

Christos G. Cassandras is Head of the Division of Systems Engineering and Professor
of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Boston University.
He is also co-founder of Boston
University’s Center for Information and Systems
Engineering (CISE). He received degrees from Yale
University (B.S., 1977), Stanford University
(M.S.E.E., 1978), and Harvard
University (S.M., 1979; Ph.D.,
1982). In 1982-84 he was with ITP Boston, Inc. where he worked on the design of
automated manufacturing systems. In 1984-1996 he was a faculty member at the
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of
Massachusetts/Amherst. He specializes in the areas of discrete event and hybrid
systems, stochastic optimization, and computer simulation, with applications to
computer and sensor networks, manufacturing systems, and transportation
systems. He has published over 250
refereed papers in these areas, and four
books. He has guest-edited several technical journal issues and serves on
several journal Editorial Boards. In addition to his academic activities, he
has worked extensively with industrial organizations on various systems
integration projects and the development of decision-support software. He has
most recently collaborated with The MathWorks, Inc.
in the development of the discrete event and hybrid system simulator SimEvents®.
Dr. Cassandras is currently
Editor-in-Chief of the IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control
and has served as Editor for Technical Notes and Correspondence and Associate
Editor. He has also served on the IEEE CSS Board of Governors, as Chair of
several conferences, and chaired the CSS Technical Committee on Control Theory.
He has been a plenary speaker at various international conferences, including
the American Control Conference in
2001 and the IEEE Conference on Decision
and Control in 2002. He is the recipient of several awards, including the
Distinguished Member Award of the IEEE Control Systems Society (2006), the 1999
Harold Chestnut Prize (IFAC Best Control Engineering Textbook) for Discrete
Event Systems: Modeling and Performance Analysis, and a 1991 Lilly
Fellowship. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Tau
Beta Pi. He is also a Fellow of the IEEE and a Fellow of the IFAC.
