Time:14:30, March 25
Venue:West 248,Building 2, Xingqing Campus
Reporter:Professor Alexandra Brintrup

Prof. Alexandra Brintrup is Professor in Digital Manufacturing at the University of Cambridge’s Engineering Department, where she leads the Supply Chain AI Lab. She also leads Digital Manufacturing at the Alan Turing Institute, is external faculty at the Complexity Science Hub Vienna, and is a fellow of Darwin College.
Prof. Brintrup was the first researcher to empirically study large-scale supply chains as complex adaptive networks, examine their emergent properties, and take a data-driven perspective to characterize their resilience, which led to understanding of universal patterns that govern supply chains. She was also the first to develop algorithms to predict supply chain dependencies and disruptions. Over the past decades she advised policymakers, and national and European scientific committees, and worked with both startups, SMEs and international organisations. She is a member of the All Party Parliamentary Groups in Artificial Intelligence and Data Analytics, and advises policy development in supply chain risk, economic performance and resilience. Her current research includes: Predictive methods for automated detection of supply chain dependencies, especially with collective learning paradigms; complex system approaches to model emergence in supply networks, autonomous and scalable optimisation and distributed decision making technologies, particularly with nature-inspired algorithms and Multi-agent Systems.
Topic:An Introduction to Digital Manufacturing
Abstract:This talk introduces the students to the concept of Industry 4.0, and how latest advances in AI have brought about the advent of Industry 5.0. We cover basic building blocks, application areas, case examples from different industries, and regions. We conclude with current concerns, open research questions and will debate about the future of digital manufacturing.
(Stamps available)