MASc Seminar - Brian Le
Speaker
Brian Le
Title
Incentive Design for Voltage Optimization Programs for Industrial Loads
Brian Le
Incentive Design for Voltage Optimization Programs for Industrial Loads
Volodymyr Rudko
Nonlinear Periodic Adaptive Control for Linear Time-Varying Plants
In adaptive control the goal is to deal with systems that have unknown and/or time varying parameters. Adaptive control techniques have been developed since 1950's and many results were proven in the cases when the time-variations were slow. However the results pertaining to systems with fast time-variations are still limited, in particular when it comes to plants with unstable zero dynamics.
Professor Rui Q. Yang
School of Electrical and Computer Engineering
University of Oklahoma
Quantum Engineered Optoelectronic Devices based on Interband Cascade Structures
Hao Wang
Phase-shifted Fiber Bragg Grating Based Humidity Sensor
In recent years, fiber Bragg grating sensors have been widely used because of their unique advantages, such as its multiplexing capability, remote monitoring capability, small size and immunity to electromagnetic. However, several challenges still need to be considered, one of which is the resolution and accuracy of measurements. In this thesis, a humidity fiber optic sensor based on phase-shifted (PS) fiber Bragg gratings (FBG) is demonstrated.
Ivan Camilo Salgado Patarroyo
Spatially Regularized Spherical Reconstruction: A Cross-Domain Filtering Approach for HARDI Signals
Nima Mousavi
Mitigating the Intractability of the User Authorization Query Problem in Role-Based Access Control
Shuning Wang
Scheduling in omnidirectional relay wireless networks
Syed Talha Jawaid
Informative Path Planning and Sensor Scheduling
In this thesis we consider two combinatorial optimization problems that relate to the field of persistent monitoring.
Aron Wei-Hsiang Su
An Online Nonlinear Bayesian Filtering Framework for Electrocardiogram Noise Removal
Nima Mousavi
Algorithmic Problems in Access Control
Access control is used to provide regulated access to resources by principals. It is one of the most important and foundational areas of research in information security. Role-Based Access Control (RBAC) is one of the most popular and widely-used access control models. In particular, it has been argued that RBAC is ideally suited for enterprise settings. In this dissertation, we address two problems in the context of RBAC.