Alice E. Smith is an American industrial engineer whose research concerns mathematical optimization for complex applications in manufacturing, business planning, advanced materials, and communication networks, based on problems including facility location and network design. She is Joe W. Forehand/Accenture Professor of Industrial and Systems Engineering at Auburn University, where she also holds an adjunct appointment in the Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering.[1]
Returning to graduate study in engineering, she completed a PhD in 1991 at the Missouri University of Science and Technology, focusing on engineering management and systems engineering. She became an assistant professor of industrial engineering at the University of Pittsburgh in 1991, and associate professor there in 1996, before moving to Auburn University in 1999 as full professor and chair of the Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering. She was named Philpott—WestPoint Stevens Professor in 2001, W. Allen and Martha Reed Professor in 2012, and Joe W. Forehand/Accenture Distinguished Professor in 2015.[2]
Smith was the 2009 winner of the WORMS Award for the Advancement of Women in Operations Research and Management Science.[4]
In 2012, the Institute of Industrial and Systems Engineers gave Smith their Albert G. Holzman Distinguished Educator Award.[5] She won the Wellington Award of the Engineering Economy Division of the Institute of Industrial and Systems Engineers, for her lifetime achievements in the field.[6]
References
^"Alice E. Smith", Engineering Faculty Profile, Auburn University, retrieved 2022-04-18
^Editor biography from Smith, Alice E., ed. (2022), Women in Computational Intelligence: Key Advances and Perspectives on Emerging Topics, Women in Engineering and Science, Springer, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-79092-9