Dimitri Mavris

Dimitri Mavris

Dimitri Mavris

Regents' Professor
Boeing Professor of Advanced Aerospace Systems Analysis
Director, Aerospace Systems Design Laboratory

Dimitri Mavris is a Regents’ Professor, Boeing Professor of Advanced Aerospace Systems Analysis, and an S.P. Langley Distinguished Professor. He also serves as the director of the Aerospace Systems Design Laboratory (ASDL) and executive director of the Professional Master’s in Applied Systems Engineering (PMASE). Dr. Mavris received his B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. in aerospace engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology. His primary areas of research interest include: advanced design methods, aircraft conceptual and preliminary design, air-breathing propulsion design, multi-disciplinary analysis, design and optimization, system of systems, and non-deterministic design theory. Dr. Mavris has actively pursued closer ties between the academic and industrial communities in order to foster research opportunities and tailor the aerospace engineering curriculum towards meeting the future needs of the US aerospace industry. He has also co-authored with his students in excess of 1,000 publications. During his tenure at Georgia Tech, Dr. Mavris has chaired and served in several Technical and Program Committees for the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) and served on the AIAA Board of Directors and Institute Development Committee. He is the President of the International Council of the Aeronautical Sciences (ICAS). He is the Georgia Tech technical point of contact for the FAA Center of Excellence for Alternative Jet Fuels & Environment (ASCENT), the Georgia Tech site director for the FAA Partnership to Enhance General Aviation Safety, Accessibility, and Sustainability (PEGASAS), and the principal investigator for the Airbus/Georgia Tech Center for MBSE-enabled Overall Aircraft Design and the Siemens Center of Excellence for Simulation and Digital Twin.

dimitri.mavris@aerospace.gatech.edu

(404) 894-1557

Website

  • http://www.ae.gatech.edu/community/staff/bio/mavris-d
  • Research Focus Areas:
    • Algorithms & Optimizations
    • Delivery & Storage
    • Policy & Economics
    • Use & Conservation
    Additional Research:

    System Design & Optimization


    IRI Connections:

    Wenke Lee

    Wenke Lee

    Wenke Lee

    Executive Director, Institute for Information Security and Privacy
    Co-Executive Director, SEI
    Professor

    Wenke Lee, Ph.D., is executive director of the Institute for Information Security & Privacy (IISP) and responsible for continuing Georgia Tech's international leadership in cybersecurity research and education. Additionally, he is the John P. Imlay, Jr. Professor of Computer Science in the College of Computing at Georgia Tech, where he has taught since 2001. Previously, he served as director of the IISP's predecessor -- the Georgia Tech Information Security Center (GTISC) research lab -- from 2012 to 2015. Lee is one of the most prolific and influential security researchers in the world. He has published several dozen, oft-cited research papers at top academic conferences, including the ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security, USENIX Security, IEEE Security & Privacy ("Oakland"), and the Network & Distributed System Security (NDSS) Symposium. His research expertise includes systems and network security, botnet detection and attribution, malware analysis, virtual machine monitoring, mobile systems security, and detection and mitigation of information manipulation on the Internet. Lee regularly leads large research projects funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), U.S. Department of Defense, Department of Homeland Security, and private industry. Significant discoveries from his research group have been transferred to industry, and in 2006, doing so enabled Lee to co-found Damballa, Inc., which focused on detection and mitigation of advanced persistent threats. Lee’s awards and honors include the “Internet Defense Prize” awarded by Facebook and USENIX in 2015, an “Outstanding Community Service Award” from the IEEE Technical Committee on Security and Privacy in 2013, a Raytheon Faculty Fellowship in 2005, an NSF Career Award in 2002, as well as best paper awards in the IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy and the ACM SIGKDD International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining. Passionate about quality education, Lee serves on the advisory boards of the Faculty of Engineering at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and the board of trustees at Pace Academy in Atlanta. He received his Ph.D. in Computer Science from Columbia University in 1999.

    wenke@cc.gatech.edu

    404.385.2879

    Website

    Research Focus Areas:
    • Delivery & Storage
    • Machine Learning
    • Network and Security
    • Policy & Economics
    • Vulnerability Analysis
    Additional Research:

    Data Security & Privacy; Encryption; Internet Infrastructure & Operating Systems; Machine Learning; Cyber Technology


    IRI Connections:

    Greg Eisenhauer

    Greg Eisenhauer

    Greg Eisenhauer

    Senior Research Scientist
    Greg Eisenhauer is a research scientist in the College of Computing at the Georgia Institute of Technology and Technical Director of the Center for Experimental Research in Computer Systems. His research focuses on data-intensive distributed applications in enterprise and high-performance systems. Technical topics of interest include: high-performance I/O for petascale machines; efficient methods for managing large-scale systems, techniques for runtime performance and behavior monitoring, understanding and control; middleware for high-performance data movement and in transit data processing, QoS-sensitive data streaming in pervasive and wide-area systems, and experimentation with representative applications in the high-performance computing and enterprise domains. He received the Bachelor's of Computer Science (1983) and a Master's of Computer Science (1985) from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He received his Ph.D. from the Georgia Institute of Technology in 1998. His thesis work demonstrated object-based methods for efficient program monitoring and steering of distributed and parallel programs using event-based monitoring techniques and code annotations.

