GTRI Electronic Systems Laboratory

The Electronic Systems Laboratory (ELSYS) is one of eight labs in the Georgia Tech Research Institute and one of three labs under the Electronics, Optics, and Systems directorate.[1] Among its research focuses are systems engineering, electronic warfare, and human systems integration.

Electronic Systems Laboratory
Nonprofit
IndustrySystems engineering, electronic warfare, human factors
Headquarters
Atlanta, Georgia
,
USA
Key people
Dr. Tommer Ender
Laboratory Director
ParentGeorgia Tech Research Institute
Websitewww.gtri.gatech.edu/elsys

Research areas

ELSYS focuses on systems engineering solutions in electronic defense; modeling, simulation and analysis; countermeasures technique development; sensors performance analysis; electronic warfare; systems integration; standardized test procedures; flight test support; laboratory support stations and test systems; missile warning system improvements; technology insertion and human factors. ELSYS also specializes in mathematical modeling, analysis of dynamic systems, specialized instrumentation, and real-time simulation.

Organization

ELSYS has five divisions: the System Engineering Division (SEN), the Test Engineering Division (TEN), the Systems Technology and Analysis Division (STAD), the Electronic Systems Integration Division (ESID), and the Human Systems Integration Division (HSI). HSI is the sole authorized consumer product test facility for the Arthritis Foundation, the Arthritis Society of Canada, Arthritis Australia, and Arthritis New Zealand.

Recently, the GTRI Health and Environmental Systems Laboratory (HESL) was disbanded, and the staff were transferred to other parts of GTRI. ELSYS received many of these individuals, as it does a lot of HCI work, a field predominant in HESL. The Air National Guard Program Office is also under ELSYS.

Locations

Most of ELSYS' operations are located in the Centennial Research Building on Georgia Tech's campus in Atlanta, Georgia. ELSYS also has a field office in Warner Robins, Georgia to provide on-site support for Robins AFB.

gollark: For all car-related data harvesting.
gollark: Do they actually have an opt out?
gollark: I don't actually have a car, but it seems like with the increasing amount of computers in them and requirements for mobile connectivity and such in them, they're moving away from this.
gollark: Generally, I think my things should do what I want and not enforce artificial lockouts on things, randomly break unrepairably, report data back to whoever, run unauditable proprietary software, or do weird stuff in the background.
gollark: Oh, and if I remember right all Teslas are constantly connected over the mobile network to Tesla and can refuse to work if you don't do software updates.

References

  1. "2014 Annual Report" (PDF). Georgia Tech Research Institute. p. 8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-11-24. Retrieved 2014-11-13.
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