Speaker: Dr. Mani Chandy
California Institute of Technology
Member of the National Academy of Engineering
Date and Time: April 28 (Friday), 2006, 1:30pm
Place: Bio Sciences Annex Auditorium
Title: Information Infrastructures for Crisis Management

Abstract: Crises have unexpected elements. Despite extensive preparation, crises such as hurricanes have
features that were not planned for. As a consequence, information infrastructures that support crisis
management must adapt rapidly to evolving situations. Responses to crises are carried out by dynamic
collections of individuals and institutions including the general public, government
agencies, non-governmental organizations and corporations. Getting information to the right place
at the right time is a critical aspect of crisis management. Traditional address-based message-passing
systems are insufficient because the proper recipients for an item of information may change
with time. Another problem with crisis situations is that people and software agents are overloaded
with information, and so separating the critical piece of information is difficult.
This talk discusses abstract models for crisis management systems and compares them with other types of systems - such
as sensor networks and database streaming systems. The talk describes software frameworks for implementing
crisis management systems including notations for specifying events and actions of interest.
Theories of how processes gain knowledge and change estimates will be explored. Experiences, both positive
and negative with using these frameworks will be presented. Open problems and pointers to research
elsewhere will be described.
About the Speaker:
Mani Chandy received his B.Tech from IIT Madras and a PhD from MIT in Electrical Engineering.
He was a professor at the University of Texas at Austin from 1970 to 1987, and at the
California Institute of Technology since 1987 where he is the Simon Ramo Professor of Computer
Science. He has received the IEEE Kobayashi Award and the CMG Michelson Award for
contributions to computer performance analysis. He is a member of the National Academy of
Engineering.
The IT Eminent Lecture Series (ITELS) is a program sponsored by the Center for
Computation & Technology (CCT) in partnership with the LSU Department of Computer
Science. The series brings world-class scholars, educators, executives and
entrepreneurs to LSU to share their experience in and vision for the future of
the I.T. industry.