    eisen@cc.gatech.edu

    404.894.3227

    Website

    Additional Research:
    Large-Scale or Distributed Systems; Software & Applications

    IRI Connections:

    Beki Grinter

    Beki Grinter

    Beki Grinter

    Professor; School of Interactive Computing
    Associate Dean for Academic Affairs
    Interim Associate Dean for Faculty Development

    Rebecca "Beki" Grinter is a Professor of Interactive Computing in the College of Computing & (by courtesy) the Scheller College of Business at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Her research focuses on improving the experience of computing by understanding the human experience in the building and using of technologies. Her work contributes to the fields of human-computer interaction, ubiquitous computing, and computer supported cooperative work. She has also worked in the areas of robotics, networking, security, and software engineering. She has published over 80 scholarly articles, served as Papers Chair (2006) & Best Papers Chair (2010) for the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI), the premier conference for human-computer interaction. In 2013 she was elected to the CHI Academy. In 2010 she was recognized as a Distinguished Alumna of the University of California, Irvine. Before joining the faculty at Georgia Tech, she was a Member of Research Staff in the Computer Science Laboratory of Xerox PARC and a Member of Technical Staff in the Software Production Research Department of Bell Laboratories. She was also a visiting scholar at Rank Xerox EuroPARC. She holds a Ph.D. and M.S. in Information and Computer Science both from the University of California, Irvine, and a B.Sc. (Hons) in Computer Science from the University of Leeds. Affiliations GVU Center

    beki@cc.gatech.edu

    Office Location:
    GVU Center

    College of Computing Profile Page

    Google Scholar

    Research Focus Areas:
    • Collaborative Robotics
    • Shaping the Human-Technology Frontier
    Additional Research:

    Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW); Human Computer Interaction (HCI); Ubiquitous Computing


    IRI Connections:

    Barry Drake

    Barry Drake

    Barry Drake

    Senior Research Scientist
    Mr. Drake is a senior research faculty member at GTRI in the Information and Communications Laboratory (ICL) and in the School of Computational Science and Engineering (CSE), College of Computing at Georgia Tech. At GTRI/ICL Mr. Drake is in the Innovative Computing Division where he serves as Technical Lead for the Algorithms and Analytics Branch. His interests include adaptive algorithms, learning machines, numerical linear algebra, and applying these technologies to solve real-world problems. Mr. Drake has been awarded patents and published numerous papers in the areas of optical computers, adaptive algorithms for signal processing, and adaptive machine learning methods. More recently, he has been performing research in the areas of Raman spectroscopy and text analytics, such as topic modeling, using matrix low-rank approxIMaTion methods. He is a member of the Georgia Tech/GTRI DARPA funded XDATA research team. Mr. Drake also served as cofounder of three startup companies and held positions at large Fortune 500 companies. He began his career as a mathematician at a federal laboratory, the Naval Ocean Systems Center (NOSC), San Diego, CA. Mr. Drake holds two Bachelor’s degrees in Mathematics and Forest Biology, a Master’s degree in Applied Mathematics all from the University of Washington, Seattle, WA, and attended Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, on a graduate fellowship from NOSC.

    barry.drake@gtri.gatech.edu

    404.407.7547

    Website

    Research Focus Areas:
    • Algorithms & Optimizations
    • Machine Learning
    Additional Research:

    Algorithms; Communication Systems; Defense / National Security


    IRI Connections:

    Hang Lu

    Hang Lu

    Hang Lu

    Associate Dean for Research and Innovation, College of Engineering
    C. J. "Pete" Silas Chair, School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

    Hang Lu received her B.S. from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign and her M.S.C.E.P and Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She is currently the Associate Dean for Research and Innovation in the College of Engineering and C. J. "Pete" Silas Chair, School of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Lu's research interests involve the interface of engineering and biology and her lab, the Lu Fluidics Group, is conducting research at these interface levels. The Lu Fluidics Group engineers BioMEMS (Bio Micro-Electro-Mechanical System) and microfluidic devices to address questions in neuroscience, cell biology, and biotechnology that are difficult to answer using conventional techniques.

