Economics

George Gross

My interests lie at the intersection of power system operations and planning and market economics. I have worked on reliability assessment and dynamic simulation aspects of power system planning, on the development of state-of-the-art tools for power system operations and real-time monitoring and control, and on the development of effective decision support tools for these areas.

Jay P. Kesan

Professor Kesan has a number of projects and students working on various aspects of cybersecurity, privacy, and risk.

Sean P. Meyn

Professor Meyn's research interests have focused on control, simulation, adaptation, model reduction, and performance evaluation for complex systems. Methodological approaches are based on Meyn's research on Markov processes, stability theory, reinforcement learning, stochastic approximation, adaptive control, and optimization.

Luis F. Rodriguez

Dr. Rodriguez's research was initiated from the study of closed-loop life support systems designed to bring humans on exploration missions to the surface of Mars. Such closed-loop life support systems can be termed the most tightly constrained ecosystems or production systems ever considered.

Michael J. Shaw

Prof. Michael J. Shaw is the Hoeft Endowed Chair in Information Technology Management and Director of the Center for Information Technology and e-Business Management at College of Business. He is the editor-in-chief of the journal Information Systems and e-Business Management, and he has published extensively in leading academic journals.

Loss Allocation Scheme for Multitransaction Systems

funded by the Grainger Foundation Inc., Power Affiliates Program

Effective Deployment of Financial Instruments in Competitive Electricity Markets

funded by the Grainger Foundation Inc.; Power Affiliates Program

Development of an Analytical Framework for Strategic Bidding in Competitive Electricity Markets: Modeling and Policy Analysis

funded by the National Science Foundation

Congestion Management Scheme for Multitransaction Systems

funded by the Economic Policy Research Institute, Department of Defense

Cyberinsurance as a Market-Based Solution to the Cybersecurity Problem

funded by National Science Foundation, and the Illinois Program in Intellectual Property and Technology Law