Wroclaw University of Technology, Poland
Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan
Employer
The University of Arizona
Title
University Distinguished Professor
Raymond J Oglethorpe Endowed Chair
Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Jerzy W. Rozenblit is a University Distinguished Professor and Raymond J. Oglethorpe Endowed Chair in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE)[1] at the University of Arizona, in Tucson, Arizona. He also holds a joint appointment as Professor of Surgery at the University of Arizona College of Medicine.[2] From 2003 to 2011 he served as the ECE Department Head.[3] During his tenure at the University of Arizona, he established the Model-Based Design Laboratory[2] with major projects in complex systems design hardware software codesign, modeling, and computer-aided minimally-invasive surgical training. He presently serves as Director of the Life-Critical Computing Systems Initiative,[4] a research enterprise intended to improve the reliability and safety of technology in life-critical applications.
Background
Rozenblit grew up in Wroclaw, Poland, and received his undergraduate degree summa cum laude from the Wroclaw University of Technology specializing in systems science and control engineering. He had spent time in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands prior to emigrating to Detroit, Michigan, where he completed his MSc and PhD in computer science at Wayne State University. In 1986, he joined the University of Arizona as a junior faculty, where he has worked ever since.
Rozenblit is one of the founders of the area known as the engineering of computer-based systems (ECBS). His key contributions are seminal works in model-based design that established the theoretical basis of ECBS and bringing ECBS principles to practice in a number of significant engineering applications, namely VLSI design and manufacturing embedded systems design and testing, computer-assisted surgery (clinical medicine), and national security.
Specific technical innovations of his approach include the development of heuristics for design space search (a problem well known and proven to be NP-complete). The developed heuristics that use a rule-based approach to reduce the search complexity from exponential to polynomial[5][6] and allow for rapid construction of simulatable design models.
Leveraging from his work in design and modeling.[6] Rozenblit developed the model-based codesign approach that integrated hardware and software development paths, solving the "model continuity" problem by providing techniques to map formal specification onto executable design models.[7][8] Rozenblit's recent work in design and engineering of systems for minimally invasive surgical training and computer-assisted surgery has strong societal implications, namely the improvement of patients' safety. He has developed the first ever system that improves the situational awareness in laparoscopic surgery using vision, sensor, and haptic-based guidance[9][10]
In 2009, he was named University Distinguished Professor by the University of Arizona and its Arizona Board of Regents for exceptional contributions to research and undergraduate education.
^Rozenblit, Jerzy W.; Huang, Yueh M. (1991). "Rule-Based Generation of Model Structures in Multifacetted Modeling and System Design". ORSA Journal on Computing. 3 (4): 330–344. doi:10.1287/ijoc.3.4.330.
^ abRozenblit, J. W.; Zeigler, B. P. (1988). "Design and Modeling Concepts". International Encyclopedia of Robotics: 308–322.
^Schulz, S.; Buchenrieder, K.J.; Rozenblit, J.W. (2002). "Multilevel testing for design verification of embedded systems". IEEE Design & Test of Computers. 19 (2): 60–69. doi:10.1109/54.990443. S2CID1738489.
^Olson, John T.; Rozenblit, Jerzy W.; Talarico, Claudio; Jacak, Witold (2007). "Hardware/Software Partitioning Using Bayesian Belief Networks". IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics - Part A: Systems and Humans. 37 (5): 655–668. doi:10.1109/TSMCA.2007.902623. S2CID15695903.
^Feng, Chuan; Rozenblit, Jerzy W.; Hamilton, Allan J. (2007). "A Hybrid View in a Laparoscopic Surgery Training System". 14th Annual IEEE International Conference and Workshops on the Engineering of Computer-Based Systems (ECBS'07). pp. 339–348. doi:10.1109/ECBS.2007.6. ISBN978-0-7695-2772-7. S2CID5965017.
^Feng, Chuan; Rozenblit, Jerzy W.; Hamilton, Allan J. (2010). "A computerized assessment to compare the impact of standard, stereoscopic and high definition laparoscopic monitor displays on surgical technique". Surgical Endoscopy. 24 (11): 2743–2748. doi:10.1007/s00464-010-1038-6. PMID20361211. S2CID13992600.