(1)Smart City Digital Twins: Toward More Sustainable, Resilient, and Livable Cities (2)Human Mobility and Urban Resilience
Thu, Oct 26, 2023
讲座主题:
(1)Smart City Digital Twins: Toward More Sustainable, Resilient, and Livable Cities
(2)Human Mobility and Urban Resilience
讲座嘉宾:
讲座时间:2023年10月30日9:00-10:30
讲座地点:同济大厦A楼309室
讲座摘要:
讲座嘉宾简介:
Dr. John E. Taylor is the inaugural Frederick Law Olmsted Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Georgia Tech, where he currently serves as the Associate Chair for Faculty Development and Research Innovation in the School of Civil and Environmental Engineering. Dr. Taylor received his PhD from Stanford University in 2006. At Georgia Tech, he is founder and Director of the Network Dynamics Lab, which focuses on; (1) achieving sustained energy conservation by coupling energy use with occupant networks and examining inter-building network phenomena in cities, and (2) understanding and improving response times by affected human networks during extreme events in urban areas. Dr. Taylor’s research has received over $8M in funding from the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, and other public and private funding sources. His research was awarded the National Science Foundation’s CAREER Award in 2011. In 2020, Dr. Taylor was elected into the National Academy of Construction for his research and pedagogical efforts to improve urban sustainability and resilience and guide the evolution of smart cities. Dr. Taylor has authored over 250 technical publications, won five journal best paper awards, and founded two technology startups.
Dr. Ryan Qi Wang is an Associate Professor and Vice Chair for Research in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Northeastern University. Before joining Northeastern, Wang was a postdoc fellow at the Department of Sociology, Harvard University. He received his Ph.D. degree from the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Virginia Tech. His research focuses on two interrelated areas: human movement perturbation under the influence of natural and manmade disasters, and mobility equality in big cities. His research has been published in Nature Human Behavior, Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), etc. His research group has received funding support from NSF, NIST, IARPA, MacArthur Foundation, USDOT, and other foundations and local government agencies.