Summary
Dajiang Suo is an assistant professor and transportation resilience researcher with nine years of experience bridging academia and industry in connected vehicles, multimodal sensing, V2X cybersecurity, and RFID. Trained at MIT (MS, PhD in Mechanical Engineering/Systems Engineering), he advanced from research assistant to research scientist and postdoc at MIT before transitioning to faculty at Arizona State University and joining the Transportation Research Board standing committee on system resilience and security. His background includes hands-on automotive cybersecurity and functional safety work at Ford, giving him practical insight into deploying secure, safety-critical vehicle systems. He combines deep experimental and systems expertise with policy-facing committee work, uniquely positioning him to translate laboratory innovations in sensing and V2X security into real-world transportation resilience practices.
9 years of coding experience
7 years of employment as a software developer
Master's degree, Systems Engineering, Master's degree, Systems Engineering at MIT
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Mechanical Engineering, Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Mechanical Engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
English, Chinese, Korean