Munther A. Dahleh

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Munther A. Dahleh
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Munther A. Dahleh - IDSS Launch.jpg
Munther Abdullah Dahleh
Born (1962-08-27) August 27, 1962 (age 61)
Family Mohammed A. Dahleh  [ ar ] (brother) [1]

Munther A. Dahleh (born 1962) is the William Coolidge Professor [2] of electrical engineering and computer science and director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Institute for Data, Systems, and Society [3] (IDSS).

Contents

Dahleh is internationally known for his contributions to robust control theory, computational methods for controller design, the interplay between information and control, statistical learning of controlled systems and its relations to model reduction of stochastic systems, the fundamental limits of learning, decisions and risk in networked systems including physical, social, and economic networks with applications to transportation and power networks, and the understanding of the Economics of data and the design of real-time markets for data and digital goods. [4] For his work in these areas, he was awarded the Axelby best paper award four times, [5] the Donald P. Eckman Award for best control engineer under age 35, and the Presidential Young Investigator Award. He is a fellow of both the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) and International Federation of Automatic Control (IFAC) societies. Dahleh is a current member of IEEE.

Education

Dahleh received his BS degree in electrical engineering from Texas A&M University (College Station, Texas) in 1983, and his Ph.D. in electrical engineering from Rice University (Houston, Texas) in 1987.[ citation needed ]

Biography

Dahleh He was born in the city of Tulkarem, Palestine (then as part of the Hashmite Kingdom of Jordan) then raised in Amman, and moved to the United States when he was 17 years old to attend Texas A&M. He lived in Texas for seven years while earning his degrees in electrical engineering. Following graduation, in 1987 Dahleh joined MIT as an assistant professor, and achieved multiple teaching, research and leadership roles in academia, industry, and business sectors. He currently resides in Boston, MA with his wife and their three children.[ citation needed ]

Research and leadership

In the late 1980s, Dahleh solved the L1 optimal control problem [6] — an open problem at the time that addresses robustness in the presence of persistent disturbances — using linear programming techniques. This work pioneered the development of computational approaches for robust controller synthesis. More recently, his work has advanced the development of a foundational theory for information propagation, decisions, and robustness of large dynamic networks arising in transportation, energy, finance, and social networks. On the applied side, Dahleh has developed and patented a methodology for managing both engine and motor switching in hybrid vehicles based on path characteristics; the patent [7] was co-owned by Ford. He also developed a Robust-Hybrid-Automaton architecture for designing autonomous vehicles that combines planning and control.[ citation needed ]

Dahleh has been the founding director of the MIT Institute for Data, Systems, and Society (IDSS) since July 1, 2015. [3] ( [8] The mission of IDSS is to provide an interdisciplinary home for decision theory, machine learning, statistics, and data science in the context of broad societal challenges. IDSS is a unique, multi-school initiative spanning the five schools of MIT: School of Architecture and Planning, School of Engineering, School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences, Sloan School of Management, and School of Science. MIT's Provost Martin Schmidt announced the newly formed institute as an effort to "create a new entity that focuses on complex socio-technical systems, information and decision systems, and statistics." [9] Dahleh has served as the associate department head of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science (EECS) and acting director of the MIT Engineering Systems Division (ESD), which operated from 1998 to June 30, 2015. He is also a member of MIT's Laboratory for Information and Decision Systems (LIDS), where he was associate director of 2007-2009 and acting director in 2010.[ citation needed ]

Research interests

[10]

Industry

Dahleh has served on multiple panels, boards and visiting committees. He is the chair of the visiting committee for Los Alamos National Laboratory, and currently serves on proposal review panels for the National Science Foundation.

In the media

"For his Ph.D in electrical engineering at Rice University" wrote Leda Zimmerman, of RiverRunMedia, for the Connector (MIT News) in 2014, "Dahleh was motivated by the potential for new approaches to control systems for such complex engineering feats as the Boeing 777 and the International Space Station. He created a computational framework for designing feedback control systems in the presence of uncertainty, a mathematical approach that allowed for a much simpler and systematic way to address complex performance requirements without sacrificing robustness or increasing risk. Because his computational formulas streamlined design processes, it became integral in many areas of manufacturing." [13]

In an interview with MIT News in 2015, Dahleh explains that "in order to understand things like power outages and bank failures, you still need electrical engineers and economists — but today you also need anthropologists and data scientists, too. Our ability to collect and aggregate data is already well beyond our ability to understand what it could tell us — and no single discipline, on its own, holds the keys to solving this problem." [8]

Introducing Dahleh as the keynote speaker of WEP2018, [14] Jeff S. Shamma, Prof. Electrical Engineering at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) in Saudi Arabia, described Dahleh's work with IDSS as "working on how humans and machines make decisions together." Dahleh continued by speaking about the "networks that we are experiencing these days, how these networks have fragilities, and how these fragilities can be either mitigated or exemplified because of the human interaction." [14]

Awards

Selected publications

Notes and references

  1. "Mohammed Dahleh, Mechanical and Environmental Engineering: Santa Barbara". cdlib.org. 2000. Archived from the original on February 19, 2024. Retrieved February 22, 2024.
  2. "MIT News-Dahleh appointed William Coolidge Professorship".
  3. 1 2 "MIT IDSS".
  4. "MIT IDSS Faculty/Leadership-Munther Dahleh".
  5. "IEEE Membership & Awards Listing".
  6. Dahleh, M.; Pearson, J. (1987). "L1-optimal compensators for continuous-time systems". IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control. 32 (10): 889–895. doi:10.1109/TAC.1987.1104455.
  7. "Patent Application Publication/HYBRID ELECTRIC VEHICLE AND METHOD OF CONTROL USING PATH FORECASTING - (21) Appl. No.: 13/157533".
  8. 1 2 "MIT Press-MIT Launches IDSS".
  9. "MIT News-Letter from the Deans Regarding New Institute".
  10. "Munther Dahleh CV".
  11. "Pointright Board". 17 October 2023.
  12. "Noted MIT Scientist Munther Dahleh Joins the EnterWorks Executive Advisory Board to Help Guide the EnterWorks Vision for Artificial Intelligence". EnterWorks, Press Release. January 15, 2018.
  13. "MIT News-The Connector".
  14. 1 2 "WEP 2018: Networks of Systems and Society by Dr. Munther Dahleh". YouTube . 7 February 2018.
  15. "IFAC Fellows".
  16. "IEEECSS-George S. Axelby Outstanding Paper Award".
  17. "IEEECSS Awards Program".
  18. "AACC Awards".
  19. "AACC Donald P. Eckman Award".
  20. Dahleh, Munther A.; Diaz-Bobillo, Ignacio J. (1995). Control of Uncertain Systems: A Linear Programming Approach. Prentice Hall. ISBN   978-0132806459.
  21. Elia, Nicola; Dahleh, Munther A. (1998-09-25). Computational Methods for Controller Design (Lecture Notes in Control and Information Sciences). ISBN   978-1852330750.
  22. "Dynamic Systems and Control".
  23. Levine, William S. (1996-02-23). The Control Handbook (Electrical Engineering Handbook). CRC Press. ISBN   978-0849385704.

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