This informative guide presents topics from the current research, applications, and practices in systems safety and security
1. Fundamentals of Systems 2. A Framework for System Development 3. Cyber-Physical Systems 4. The Business of Safety 5. Systems and Safety 6. Applications of System Safety 7. The Business of Security 8. Systems and Security 9. Application of System Security 10. Evolving Security 11. Distributed and Cloud Computing 12. Mobile Computing 13. Smart Grid 14. Smart Grid Algebra: A Formal Language for Design and Test
Dr. Edward Griffor is the Associate Director for Cyber Physical
Systems at the National Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST) in the US Department of Commerce. Prior to joining NIST in
July of 2016, he was a Walter P. Chrysler Technical Fellow, one of
the highest technical positions in the automotive industry and one
that exists in multiple industry sectors, including transportation,
aerospace, science, defense, energy and medical. He served as
Chairman of the Chrysler Technology Council until 2015 and
continues to serve as Chairman of The MIT Alliance, a professional
association of scientists, engineers, and business experts trained
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Dr. Griffor completed doctoral studies at MIT in Mathematics at MIT
and was awarded Habilitation in Mathematics and Electrical
Engineering by the University of Oslo. He was named National
Science Foundation/NATO Postdoctoral Fellow in Science and
Engineering. Dr. Griffor was on the faculty of Uppsala University
in Uppsala, Sweden from 1980 to 1997 and returned to the US to lead
advanced research in Electrical Engineering in the automotive
industry.
Dr. Griffor has been on the faculties of the University of Oslo in
Norway, Uppsala University in Sweden, the Catholic University of
Santiago in Chile as well as those of Harvard, MIT and Tufts
University in the U.S. He is regarded as one of the world experts
in the use of mathematical methods for the design and assurance of
technologies used in developing advanced, adaptive cyber physical
systems, including those used to ensure the safety and security of
autonomous systems. In addition to his work at Chrysler, Dr.
Griffor has led research in biosystem modeling and simulation. He
is Adjunct Professor at Wayne State University School of Medicine
in Detroit, MI at the Center for Molecular Medicine and
Genetics.
Dr. Griffor’s work in the automotive industry provided advanced
algorithms for Voice Recognition and Autonomous and Connected
Vehicles. Dr. Griffor has published three books previously,
including Handbook of Computability by Elsevier, Theory of Domains,
by Cambridge University Press, and Logic’s Lost Genius: The Life of
Gerhard Gentzen by American Mathematical Society. He has published
extensively in professional journals and has given invited
presentations for the American Mathematical Society, Association
for Symbolic Logic, North American Software Certification
Consortium, Society of Automotive Engineers, the Federal Reserve
Bank and US government agencies, including NIST, DARPA, DOE, DOT
and NASA.
Ask a Question About this Product More... |