Donald H. Liles

Donald H. (Don) Liles (born February 14, 1947) is an American engineer, Professor of Industrial Engineering at the University of Texas at Arlington, known for his seminal work on enterprise engineering.[1][2]

Donald H. Liles
Born(1947-02-14)14 February 1947
NationalityUnited States
Alma materUniversity of Texas at Arlington
Known forEnterprise Engineering
Scientific career
FieldsIndustrial Engineering
Doctoral advisorG. T. Stevens

Biography

Liles studied engineering at the University of Texas at Arlington, where he received his BS in 1970, his MS in 1974 and his PhD in 1978 all in industrial engineering.[3]

Liles has spent his academic career at the University of Texas at Arlington, starting in 1979 as assistant professor and later associate professor. From 1989 to 1998 he was also associate director at the Automation and Robotics Research Institute. From 1998 to 2012 he was professor of industrial engineering, and chair of the IMSE Department at the University of Texas at Arlington.[3]

Liles has been executive council member of the Texas Manufacturing Assistance Center, and member of the National Honor Society for Industrial Engineering.[3]

Publications

Liles authored and co-authored several books and articles.[4] Books:

  • With Somerville, Rob; Hulsey, Gary (1990). "Machine vision-based control of the abrasive waterjet process". Dearborn, Mich.: Society of Manufacturing Engineers. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • With Kamrani, Ali K.; Parsaei, H. R. (1995). "Planning, design, and analysis of cellular manufacturing systems". Amsterdam ; New York: Elsevier. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

Articles, a selection:

  • With Ayoub, M. M.; Selan, Joseph L. (1983). "An ergonomics approach for the design of manual materials-handling tasks". Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society. 25 (5): 507–515. doi:10.1177/001872088302500505. PMID 6667940.
  • With Johnson, Mary E.; Meade, Laura (1995). "Enterprise engineering: a discipline?". Society for Enterprise Engineering Conference Proceedings. 6. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.196.4337.
  • With Presley, Adrien R. (1996). Enterprise modeling within an enterprise engineering framework (PDF). Proceedings of the 28th conference on Winter simulation. IEEE Computer Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-09-12.
gollark: Your thing pulls in an entire Lua VM for about five lines of JS, soooo...
gollark: I think a big reason for inefficiency is that some sites seem obsessed with shipping big images with their content even when it's not meaningful or helpful.
gollark: I've designed my website to be very lightweight, though, so it's reasonably good for people on slow connections and loads very fast.
gollark: I'm on a 30something Mbps VDSL connection, which I consider bad but which is actually somehow better than many people I interact with.
gollark: I don't think that would work, maybe do `WHERE selector LIKE ?` and substitute in `%whatever%` instead.

References

  1. Giaglis, George M. (2001). "A taxonomy of business process modeling and information systems modeling techniques". International Journal of Flexible Manufacturing Systems. 13 (2): 209–228. doi:10.1023/A:1011139719773.
  2. Dietz, Jan; Iijima, Junichi; Mulder, Hans; Proper, Erik; Tribolet, José; Winter, Robert; et al. (2013). "The discipline of enterprise engineering". International Journal of Organisational Design and Engineering. 3 (1): 93.
  3. "Dr. Don Liles". uta.edu. September 2014.
  4. Donald H. Liles at DBLP Bibliography Server
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.