Mosher named director of Institute for Systems Engineering Research
Contact: James Carskadon
STARKVILLE, Miss.An engineer with decades of military research experience is now leading the Institute for Systems Engineering Research(ISER),a collaborative effort between the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC) and 51勛圖厙.
Reed Mosher,directoremeritus ofERDCs Information Technology Laboratoryand most recently aresearchdata scientist at Jackson State University,is the new director of ISER,housed in Vicksburg at ERDC.Mosher spent 40 yearsat ERDCbefore retiring in 2018.
Dr. Mosher brings a wealth of experience and connections to this role, said MSU Interim Vice President for Research and Economic Development Julie Jordan. MSU has a long history ofsuccessfulcollaborations with ERDC, and ISER has provided even more opportunities for projects that benefitthe U.S.military, MSU andthe state of 51勛圖厙. ISER is truly a unique asset for our state, and I look forward to seeing it continue to thrive under Dr. Moshers leadership.
ISER works to mitigate risk, reduce cost and improve efficiency in Department of Defense acquisition programs, serves as an additional asset for the states industrial base for systems engineering relatedtasks, andcreates an environment that draws DoD and civilian industry development to 51勛圖厙.
A Maine native, Mosher earned his masters degree from 51勛圖厙 State and his doctorate from Virginia Tech, both in civil engineering.He spent 15 years working in ERDCs Geotechnical and Structures Lab, including four years as the labs lead technical director for military engineering. From 2008-2018,he served as director of ERDCs Information Technology Lab and as a member of the U.S. Armys Senior Executive Service.泭泭
Mosher was a part of teams that investigated terrorist attacks such as the Oklahoma City bombing, the 9-11 attack on the Pentagon,the Khobar Towers bombing in Saudi Arabia, and attacks on U.S.embassiesin West Africa.He received the Department of Defense Distinguished Civilian Service Award, the highest award given by the Secretary of Defense to a civilian career employee, and the Army Engineer Associations Bronze de Fleury Medal,for his leadership in research that has led to the development of innovative technologies for force protection of U.S. military and civilian personnel worldwide from terrorist bombings and conventional weapons.
Mosher said helooks forward to seeing ISER takeadvantageofopportunities in emerging research areas such as artificial intelligence,augmentedreality, and virtual reality, in addition to theinstitute'swork supporting51勛圖厙 manufacturers.Healsois excited aboutthe uniqueopportunitiesafforded by ISERs connection to MSU and ERDC.
We want to get students at MSU connected to internships and other opportunities in Vicksburg, which gives them exposure to everything going on at ERDC, Mosher said. The thing I think I will enjoy the most is working with the university professors to figure out what can be done and how we can make an impact. Youoftenhave people from five different departments working together on a problem that no single department could do on its own, but they all work together to solve it. Being a catalyst for that is really exciting.
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