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This is my second, slightly corrected attempt to enter the PRNCYP-L
mailing community; the first one has been cancelled by your Web-master:
Name: Ulrich Kramer
Email address: kramer@modal1.fh-bielefeld.de
Postal address:
FH Bielefeld
Wilhelm-Bertelsmann-Strasse 10
D-33602 Bielefeld
Germany
Phone: +49 521 106 23 05
Fax: +49 521 106 23 23
Academic degrees: communication engineering (Ing. grad., 1973),
electrical engineering/control theory (Dipl.-Ing., 1978), automotive
engineering (Dr.-Ing., 1985)
Professional expertises: control design methods, man-machine systems,
real-time simulation and graphic animation, dynamic systems analysis
Career:
since 1990: professorship at the Bielefeld University of Applied
Sciences (Fachhochschule Bielefeld), head of the Automation Engineering
Laboratory (AutoLab);
1985 - 1990: head of the department Vehicle Cybernetics in a car
manufacturing company; development of in-car computer vision systems,
and of driver information and assistance systems; ergonomics, safety,
and dependability of automatic in-car systems,
management of European vehicle and traffic research programmes;
1980 - 1985: assistant at the Technical University Berlin, Institute of
Automotive Engineering, development of the Fuzzy Driver Model,
co-founder of the Man-Machine Systems research group;
1978 - 1980: scientific employee at the Technical University Berlin,
Institute of Automotive Engineering, research work in the field of
"driver behavior"
Research interests: automatic digital control design, process
specification and simulation with Petri-nets and bond-graphs, nonlinear
systems theors (Lotka-Volterra models, chaotic regimes of nonlinear
control systems, etc.), non-classical logics
(application of the fuzzy sets theory, multi-domains logics, recognition
and generation of innovative processes)
Lectures: automation, systems engineering, and simulation
Publications: more than 60 articles, reports, and conference papers;
books: Mobile Systems Analysis (in German, 1985), Simulation Techniques
(co-authored by Dr Mihaela Neculau, in German, to be published 1998)
--------------51533EC776F2E8A7015D9AF8
Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
This is my second, slightly corrected attempt to enter the PRNCYP-L mailing community; the first one has been cancelled by your Web-master:
Name: Ulrich Kramer
Email address: kramer@modal1.fh-bielefeld.de
Postal address:
FH Bielefeld
Wilhelm-Bertelsmann-Strasse 10
D-33602 Bielefeld
Germany
Phone: +49 521 106 23 05
Fax: +49 521 106 23 23
Academic degrees: communication engineering (Ing. grad., 1973), electrical engineering/control theory (Dipl.-Ing., 1978), automotive engineering (Dr.-Ing., 1985)
Professional expertises: control design methods, man-machine systems, real-time simulation and graphic animation, dynamic systems analysis
Career:
since 1990: professorship at the Bielefeld University of Applied Sciences
(Fachhochschule Bielefeld), head of the Automation Engineering Laboratory
(AutoLab);
1985 - 1990: head of the department Vehicle Cybernetics in a car
manufacturing
company; development of in-car computer vision systems, and of driver
information
and assistance systems; ergonomics, safety, and dependability of automatic
in-car systems,
management of European vehicle and traffic research programmes;
1980 - 1985: assistant at the Technical University Berlin, Institute
of Automotive Engineering, development of the Fuzzy Driver Model, co-founder
of the Man-Machine Systems research group;
1978 - 1980: scientific employee at the Technical University Berlin,
Institute of Automotive Engineering, research work in the field of "driver
behavior"
Research interests: automatic digital control design, process
specification and simulation with Petri-nets and bond-graphs, nonlinear
systems theors (Lotka-Volterra models, chaotic regimes of nonlinear control
systems, etc.), non-classical logics
(application of the fuzzy sets theory, multi-domains logics, recognition
and generation of innovative processes)
Lectures: automation, systems engineering, and simulation
Publications: more than 60 articles, reports, and conference papers; books: Mobile Systems Analysis (in German, 1985), Simulation Techniques (co-authored by Dr Mihaela Neculau, in German, to be published 1998) --------------51533EC776F2E8A7015D9AF8--