Friday, December 31, 2021

University at Buffalo - Industrial Engineering Programs

21) University at Buffalo,  Buffalo, New York
BS Curriculum: - https://engineering.buffalo.edu/industrial-systems/academics/undergraduate/requirements-bs.html
MS Curriculum:- https://engineering.buffalo.edu/industrial-systems/academics/graduate/programs/PhD-MS-OR.html

Recent Dec 2021

ISE Newsletter

https://engineering.buffalo.edu/industrial-systems/news-events/newsletter.html

Rajan Batta (Associate Dean for Faculty Affairs) batta@buffalo.edu


University at Buffalo
Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering

https://engineering.buffalo.edu/industrial-systems/academics/undergraduate/requirements-bs.html

https://engineering.buffalo.edu/industrial-systems/academics/graduate/courses.html

Course Descriptions
IE 511 Social Network Behavior Analysis
IE 521 Sustainable Manufacturing
IE 501/502 Individual Problems (for MS/ME students)
IE 504 Facilities Design Facilities Design
IE 505 Production Planning and Control
IE 506 Computer Integrated Manufacturing
IE 507 Design and Analysis of Experiments
IE 508 Quality Assurance
IE 509 Six Sigma Quality
IE 512 Decision Analysis
IE 514 Revenue Management
IE 515 Transportation Analytics
EAS 521 Principles of Engineering Management I
EAS 522 Principles of Engineering Management II
IE 528 Decision Based System Design
IE 531 Human Factors Research Methodology
IE 532 Human Information Processing
IE 535 Human-Computer Interaction
IE 536 Work Physiology
IE 538 Human Factors and Ergonomics Lab
IE 541 Human Factors in Safety
IE 551 Simulation and Stochastic Models
IE 552 Information Fusion Systems and Applications
IE 553 High Level Information Fusion
IE 559/560 Thesis (for MS students)
IE 564 Lean Enterprise and Applications
IE 572 Linear Programming
IE 573 Discrete Optimization
IE 575 Stochastic Methods
IE 576 Applied Stochastic Processes
IE 582 Robotics
IE 585 Research in Healthcare
IE 632 Advanced Topics in Human Factors
IE 633 Cognitive Engineering
IE 635 Cognitive Modeling and its Applications in Intelligent System Design
IE 639 Special Topics: Field Research Methods in Occupational Ergonomics
IE 639 Special Topics: Innovations in Home Health
IE 640 Formal Methods for Reliable Human-Interactive Systems
IE 659/660 Dissertation
IE 670 Topics in Operations Research
IE 671 Nonlinear Programming
IE 675 Game Theory
IE 677 Network Optimization
IE 678 Urban Operations Research
IE 679 Multiple Criteria Decision Making
IE 680 Topics in Production Systems

Productivity Management: - Not in Curriculum



Ann Bisantz
Dean of Undergraduate Education; Professor
PhD, Georgia Institute of Technology - Cognitive Engineering; Human Factors in Health Care; Human Decision-making
323 Bell Hall, Phone: (716) 645-8989
bisantz  @buffalo.edu

Lora Cavuoto
Associate Professor and Director of Undergraduate Studies
PhD, Virginia Tech - Physical Ergonomics, Biomechanics of Obesity, Aging and Human Work Capacity, Occupational Safety and Health
324 Bell Hall
Phone: (716) 645-4696
Email: loracavu  @buffalo.edu

Li Lin
Professor and Director of Graduate Studies
PhD, Arizona State - Health systems, simulation, production systems
308B Bell Hall
Phone: (716) 645-4713
Email: indlin  @buffalo.edu

Victor Paquet
Professor and Chair
ScD University of Massachusetts, Lowell - Industrial Ergonomics, Musculoskeletal Epidemiology, Occupational Safety and Health
342 Bell Hall
Phone: (716) 645-4712
Email: vpaquet  @buffalo.edu

Created in 1946, the Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering is one of the founding departments of the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences at UB. We are committed to research and educational excellence across a broad range of industrial and systems engineering disciplines - including operations research, production systems, manufacturing, quality, simulation, and human factors.

What is Industrial and Systems Engineering?


Industrial engineers determine the most effective ways to use the basic factors of production—people, machines, materials, information, and energy—to make a product or provide a service.

"...They are concerned primarily with increasing productivity through the management of people, methods of business organization, and technology. To maximize efficiency, industrial engineers study product requirements carefully and then design manufacturing and information systems to meet those requirements with the help of mathematical methods and models. They develop management control systems to aid in financial planning and cost analysis, and they design production planning and control systems to coordinate activities and ensure product quality." 

https://engineering.buffalo.edu/industrial-systems/academics/undergraduate/why-ise.html







1 comment:


  1. I appreciate your website. Its really very help full. Thanks for sharing the great information.

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