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For questions regarding the Summer Annual Meeting, please contact:
Melissa Torres
Meetings Manager
ASME
Three Park Avenue
New York, NY 10016
PH: (212) 591-8257
FX: (212) 591-7856
Email: torresm@asme.org

 

For questions regarding the Think Tank Summit, please contact:
Phyllis Klasky
Director, Events Management
ASME
Three Park Avenue
New York, NY 10016
Email: klaskyp@asme.org

 

 

 

 

 

Speaker Biographies

Partial list of speakers.
 
TEACHING WOMEN ENGINEERING:

Carolyn W. Meyers (ASME member)
Dr. Carolyn W. Meyers, a past vice president of ASME’s Board on Minorities and Women, is president of Norfolk State University. She has held administrative posts at North Carolina A&T State University, the Center for Success of the Southeastern Universities and Colleges Coalition in Engineering Education (SUCCEED), and Georgia Tech. Her professional activities also include chairing the board of directors of the National Institute of Aerospace. She has received the NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award, the Society of Automotive Engineers Ralph A. Teetor Award, and the National Society of Black Engineers' Golden Torch Award.

Dr. Patricia B. Campbell
Dr. Patricia B. Campbell, president of Campbell-Kibler Associates Inc., has written more than 90 publications. She was a co-author of The AAUW Report: How Schools Shortchange Girls and was a member of the U.S. Department of Education’s Impact Review Panel and took part in the development of the National Science Foundation publication Infusing Equity in Systemic Reform: An Implementation Scheme. She has received awards from the American Educational Research Association, the Women in Engineering Program Advocates Network, the Educational Press Association of America, and the American Business Women's Association.

 

Joanna Rucker
Joanna Rucker is a senior engineering student at Tufts University and an ASME member. She has been active in a project at Tufts called “Nerd Girls: Breaking the Stigmas and Stereotypes of Women in Engineering.” This is also the title of a documentary film that follows a group of young women engineering students as they design a solar-powered car.

Ron Lasser
Dr. Ron Lasser, a mechanical engineer, is a professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering department at Tufts University’s School of Engineering. He has been intricately involved in connecting young women to engineering disciplines since the late 1970s. His objective is to inspire students to reach their full potential and to bring diversity to engineering so that new ideas and innovations may be discovered in order to promote collaboration and solve challenging problems. Dr. Lasser has spent 25 years in industry at such companies as AT&T Bell Laboratories, DuPont ImagiTex, and General Scanning Inc. in various roles from design engineer to senior executive. Before he joined the Tufts faculty, he was an international consultant in product development, innovation, and product portfolio strategy and planning.

Alice M. Agogino
Dr. Alice M. Agogino, is co-author of the National Academies’ report: “Beyond Bias and Barriers: Fulfilling the Potential of Women in Academic Science and Engineering.” The report concludes that educational institutions are biased in their approach toward women in engineering disciplines. Dr. Agogino, a Fellow of ASME, is the Roscoe and Elizabeth Hughes Professor of Mechanical Engineering and affiliated faculty at the Haas School of Business in their Operations and Information Technology Management Group at the University of California, Berkeley. Prior to joining the faculty at UC Berkeley, she worked in industry for Dow Chemical, General Electric and SRI International. Agogino is an acclaimed professor whose research interests include, among many others, intelligent learning systems; information retrieval and data mining; and multi-objective and strategic product design; and gender/ethnic equity.

 

PRODUCT LIFECYCLE MANAGEMENT SESSION:

Marc Halpern
Dr. Marc Halpern, P.E., is a research director at Gartner Inc., where he is the lead analyst covering product lifecycle management strategies and software applications. He focuses on design, product data management, manufacturing process planning, and product portfolio management. Dr. Halpern has more than 20 years of experience as a PLM software industry specialist and a practicing engineer. Prior to joining Gartner, he was a principal and research director of D.H. Brown's engineering, manufacturing, and design research and advisory services.

 

Dr. Dave J. Kasik
Dave Kasik is the Boeing Enterprise Visualization Architect. His research interests include innovative combinations of basic 3D graphics and user interface technologies and increasing awareness of the impact of visualization technology inside and outside Boeing. He is a member of IEEE, ACM, ACM SIGGRAPH (he has attended all SIGGRAPH conferences), and ACM SIGCHI. He is a member of the editorial board for IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications.

 

Ron Lasser
Dr. Ron Lasser is professor in the electrical and computer engineering department of Tufts University’s School of Engineering. He spent 25 years in industry at such companies as AT&T Bell Laboratories, DuPont ImagiTex, and General Scanning Inc. in various roles from design engineer to senior executive. Before he joined the Tufts faculty, he was an international consultant in product development, innovation, and product portfolio strategy and planning.

Paul Murphy
Dr. Paul Murphy is director of Platform Engineering for Varian Semiconductor Equipment Associates Inc., in Gloucester, Mass., a supplier of Ion Implantation Systems—large machines used by semiconductor manufacturers in the chip fabrication process. Dr. Murphy has been involved in guidance system design, scientific instrument design, space and satellite design, and semiconductor capital equipment. Murphy earned his Ph.D in physics from Ohio State University.

