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Dorothée Normand-Cyrot

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Dorothée Normand-Cyrot is a French applied mathematician and control theorist, known for her work on discrete-time nonlinear control systems.

Education and career

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As a teenager entering the French university system in 1971, Normand-Cyrot found the grandes écoles closed off to her because she was female; instead she went to a lesser university to study mathematics. Her mentors included algebraist Andrée Ehresmann and, a few years later, control theorist Michel Fliess.[1]

Normand-Cyrot worked for two years for Électricité de France,[1] earned a doctorat de troisième cycle in mathematics in 1978 at Paris Diderot University, became a researcher for the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) in 1981, and completed her doctorat d'état in 1983 at Paris-Sud University. She became a director of research for CNRS in 1991, and was posted by CNRS to the Laboratoire des signaux et systèmes at Paris-Saclay University.[2]

Recognition

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Normand-Cyrot was named an IEEE Fellow in 2005, "for contributions to discrete-time and digital nonlinear control systems".[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b "People in control [Interviews with Dorothee Normand-Cyrot and Tarek Sobh]", IEEE Control Systems Magazine, 29 (4): 21–27, August 2009, doi:10.1109/mcs.2009.932923
  2. ^ Bio-sketch, Laboratoire des signaux et systèmes, archived from the original on 2020-01-06
  3. ^ "CSS members promoted to IEEE Fellow in 2005", CSS IEEE Fellows Archive, IEEE Control Systems Society, retrieved 2020-07-29
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