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Welcome to Decision Systems and e-Service Intelligence Laboratory

Introduction

The Decision Systems & e-Service Intelligence (DeSI) Laboratory was established in 2002. Led by Professor Jie Lu, in 2008 it became one of five laboratories within the Centre for Quantum Computation and Intelligent Systems – a Priority Investment Research Program of the University of Technology, Sydney.


The aim and research objective of the DeSI Laboratory is the development of theories, methods, software tools and applications in the areas of decision support systems, uncertain information processes and e-service intelligence. The DeSI Laboratory mainly focuses on theoretical and methodological questions arising in the field of decision systems and e-service intelligence, but also actively commits to real-world problems of government and industry to improve business intelligence and support decision-making by the provision of powerful software tools. Recently a new Cloud Computing Group is stablished in the Lab.

***In memory of adjunct Professor Ruan Da from our lab***

Research Interests in General

  • Decision support systems
  • Multi-criteria decision making
  • Multi-level decision making
  • Fuzzy logic and measure
  • Fuzzy optimisation and fuzzy decision making
  • Uncertain information processing
  • Cognitive decision models and analysis
  • Situation awareness
  • Early warning systems
  • Web intelligence and ontology
  • e-Service and e-Business intelligence systems
  • e-Government service personalization and integration
  • Recommendation systems
  • Case-based reasoning and prediction
  • Emergency management and risk analysis
  • Genetic algorithms
  • Online negotiation and online auction

 

Application Domains

  • Organisational decision-making
  • Material, product and service evaluation
  • Social crisis prediction, early warning and anti-terrorism
  • Business strategy and resource planning
  • Logistics and customer relationship management
  • Knowledge management and adaption
  • e-Government and m-Government
  • Risk management in various areas such as textile and fashion design, power market, transportation, nuclear engineering, education, tourism and Telecom

Directors


Australia Learning&Teaching Council CG7-494

Strategies and approaches to teaching and learning cross culture

Click here

http://decide.it.uts.edu.au/altc/altc.htm