a team of NASA engineers in the development of hardware, software, and crew training procedures. This activity culminated in the successful collection of data from the first subject on Expedition 6 on Christmas Eve 2002. This experiment is scheduled to continue through the next several ISS increments.
Dr. Cavanagh is also chairman of the Science Council for the Division of Space Life Sciences of the Universities Space Research Association (USRA). Amongst his other space-related activities, Dr. Cavanagh presented the 2001 DB Dill lecture to the American College of Sports Medicine on the topic of The History of Life Science in Medicine in Space.
He has published a number of articles related to space life science. In 2003, Dr. Cavanagh was invited to join the NASA Reinvention Committee and also the advisory group to examine the provision of longduration medical care on the International Space Station. He has appeared on National Public Radio, commenting on the decision to launch the increment 8 crew to the ISS and has participated in the NASA TV program Increment 6 science update.
He holds several grants focusing on bone loss in simulated and actual microgravity. In February 2004, he was appointed Team Leader of the Bone Loss Team of the National Space Biomedical Research Institute, which involves not only setting priorities for space research on bone loss but also interacting with both experts and the lay public on the advances coming from such directed funding. In October 2004, Dr. Cavanagh was appointed Co-Director of the newly established Center for Space Medicine at the Cleveland Clinic.
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