Lee Schruben

Lee W. Schruben (born 1946) is an American educator, engineer and serves as the Professor and Past Chair, Department of Industrial Engineering and Operations Research College of Engineering, University of California at Berkeley.[1] He is the former Andrew Schultz, Jr. Professor (1976–1998), Sibley College of Engineering, Cornell University, Department of Operations Research. Professor Schruben took his Bachelor of Science at Cornell’s engineering college in 1968, his Master of Science at the University of North Carolina in 1973 and his doctorate at Yale University in 1974.

Expertise

Schruben specializes in teaching and research on simulation experiments, optimization of simulation system response, and simulation modeling foundations. He is a lead researcher in discrete event simulation.[2] Professor Schruben studies data from experiments and develops coverage functions to study confidence interval performance of parameters arising from simulations. He also introduced the method of standardized time series, a major breakthrough in the simulation field. In February 2005, Schruben invented a simulation technique consisting of cost and productivity management software for use in fast simulators. Professor Schruben’s technique has been proven to be up to seventy times more rapid than Job Driven (JD) simulation approaches.

Honors

In recognition of his work in the area of output analysis, Schruben received an Outstanding Publication Award from the Institute of Management Science's College on Simulation and Gaming for his output analysis work.

Member

Professor Schruben joined the Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity at Cornell, and through that organization, the Irving Literary Society.

Sample Publications

References

  1. Lee W. Schruben, Faculty, Industrial Engineering and Operational Research, University of California at Berkeley .
  2. Business Wire, WWK Signs IP Acquisition Agreement for Ultra-Fast, Resource Driven Simulation Technology (Feb. 22, 2005).
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