    Faces of Research - Profile Article

    hang.lu@gatech.edu

    404.894.8473

    Office Location:
    EBB 3017

    Lµ Fluidics Group

  • ChBE Profile Page
  • Google Scholar

    Research Focus Areas:
    • Big Data
    • Cancer Biology
    • Chemical Biology
    • Drug Design, Development and Delivery
    • Nanomaterials
    • Neuroscience
    • Regenerative Medicine
    • Systems Biology
    Additional Research:

    Microfluidic systems for high-throughput screens and image-based genetics and genomicsSystems biology: large-scale experimentation and data miningMicrotechnologies for optical stimulation and optical recordingBig data, machine vision, automationDevelopmental neurobiology, behavioral neurobiology, systems neuroscienceCancer, immunology, embryonic development, stem cells


    IRI Connections:

    Maria Konte


    Maria Konte

    Research Scientist

    Maria Konte is a research scientist at the School of Computer Science at Georgia Tech and affiliated with its Institute for Information Security & Privacy. Her research is network security. Her work on network reputation as a measure to defend against cybercriminal infrastructures, appeared at ACM SIGCOMM15, and NANOG62 Research Track. She received the Passive and Active Measurement Conference Best Paper Award 2009 for her work on hosting infrastructures of malicious DNS domains. She received her Ph.D. in Computer Science from Georgia Tech in 2015. She holds an Master's in Systems Engineering from Boston University, and a Diploma in Eng. from the Industrial Engineering and Management Dept. at Technical University of Crete, Greece. She has interned at Damballa and Verisign Labs.

    mkonte@gatech.edu

    Website

    Research Focus Areas:
    • Network and Security Vulnerability Analysis
    Additional Research:
    Network Science

    IRI Connections:

    Nicoleta Serban

    Nicoleta Serban

    Nicoleta Serban

    Professor
    Virginia C. and Joseph C. Mello Professor

    Nicoleta Serban is the Peterson Professor of Pediatric Research in the H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering at Georgia Tech.

    Dr. Serban's most recent research focuses on model-based data mining for functional data, spatio-temporal data with applications to industrial economics with a focus on service distribution and nonparametric statistical methods motivated by recent applications from proteomics and genomics. 

    She received her B.S. in Mathematics and an M.S. in Theoretical Statistics and Stochastic Processes from the University of Bucharest. She went on to earn her Ph.D. in Statistics at Carnegie Mellon University.

    Dr. Serban's research interests on Health Analytics span various dimensions including large-scale data representation with a focus on processing patient-level health information into data features dictated by various considerations, such as data-generation process and data sparsity; machine learning and statistical modeling to acquire knowledge from a compilation of health-related datasets with a focus on geographic and temporal variations; and integration of statistical estIMaTes into informed decision making in healthcare delivery and into managing the complexity of the healthcare system.

    nicoleta.serban@isye.gatech.edu

    404-385-7255

    Office Location:
    Groseclose 438

    Departmental Bio

  • Laboratory Site
  • Research Focus Areas:
    • Platforms and Services for Socio-Technical Frontier
    Additional Research:
    Statistics; Data Mining; Health Analytics; Health Systems; Enterprise Transformation

    IRI Connections:

    Annalisa Bracco

    Annalisa Bracco

    Annalisa Bracco

    Associate Chair and Professor; Earth and Atmospheric Sciences

    Dr. Annalisa Bracco is a professor at Georgia Tech with extensive background in computational fluid dynamics and physical oceanography. Her research interests include coastal ocean circulation, with focus on meso- and submesoscale processes, ocean predictability and inverse dynamics, impacts of physical forcing on ecosystems, and climate model validation. Her group has been involved in field collections during the Deepwater Horizon spill (July/Aug. 2010) and was back in the Gulf in the summer of 2011.

    abracco@gatech.edu

    Website

    University, College, and School/Department
    Research Focus Areas:
    • Health & Life Sciences
    Additional Research:
    Data Mining

    IRI Connections:

    Fan Zhang

    Fan Zhang

    Fan Zhang

    Assistant Professor; School of Mechanical Engineering

    Dr. Fan Zhang received her Ph.D. in Nuclear Engineering and M.S. in Statistics from UTK in 2019. She is the recipient of the 2021 Ted Quinn Early Career Award from the American Nuclear Society and joined the Woodruff School in July, 2021. She is actively involved with multiple international collaborations on improving nuclear cybersecurity through the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the DOE Office of International Nuclear Security (INS). Dr. Zhang’s research primarily focuses on the cybersecurity of nuclear facilities, online monitoring & fault detection using data analytics methods, instrumentation & control, and nuclear systems modeling & simulation. She has developed multiple testbeds using both simulators and physical components to investigate different aspects of cybersecurity as well as process health management.

    fan.zhang@me.gatech.edu

    404.894.5735

    Office Location:
    Boggs 371

    iFAN Lab

  • ME Profile Page
  • Google Scholar

    Research Focus Areas:
    • AI for Security
    • Analytics and Prognostics Systems
    • Critcal Data Protection
    • Cyber-Physical Systems
    • Electrical Grid
    • Nuclear
    • Risk Management
    • Security and Privacy of AI
    • Threat Intelligence and Security Analytics
    Additional Research:

    Research interests include instrumentation & control, autonomous control, cybersecurity, online monitoring, fault detection, prognostics, risk assessment, nuclear system simulation, data-driven models, and artificial intelligence applications.  


    IRI Connections: