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Laboratory for Intelligent Systems and Quality (LISQ)
originally started as the
Artificial Intelligence (AI) Laboratory
in 1987 founded by Professor Kumara. During the mid nineties
Professors Kumara, Barton, and Chandra joined together to take the
AI lab to the next step:
Intelligent Design and Diagnostics Research Laboratory
(IDDRL).
Professor Gautam teamed up with the lab in 1996.
The Objective of LISQ in essence is to study survivability of large-scale complex systems. The three pillars of survivability are: Robustness, Security, and Performance. The LISQ team is studying the theoretical, applied and implementation details related to the survivability of large-scale complex adaptive systems (CAS).
We use distributed multi agent framework for implementation. Our
theoretical work encompasses models for: sensor signal
representation, data fusion, networks, adaptive control, data
mining, robustness, performance and security. LISQ research is
interdisciplinary in nature and combines Biology, Economics,
Statistics, Computer Science, Non-linear Systems Theory, Complexity
and Operations Research models. We wish to generate a body of
knowledge that will lay the foundation for building a unified theory
for the control of complex adaptive systems to ensure their
survivability. Our theoretical work is rooted in applications from
Manufacturing, Supply Chain Logistics, Military Logistics,
Communication Networks and the Internet. LISQ has many active funded projects in the current academic year with a total funding of about $1.6 Million.
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