The 2013 US Frontiers of Engineering will be hosted by DuPont on September 19-21, at the DuPont Hotel in Wilmington, Delaware. About 100 outstanding engineers under the age of 45 will meet for an intensive 2-1/2 day symposium to discuss cutting-edge developments in four areas: Designing and Analyzing Social Networks, Cognitive Manufacturing, Energy: Reducing our Dependence on Fossil Fuels, and Flexible Electronics. The goal of the Frontiers of Engineering program is to bring together engineers from all engineering disciplines and from industry, universities, and federal labs to facilitate cross-disciplinary exchange and promote the transfer of new techniques and approaches across fields in order to sustain and build U.S. innovative capacity.
The National Academy of Engineering would like to express its gratitude to the meeting sponsors for their support of the 2013 USFOE Symposium.
LIST OF SESSIONS
(Order of sessions and speakers TBD. Working titles listed.)
Chair: Kristi Anseth, University of Colorado, Boulder
DESIGNING AND ANALYZING SOCIETAL NETWORKS
Session Co-chairs: Tanzeem Choudhury, Cornell University, and Scott Klemmer, Stanford University
Modeling Large-Scale Networks Based on Mobility Data
Tony Jebara, Columbia University
Crowd Computing
Rob Miller, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Crowds, Crisis, and Convergence: Crowdsourcing in the Context of Disasters
Kate Starbird, University of Washington
Computational Social Science: Exciting Progress and Grand Challenges
Duncan Watts, Microsoft
COGNITIVE MANUFACTURING
Session Co-chairs: Elizabeth Hoegeman, Cummins Inc., and Rhett Mayor, Georgia Institute of Technology
Distributed Agents for Artificial Immunity in Modern Manufacturing
Dragan Djurdjanovic, University of Texas, Austin
Manufacturing Execution Systems and Computer-Enabled Decisions at the Manufacturing System Level
Chris Will, Apriso and FlexNet
Computer-Enabled Supply Chain Design
Steve Ellet, CHAINalytics
Sustainable Manufacturing Enabled by Cognitive Manufacturing
Steve Skerlos, University of Michigan
ENERGY: REDUCING OUR DEPENDENCE ON FOSSIL FUELS
Session Co-chairs: Halil Berberoglu, University of Texas at Austin, and Stuart Thomas, DuPont
Energy from Fossil Fuels: Challenges and Opportunities for Technology Innovation
Laura Anadon, Harvard University
Drivers for Successful Biofuel Production Scale-up
Willem Rensink, Shell USA
Bioenergy Technologies and Strategies--A New Frontier
Joyce Yang, US Department of Energy
Solar Fuels Generation
Rachel Segalman, University of California, Berkeley
FLEXIBLE ELECTRONICS
Session Co-chairs: Lynn Loo, Princeton University, and Tina Ng, Palo Alto Research Center
Materials and Process Engineering for Printed and Flexible Opto-electronic Devices
Antonio Facchetti, Polyera Inc.
Bio-Integrated Electronics
Nanshu Lu, University of Texas at Austin
Flexible Optoelectronic Devices for Neural Recording and Stimulation
Polina Anikeeva, Massachusetts Institute of Technology