Welcome
to the home page of Dr. Peter Chen at Louisiana
State University where he holds the position of M. J. Foster
Distinguished Chair Professor of Computer Science since 1983. Dr.
Chen is the originator of the Entity-Relationship Model
(ER Model), which serves as the foundation of many systems
analysis and design methodologies, computer-aided software engineering
(CASE) tools, and repository systems including IBM's Repository
Manager/MVS and DEC's CDD/Plus.
Dr. Peter Chen's original paper on the Entity-Relationship model
(ER model) is one of the most cited papers in the
computer software field. Recently, Dr. Chen was honored by the selection
of his original ER model paper as one of the 38
most influential papers in Computer Science according
to a survey of 1,000 computer science college professors (Table
of Contents, Great Papers in Computer Science, edited by P. Laplante,
West Publishing, 1996). Based on one particular citation database,
Chen's paper is the 35th
most cited article in Computer Science.
The
ER model was adopted as the meta model for the ANSI Standard in
Information Resource Directory System (IRDS), and the ER approach
has been ranked as the top methodology for database design and one
of the top methodologies in systems development by several surveys
of FORTUNE 500 companies.
Dr.
Chen’s work is a cornerstone of software engineering, in particular
Computer-Aided Software Engineering (CASE). In the late 80’s
and early 90’s, IBM’s Application Development Cycle
(AD/Cycle) framework and DB2 repository (RM/MVS) were based on the
ER model. Other vendors’ repository systems such as Digital’s
CDD+ were also based on the ER model. Dr. Chen has made significant
impact on the CASE industry by his research work and by his lecturing
around the world on structured system development methodologies.
Most of the major CASE tools including Computer Associates’
ERWIN, Oracle’s Designer/2000, and Sybase’s PowerDesigner
(and even a general drawing tool like Microsoft’s VISIO) are
influenced by the ER model.
The
ER model also serves as the foundation of some of the recent work
on Object-Oriented analysis and design methodologies and Semantic
Web. The UML modeling language has its roots in the ER model.
The
hypertext concept, which makes the World Wide Web extremely popular,
is very similar to the main concept in the ER model. Dr. Chen is
currently investigating this linkage as an invited expert of several
XML working groups of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C).
Dr. Peter Chen's work is cited heavily in a book published in 1993
for general public called Software Challenges published by Time-Life
Books as a part of the series on "Understanding Computers".
Dr. Peter Chen is also the Editor-in-Chief of Data & Knowledge
Engineering, the Associate Editor for the Journal of Intelligent
Robotic Systems and other journals. In the past, he was the Associate
Editor for IEEE Computer, Information Sciences and other journals.
He is a member of the Airlie Software Council, which consists of
software visionaries/gurus and very-high-level software organization
executives, organized by U.S. Department of Defense (DoD).
Dr. Chen is a Fellow of the IEEE, the ACM, and the AAAS. He has
been listed in Who's Who in America and Who's Who in the World for
more than ten years. He is the recipient of awards in several fields
of Information Technology (IT): from data management to information
management, software engineering, and general information technology:
· The Data Resource Management Technology Award from the
Data Administration Management Association (NYC) in 1990.
· The Achievement Award in Information Management in 2000
from DAMA International, an international professional organization
of data management professionals, managers, and Chief Information
Officers (CIO's). Dr. E. F. Codd (the inventor of the Relational
data model) is the winner of the same award in 2001.
· Inductee, the Data Management Hall of Fame in 2000.
· The Stevens Award in Software Method Innovation in 2001,
and the award was presented at IEEE
International Conference on Software Maintenance in Florence,
Italy on November 8, 2001.
· Dr. Chen is scheduled to receive the IEEE Harry Goode
Award at the IEEE-CS Board of Governors meeting in San Diego, February
2003. The previous winners of the Harry Goode Award include the
inventors of computers, core memory, and semiconductors.
He was recognized as a “software pioneer” in the "Software
Pioneers" Conference, Bonn, Germany, June 27-28, 2001, together
with a group of very distinguished scientists including winners
of President’s Medals of Technology, ACM Turing Awards, or
IEEE distinguished awards such as Harry Goode Awards. The video
streaming and slides of the talks in this “Pioneers”
Conference can be found at the conference website. All the speeches
in the conference are documented in a book (with 4 DVD’s)
published by Springer-Verlag, and how to order the book can be found
in the section on Papers-Online. More details of various honors
and awards received by Dr. Chen can be found in the section on Honors
& Professional Activities.
The Entity-Relationship model is described in most textbooks on
databases, software engineering, and information systems analysis.
It is included as a fundamental topic in the ACM/IEEE recommended
curriculum on computer science and information systems. Today, it
is very likely to find at least one chapter on the ER model when
a person randomly picks up a college textbook on information system
design or databases. It is also very likely to walk into a college
classroom to attend a class on information management and see that
the ER modeling is being taught there. For example, at LSU, the
ER model is being taught in 3 different colleges: the Computer Science
department in College of Basic Sciences, the Information Systems
and Decision Sciences Department in College of Business, and the
Industrial Engineering and Manufacturing Systems Department in the
College of Engineering. In other universities, the ER model is also
taught in a variety of departments and colleges. For example, at
Berkeley, the ER model is being taught in 2 or 3 courses at the
School of Information Management. As another example, the ER model
is being taught in the Computational-Biology/bioinformatics programs
at University of Pennsylvania, Drexel, University of Virginia, and
Hong Kong University.
At MIT, UCLA and Harvard, Dr. Peter Chen taught various courses
in Information Systems and Computer Science. At LSU, he has taught
courses in database management systems, software engineering, database
design, and Object-Oriented programming. Since 1994, Dr. Chen has
been doing research and teaching on Internet/Web, Java, XML, Data
Warehousing, E-commerce (B2B and B2C), and Internet Security.
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