Profiles

Infrastructure and the Built Environment - Profiles

Photo of Prabir Barooah Prabir Barooah Infrastructure & the Built Environment
352-294-0411

Professor Barooah received his Ph.D. in 2007 from the University of California, Santa Barbara. From 1999 to 2002 he was a research engineer at United Technologies Research Center, East Hartford, CT. He received the M. S. degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Delaware in 1999 and the B.Tech degree in Mechanical Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur, in 1996.…

Photo of Eric Jing Du Eric Jing Du Infrastructure & the Built Environment
352-294-6619
Photo of Baoyun Ge Baoyun Ge Application of AI to electric drive systems
352.294.3926

Electric drive systems, including the application of artificial intelligence, IoT, parallel computing, and advanced manufacturing to reduce the carbon footprint of electric machines and drives throughout their lifetime.

Photo of Eakta Jain Eakta Jain Cloud Computing, Networks & Signal Processing; Infrastructure & the Built Environment
352-562-0979
Photo of Forrest J. Masters Forrest J. Masters Infrastructure & the Built Environment
352-392-0946

Dr. Forrest Masters is a professor in our Engineering School of Sustainable Infrastructure & Environment. He earned his Ph.D. in civil (structural) engineering from the University of Florida in 2004. Dr. Masters has received support from more than 40 grants from state, federal and private sources, including the NSF CAREER and MRI Programs. Recently, he secured a $3.6M cooperative agreement with NSF to create one of six national experimental facilities to study infrastructure performance in natural hazards.…

Photo of Sean Meyn Sean Meyn Infrastructure & the Built Environment
352-392-8934
Photo of Brian Phillips Brian Phillips Infrastructure & the Built Environment
352-294-6604
Photo of Sanjay Ranka Sanjay Ranka Infrastructure & the Built Environment
352-514-4213

Large-scale software systems, parallel and distributed computing, CRM, data mining, optimization and biomedical computing.