Karen Rudie
Karen Gail Rudie (born 1963)[1] is a Canadian control theorist and electrical engineer known for her work on the decentralized control of discrete event dynamic systems.[2][3] She is a professor of electrical and computer engineering in Queen's University at Kingston.[4]
Education and career
[edit]Rudie majored in mathematics and engineering as an undergraduate at Queen's University, specializing in control and communication; she graduated in 1985.[3][5] She has a Ph.D. from the University of Toronto, completed in 1992;[4] Her dissertation, Decentralized Control of Discrete-Event Systems,[1] was supervised by Walter Murray Wonham.[4]
She returned to Queen's University as a faculty member in 1993, after postdoctoral research at the Institute for Mathematics and its Applications.[4]
Recognition
[edit]In 2018, Rudie was named an IEEE Fellow, as a member of the IEEE Control Systems Society, "for contributions to the supervisory control theory of discrete event systems".[2]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Karen Gail Rudie", ISNI, retrieved 2020-10-23
- ^ a b "Karen Rudie named IEEE fellow", Queen's Gazette, January 11, 2018
- ^ a b "Karen G. Rudie" (PDF), People in Control, IEEE Control Systems Magazine, 38 (4): 25–27, August 2018, doi:10.1109/mcs.2018.2830058, S2CID 240308554
- ^ a b c d Karen Rudie, P.Eng., Queen's University, retrieved 2020-10-23
- ^ "Karen Rudie", ORCID, retrieved 2020-10-23
External links
[edit]- Karen Rudie publications indexed by Google Scholar