People & Partners - People
University of Bath
| Professor Peter Johnson | |
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Dr. Neil Carrigan is a Research Fellow in Human-Computer Systems at the University of Bath. On the NECTISE project, Neil works in the ‘Collaborative Working’ stream of the Decision Support (DS) topic group. A particular concern of the work at Bath is how to support the design of systems that support collaborative decision-making. |
University of Cambridge
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Professor John Clarkson Research at Cambridge University into NEC focuses on how to apply change prediction methods to the systems (of systems) approach described by NECTISE. The aim is to demonstrate how capability components, decision management, change prediction, collaboration, and integration may be leveraged to understand, develop intent, and synchronise effect with the purpose of providing decision enhancement within an organisational context. Professor Clarkson leads the Change Management research team with the Cambridge Engineering Design Centre. |
Dr. Nicholas Caldwell
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Cranfield University
| Professor Phillip John Philip John is the Professor of Systems Engineering at Cranfield University and leads the "Through Life Systems Management" Topic Area within NECTISE. Building on their many years industrial experience in complex system development, Phil and his team at Cranfield are investigating the Systems engineering, Project management and Enterprise and Acquisition practices that are needed to achieve and sustain Network Enabled Capability. |
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Mr Tim Mackley |
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| Dr. Steve Barker | |
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Dr. John Deane This followed a 38 year career with MBDA UK and its predecessor companies working on missile systems design and development. |
University of Leeds
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Professor Jie Xu Professor Jie Xu is a Professor of Computing at the University of Leeds and Director of the EPSRC WRG e-Science Centre, involving the three White Rose Universities of Leeds, York and Sheffield. Professor Xu now leads a research team studying Grid technologies with a focus on complex system integration, dependable and secure collaboration, and evolving system architectures. He is the Topic Leader of NECTISE Systems Architecture team. |
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Dr Colin C Venters
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Dr. Lu Liu Lu Liu is a Research Fellow in the School of Computing at the University of Leeds. He is working on Systems Architecture Topic in NECTISE. The goal of his research is to investigate and develop architectural strategies and mechanisms appropriate for the through-life delivery of NEC. His research focuses on the investigation and development of advanced mechanisms for coping with evolution and changes. |
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Dr, Duncan Russell Dr Duncan Russell is a Senior Research Fellow in the School of Computing at the University of Leeds. He is the lead research assistant for the Systems Architecture topic in NECTISE. Dr Russell is investigating architectural models that support interoperability, evolution and dependability through service-oriented architecture and novel architectural models. |
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Dr. David Webster David is currently a research assistant for the the University of Leeds Distributed Systems and Services group, primarily working on the NECTISE project. Within NECTISE, David is working on Life-cycle modelling for systems of systems within NEC." |
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Dr. Zongyang Luo is currently a research assistant working on NECTISE project in the School of Computing at the University of Leeds. His work in NECTISE is mainly focused on Architecture Framework, Service-oriented Architecture (SOA). He received his PhD degree in Electronic Engineering from the University of Surrey, UK, in 2008. |
University of Leicester
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Professor Ian Postlethwaite |
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Professor Da-Wei Gu Da-Wei Gu is a member of the Control & Monitoring Topic Group, with particular research interests in fault tolerant and optimal operations of networks in a highly uncertain environment, using sophisticated optimisation algorithms and artificial intelligent approaches |
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Alexandru Murgu Responsible for research, cooperation and business case development of "Reconfiguration" theme in the Control & Monitoring stream of NECTISE. Interested in applying supervisory and hierarchical control methods and developing a research platform for assets coordination and reconfiguration in NEC environments. Relevant goals include achieving UAV mission availability and surveillance capability. |
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Dr Liqun Yao Liqun Yao is a Research Associate in the Department of Engineering, University of Leicester (Control Systems). She is working on the health management stream (CM2) in the Control & Monitoring (C&M) topic for the NECTISE project. Her main task is developing a monitoring and diagnostic capability, which when integrated with the prognostics developments, will provide a health management system for use in a network enabled system. |
Loughborough University
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Professor Michael Henshaw Professor Michael Henshaw is Director of the NECTISE research programme and Professor of Systems Engineering in the Electronic and Electrical Engineering Department of Loughborough University. He graduated with a first class BSc. and then a PhD in Applied Physics from the University of Hull and after three years researching in plasma physics at the University of York, joined British Aerospace (now BAE Systems) in 1989 as an aerodynamics engineer. He worked on a number of research programmes in aeronautical engineering specialising in unsteady aerodynamics, in which he was awarded a BAE Systems Chairman's silver award for innovation and four bronze awards. He studied part-time and was awarded a MBA (distinction) from the University of Lincolnshire and Humberside in 1998. In 1999 he set up and led the successful PUMA DARP research programme (unsteady aerodynamics) that involved six universities and four industries. He subsequently developed integrated, multi-disciplinary research programmes including FLAVIIR and NECTISE. Michael Henshaw joined Loughborough University to lead NECTISE in August 2006. He has also developed other research activities in integration of complex systems; system of systems engineering; multi-disciplinary teams, projects, and experimentation; engineering management; autonomous systems; and engineering for enduring capability. He is a member of RAeSoc, AIAA, IEEE and INCOSE and serves in an advisory role as a member at large of the NATO RTO Systems Concepts Integration Panel and the NDIC working group on systems engineering and open architectures. |
