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Steven R. Shaw, Associate Professor
Ph.D. Electrical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Areas of expertise: Fuel Cells, Signals and Systems
532 Cobleigh Hall, +1 406-994-5982
sshaw@matrix.coe.montana.edu |
Background
Dr. Steven R. Shaw joined the faculty of the Electrical and Computer Engineering
Department at Montana State University as an assistant professor in August,
2000 and was promoted to Associate professor with tenure in September, 2006.
He is interested in system identification and controls, energy and fuel cell
systems, and instrumentation. Dr. Shaw is a Montana State University 2001 Teaching
and Learning Fellow, recipient of a 2001 M.I.T. Laboratory for Electronic and
Electromagnetic Systems Grainger Foundation Award, and recipient of the 1997
M.I.T. David Adler memorial prize for best thesis in Electrical Engineering.
In May 2002, Dr. Shaw received a Technology Review Magazine TR-100 award. The
TR-100 is an international award recognizing young innovators "who will
create the future." In September 2003, Dr. Shaw was honored by the National
Academy of Engineering in the ninth annual "Frontiers of Engineering'' event.
He was elected ECE instructor of the year from 2003 to 2005. In 2006 Dr. Shaw
received an NSF CAREER award. In 2007, he was honored by the MSU vice-president
for research office with the award for meritorious technology/science. Dr. Shaw
is a senior member of IEEE and member and chapter co-chair of Sigma Xi.
News and Awards
- Awarded
MSU's Meritorious Technology/Science Award, May 2007
- MSU professor hopes to train better engineers with prestigious award, April 18, 2006
- MSU engineering
professor wins career award from the National Science Foundation (NSF),
March 23, 2006
- MSU invention
could improve fuel cell performance, longevity, April 4, 2005
- Shaw selected
as one of nation's top young engineers, September 3, 2003
- Selected to Participate
in National
Academy of Engineering (NAE) 2003 U.S. Frontiers
of Engineering Symposium
- Named a Young
Innovator Under 35 by Technology
Review in May 2002.
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