Skip navigation

ECE's Bagchi finalist for global engineering award

ECE's Bagchi finalist for global engineering award

Author: Leon Yee
Event Date: September 19, 2024
Purdue professor Saurabh Bagchi is a finalist for the IET Achievement Medal for his work on resilient, data-driven software systems. Recognized for shifting the field away from rule-based systems, Bagchi leads major initiatives like the NSF CHORUS Center and the Army-funded Assured Autonomy Innovation Institute.
 

Saurabh Bagchi, professor in the Elmore School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, is a finalist for the Institution of Engineering Technology (IET) Achievement Medal, a global award in engineering. Winners will be announced and presented in London on Oct. 18.

He was chosen by IET as a pioneer in data-driven dependability and security, demonstrating learning from data to build resilient software systems, even when data is incomplete or partially compromised. He overturned the long-held dogma of purely rule-based systems for system dependability and security. 

Bagchi also serves as director of the NSF Center CHORUS,  which is advancing the science and engineering of resilient cyber-physical systems. He is also the Principal Investigator of the Assured Autonomy Innovation Institute, an Army Research Lab-funded institute on security in distributed machine learning.

The IET is a multidisciplinary professional engineering institution that was formed in 2006 from two separate institutions: the Institution of Electrical Engineers, dating back to 1871, and the Institution of Incorporated Engineers, dating back to 1884. Its worldwide membership currently exceeds 158,000 in 153 countries. It is headquartered in England. 

The IET Achievement Medals are awarded to individuals who have made an exceptional contribution to the advancement of science, engineering or technology. Up to five medals are awarded to those who have made an impact in any sector of engineering and technology.


Article first originally appeared at engineering.purdue.edu