| Ms Natalie Pugh Natalie works as PA to Prof Henshaw at Loughborough University. Her responsibilities include the NECTISE website, organisation of demonstrations conferences and workshops within NECTISE, administrator for the Shared Data Environment, programme finance and core administration on the programme. |
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Dr. Maged Morcos |
| Dr. Elena Irina Neaga Irina deals with research core studies and applied principles for “systems of systems” to support military capability-based acquisition in network environments as well as related themes to enable the development and deployment of NEC solutions. The related holistic approaches include a comparative analysis of capability concept, associated research and practice of systems and resilience engineering, roadmapping strategies, alongside the determination and relationships of NEC Themes. |
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Murray Sinclair
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Dr. Esmond Urwin |
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Professor John Andrews I am involved in the CM3 Prognostics stream of NECTISE which develops systems modelling techniques for multi-platform phased missions. The mission is performed by several platforms (systems of systems) collaborating to meet a shared mission objective. The modelling predicts the failure of individual platform missions and the overall mission. The framework developed uses a Binary Decision Diagram based phased mission analysis technique. The objective is to update the mission failure likelihood predictions as circumstances change and new knowledge emerges. The new knowledge can be in the form of failures reported by a fault diagnostics process, external factors (such as weather or threats), and phases know to be successfully completed. The updated probabilities need to be produced in real-time to aid in the future mission planning process. |
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Dr. Darren Prescott The CM3 Prognostics stream is researching the modelling of the mission failure probability of a number of entities working in collaboration to meet a shared mission objective. A new Binary Decision Diagram based Phased Mission Analysis technique is being used to move towards the goal of real-time phased mission reliability calculation. |
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Professor Paul Chung I work on the Decision Support topic and am the lead academic on the Capability Components and Architecture stream. We provide technical input and supervise one research associate who is working on this stream. Together we are developing a repository system that allows users from different geographical locations to contribute and access information from different sources, including distributed databases, and formats. |
Dr. Zhining Liao |
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Professor Charles Dickerson |
University of Manchester
| Professor Graham Winch | |
Dr Eunice Maytorena-Sanchez |
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| Dr. Mike Pryce |
Queens University Belfast
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Professor Mark Price |
University of Strathclyde
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Professor Alex Duffy Alex Duffy is the academic topic leader for Decision Support. He is presently a Professor and Director of the CAD Centre within the department of Design Manufacture and Engineering Management at the University of Strathclyde. His main research interests include advanced computational design, conceptual design and decision support, knowledge modelling, design sketching support, learning and design re-use, design performance measurement, process optimisation and design management. |
| Ian Whitfield Dr Robert Ian Whitfield is a lecturer in the Department of Design Manufacture and Engineering Management at the University of Strathclyde. He is currently involved in the development of collaborative tools and techniques for the integration of distributed design expertise across Europe. His research background subsequently covers issues relating to: co-ordination, collaboration, integration, resource management, process modelling and optimisation and modular design. |
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| Dr. Shaofeng Liu Dr Shaofeng Liu works on the Decision Support topic within NECTISE, and focuses on the DS-5 Integration stream. Her main responsibility is to integrate the developments across the Decision Support topic to develop an Integrated Decision Support Environment (IDSE). She is acting as the Technical Leader of the IDSE development. She is currently working with the Core Team to champion the Knowledge theme development for NECTISE 2008 demonstration. |
University of York
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Dr. Tim Kelly Dr Kelly is a Senior Lecturer within the Department of Computer Science at the University of York. He is also Academic Theme Leader for Dependability in the UK MoD funded Software Systems Engineering Initiative (SSEI). His research interests include safety case management, software safety analysis and justification, software architecture safety, certification of adaptive and learning systems, and the dependability of “Systems of Systems”. He has supervised a number of research projects in these areas with funding and support from Airbus, BAE SYSTEMS, Data Systems and Solutions, DTI, EPSRC, ERA Technology, Ministry of Defence, QinetiQ and Rolls-Royce. He has published over 100 papers on high integrity systems development and justification in international conferences and journals. He is also and Chair of the IET’s Functional Safety Network Executive Committee. He received his DPhil from the University of York in 1999, and MA in Computer Science (1st Class) from the University of Cambridge in 1994. |
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Frantz Iwu |


























