Joanne Bechta Dugan (born 1958)[1] is an American computer engineer whose research concerns fault tolerance in computer systems, fault tree analysis, and the dynamic fault tree method for the probabilistic analysis of fault tolerance. She is a professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Virginia.[2]
Education
editDugan studied mathematics and computer science as an undergraduate at La Salle College,[2] graduating in 1980.[3] She went to Duke University for graduate study, and earned a master's degree and PhD in electrical engineering there.[2] Her 1984 dissertation, Extended Stochastic Petri Nets: Applications and Analysis, was jointly supervised by Kishor S. Trivedi and Robert M. Geist III.[4]
Recognition
editDugan was named a Fellow of the IEEE in 2000, "for contributions to dependability analysis of fault tolerant computer systems".[5] In the same year she won the IEEE Reliability Society Award for "contributions of new techniques for fault tree analysis, including theoretical advances, practical application and technology transfer through software tool development".[2] She won the Harriett B. Rigas Award of the IEEE Education Society in 2003 for her contributions to undergraduate education.[6]
In 2016, the La Salle University Computer Science Programs Advisory Board gave Dugan their IT Leadership Award.[3]
References
edit- ^ Birth year from Library of Congress catalog entry, accessed 2021-07-02
- ^ a b c d "Joanne Bechta Dugan", Faculty, University of Virginia Engineering, 13 April 2017, retrieved 2021-07-02
- ^ a b "La Salle University Alumna Joanne Bechta Dugan Presented with 2016 IT Leadership Award", La Salle News, La Salle University, 12 December 2016, retrieved 2021-07-02
- ^ Joanne Bechta Dugan at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ^ IEEE Fellows directory, IEEE, retrieved 2021-07-02
- ^ Hewlett-Packard/Harriett B. Rigas Award, IEEE, archived from the original on 2003-09-02, retrieved 2021-07-02