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Systems engineering is an interdisciplinary and cooperative field that bridges mathematics, engineering, social and physical sciences, and medicine. This program equips you with the necessary skills to conceptualize solutions for overarching challenges across various domains. You will acquire substantial hands-on experience in teamwork-based problem-solving, preparing you for diverse career paths such as those in future energy infrastructure, smart urban development, healthcare decision-making, data analysis and decision processes, and infrastructure cybersecurity.
Students in the program learn theoretical principles, computational techniques, and research methodologies within core areas like optimization, network theory, and uncertainty quantification, enabling them to devise solutions for complex, large-scale issues in multiple fields. Instances encompass tracking and simulating the COVID-19 pandemic, improving hospital resource distribution, enhancing fair food accessibility, and creating integrated, hazard-resilient, and cyber-safe infrastructure, energy networks, and smart cities. Participants will develop considerable expertise in cooperative problem-solving, beneficial for a wide array of professions, including roles in upcoming energy systems, intelligent urban planning, medical decision support, data exploration and decision-making, and infrastructure cybersecurity.
The advancement of systems science and engineering mirrors technological progress. While historically, the concept of a 'system' brought to mind human-created structures with tightly integrated parts working together to achieve specific results, today's interpretation is far more extensive in both scope and magnitude. Systems research has transformed into a cross-disciplinary, collaborative domain, linking mathematics, engineering, social and physical sciences, and medicine. The department's initiatives unite students, faculty, and researchers from various departments within the Whiting School of Engineering, as well as from the Krieger School of Arts and Sciences, the Bloomberg School of Public Health, the School of Medicine, and the Applied Physics Laboratory.