Ken Kreafle
Ken Kreafle is General Manager of Vehicle Production Engineering at Toyota Motor Engineering & Manufacturing North America, (TEMA) in Erlanger Kentucky. He was the Chief Production Engineer for the new generation Avalon and works closely with the Toyota North American Manufacturing Companies (NAMC’s), Toyota Technical Center (TTC) and Toyota Motor Corporation (TMC) to ensure the success of the North American vehicle launches. Prior to this position, Kreafle was General Manager of Quality Control and Quality Engineering Departments at Toyota Motor Manufacturing Kentucky (TMMK) in Georgetown, Kentucky. He was responsible for the plant’s vehicle lines and engine line, which include vehicle component and service parts operations. Mr. Kreafle co-chaired the Lean Manufacturing Program, a joint effort of TMMK and the University of Kentucky, Center for Robotic and Manufacturing Systems. He has also served as an Advisory Board Member for the Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Kentucky, and as an Advisory Council Member, Department of Technology for Eastern Kentucky University.

Dr. Walt Baxter
Dr. Baxter is a Principal Scientist within Medtronic's Cardiac Rhythm Management Division and operates primarily within the Therapy Delivery business helping to develop novel pacing/defibrillator leads and catheters for positioning leads within the heart. His expertise has been tapped across the company where he has supported research and development efforts in the heart valves, diabetes, and vascular business units. Prior to joining Medtronic, Dr. Baxter trained within the Cardiac Mechanics Research Group at the University of California, San Diego where he developed, implemented, and validated novel algorithms for elucidating the mechanics of implanted medical devices. Dr. Baxter serves on the industrial advisory boards at UC Irvine's Department of Bioengineering, UC San Diego's Whitaker Institute of Biomedical Engineering, and San Diego State University's Department of Mechanical Engineering.

 

HUMAN FACTOR ENGINEERING:

Don Norman
Dr. Don Norman is cofounder of the Nielsen Norman Group and a Professor at Northwestern University. He has been Vice President of Apple Computer and an executive at Hewlett Packard. He serves on many advisory boards, such as Chicago’s Institute of Design and Encyclopedia Britannica. He has received honorary degrees from the University of Padova (Italy) and the Technical University of Delft (the Netherlands), the “Lifetime Achievement Award” from SIGCHI, the professional organization for Computer-Human Interaction, and the Benjamin Franklin Medal in Computer & Cognitive Science from the Franklin Institute (Philadelphia). He is well known for his books “The Design of Everyday Things” and “Emotional Design.” He is now writing “The Design of Future Things,” discussing the role that automation plays in such everyday places as the home, and automobile.

Greg A. Jamieson
Dr. Greg A. Jamieson is an Assistant Professor of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering at the University of Toronto. His research and teaching focuses on the design of cognitive artifacts for those working in complex systems. Dr. Jamieson specializes in human-automation interaction and human-machine interface design with applications primarily in process control. He has published over 25 articles on human factors in process control, has authored four successful patents for advanced operator graphics. He has also established a simulation facility for human factors research in process control.

 

Ken Kreafle
Ken Kreafle is General Manager of Vehicle Production Engineering at Toyota Motor Engineering & Manufacturing North America, (TEMA) in Erlanger Kentucky. He was the Chief Production Engineer for the new generation Avalon and works closely with the Toyota North American Manufacturing Companies (NAMC’s), Toyota Technical Center (TTC) and Toyota Motor Corporation (TMC) to ensure the success of the North American vehicle launches. Prior to this position, Kreafle was General Manager of Quality Control and Quality Engineering Departments at Toyota Motor Manufacturing Kentucky (TMMK) in Georgetown, Kentucky. He was responsible for the plant’s vehicle lines and engine line, which include vehicle component and service parts operations. Mr. Kreafle co-chaired the Lean Manufacturing Program, a joint effort of TMMK and the University of Kentucky, Center for Robotic and Manufacturing Systems. He has also served as an Advisory Board Member for the Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Kentucky, and as an Advisory Council Member, Department of Technology for Eastern Kentucky University.
Dr. Jeffrey Wilbert
Dr. Jeffrey Wilbert is the Associate Technical Fellow in Human Engineering at Northrop Grumman, the second highest technical rank at Northrop Grumman. As a human factors engineering practitioner Dr. Wilbert has worked on numerous military aircraft programs for the Army, Air Force, and Navy. He has also worked on Unmanned Air Vehicles and ground stations. Dr. Wilbert was also involved on R&D efforts in the areas of laser eye protection, high “G-force” endurance, high-speed/high-altitude ejection, Nuclear-Biological-Chemical protection systems, operator workload and situational awareness assessment, and most recently neurofeedback for workload monitoring and invoked automation triggering. Dr. Wilbert is the chairman of the Northrop Grumman Human Systems Integration Community of Practice, and was the founder and past president of the Long Island Chapter of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society.

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