Dr. Ian R. Grosse, Professor


213B ELab
University of Massachusetts
160 Governors Drive
Amherst, MA 01003-2210
E-mail: grosse@ecs.umass.edu
Phone: (413) 545-1350
Fax: (413) 545-1027

 

 

Education:
B.S,. Cornell University, Mechanical Engineering, 1979;
M.S., Virginia Polytechnica Institute & State University, 1983;
Ph.D., Virginia Polytechnica Institute & State University, 1987

Research Interests: Finite element modeling and analysis of biomechanical systems; interoperability, reusability, and adaptability of engineering tools, methods, and models; ontologies for engineering knowledge modeling, management, and sharing; integration of engineering design and analysis

Honors & Awards:

  • 2003 ASME Computers and Information in Engineering Conference Best Paper award
  • Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Engineering, University of Massachusetts, February 1993
  • 1990 ASME International Computers in Engineering Conference Best Paper Award

Select Archival Publications:

  • Dumont, E.R., Grosse, I.R., and Slater, G.J., “Requirements for Comparing the Performance of Finite Element Models of Biological Structures,” Journal of Theoretical Biology, doi:10.1016/j.jtbi.2008.08.017, 2008.
  • Grosse, Ian R., Dumont , Elizabeth R., Coletta, Chris, and Tolleson, Alex. (2007).  Techniques for Modeling Muscle-Induced Forces on Finite Element Models of Skeletal Structures. The Anatomical Record: Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutional Biology, 290:1069-1088.
  • Witherell, Paul, Krishnamurty, Sundar, and Grosse, Ian R., (2007). "Ontologies for Supporting Engineering Design Optimization," ASME Journal of Computing and Information Science in Engineering, 7(2): 141-150.
  • Grosse, I.R., Milton-Benoit, J.M., and Wil ed en, (2005). "Ontologies for Supporting Engineering Analysis Models," Artificial Intelligence for Engineering Design, Analysis and Manufacturing, 19(1): 1-18.
  • Richmond , B.G., Wright, B.W., Grosse, I.R., Dechow, P.C., Ross, C.F., Spencer, M.A., and Strait, D.S. (2005). "Finite Element Analysis in Functional Morphology," The Anatomical Record Part A: Discoveries in Molecular, Cellular, and Evolutionary Biology, 283A(2): 259-274.

Personal Websites:

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