Web of Science ResearcherID: AFT-6690-2022
Ali Kheyroddin (born 1964) is an Iranian researcher and Distinguished Professor of Structural Engineering at Semnan University. He obtained his MS degree from Iran University of Science and Technology, Iran, and his PhD degree from McGill University, Canada at 1996. He is also the member of Center of Excellence for Engineering and Management of Civil Infrastructures, University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran. He was an invited visiting scholar in the University of Texas at Arlington, USA (2015), and he was the chancellor of the Semnan University for 8 years. He was also Vice Minister of Technology and Innovation at Iranian Ministry of Science, Research and Technology for two years. He is known for his works on design of reinforced concrete structures, tall buildings, rehabilitation of existing buildings, neural networks and design of earthquake resistant buildings. He is the author of twelve books, more than 400 ISI and ISC journal papers, and more than 250 conference papers. He has ten patents, and he has also supervised numerous PhD and MS degree theses. He is also Editor in Chief of Journal of Rehabilitation in Civil Engineering (JRCE, in English). He is known for his works on reinforced concrete structures, nonlinear finite element analysis, tall buildings (analysis and design), composite structures, fiber-reinforced concrete, seismic retrofit, progressive collapse, and neural networks.
Web of Science ResearcherID: CCB-1142-2022
Dr. Ajla Aksamija is a Professor at the School of Architecture at the University of Utah. She is the Distinguished Chair for Resilient Places and directs Transforming Places, Practices and Pedagogies Collaborative (TP3C) research entity. She served as the Chair of the School of Architecture. Her interdisciplinary research expertise includes building science and sustainability, emerging building technologies, digital design and representations, and innovations in architecture. She has worked on developing building analysis and modeling applications, implementation of novel materials in architectural design, development of computational models, and has collaborated with researchers from material science, civil and environmental engineering and computational design. Her professional background includes Perkins&Will, where she directed Building Technology Laboratory (“Tech Lab”), one of the first practice-driven architectural research laboratories, as well as U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Construction Engineering Research Laboratory. Prior to joining the University of Utah, she was a Professor at the Department of Architecture at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Web of Science ResearcherID: DNX-6419-2022
Research interests
Web of Science ResearcherID: FVF-5946-2022
Web of Science ResearcherID: AAG-9302-2020
Research interests