Directory

Pingbo Tang is an associate professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. He founded and is directing Spatiotemporal Workflows and Resilient Management Laboratory (SWARM Lab). He obtained his bachelor’s degree of civil engineering in 2002, and his master’s degree of bridge engineering in 2005, both from Tongji University, Shanghai, China. He obtained is Ph.D. from the group of Advanced Infrastructure Systems (AIS) at Carnegie Mellon University in 2009.

Tang’s research explores the remote sensing, human systems engineering, data analytics, and information modeling technology to support spatiotemporal analyses needed for predictive management of constructed facilities, workspaces and civil infrastructure systems. His on-going studies have been examining sensing and modeling methods for comprehending the Human-Cyber-Physical-Systems (H-CPS) in accelerated construction and infrastructure operations (e.g., airport operations, nuclear plant outage control). He has published more than 100 peer-reviewed articles in these areas. The National Science Foundation (NSF), Department of Energy (DOE), The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Salt River Project (SRP), and Phoenix Government have funded his research efforts.

Tang holds memberships or leadership positions of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE, the Chair of the ASCE Data Sensing and Analysis committee), TRB (Committee on Bridge Management, AHD35), IABSE, ASPRS, and ASTM International (Committee E57: 3D imaging systems). He is on the editorial board of ASCE Journal of Computing in Civil Engineering, as well as a reviewer of multiple top journals and conferences related to Computing in Civil Engineering. He won best paper awards on top conferences (the 2019 ASCE International Conference on Computing in Civil Engineering, the ASCE 2017 International Workshop on Computing in Civil Engineering, the ASCE 2009 Construction Research Congress), the best poster award of Construction Industry Institute's 2011 Annual Conference, the 2013 Recent Alumnus Achievement Award of the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department at Carnegie Mellon University. Tang won the National Science Foundation CAREER Award in 2015.

Office
123F Baker/Porter Hall
Phone
412.268.8215
Email
ptang@andrew.cmu.edu
Google Scholar
Pingbo Tang
Websites
Pingbo Tang’s website
Pingbo Tang’s Research Gate
Pingbo Tang’s Research Group

Creating AI Assistants for a Safer World

Education

2009 Ph.D., Carnegie Mellon University

2005 M.S., Tongji University, China

2002 B.S., Tongji University, China

Media mentions


CMU Engineering

Finding comfort through machine learning

A recent study leverages information provided by building occupants when answering multiple related questions about their thermal comfort to find the real “comfort zone” for most people in a building.

CMU Engineering

AI for aviation

Pingbo Tang is working toward realizing several AI techniques supporting the predictive management of aircraft and other systems.

CEE News

Tang researches water treatment infrastructure using digital twins

CEE’s  Pingbo Tang and CEE alumnus Damon Weiss collaborate on water treatment infrastructure research using digital twins.

Civil and Environmental Engineering

Tang and Weiss test infrastructure scenarios using digital twins

Years after studying together at CEE, Professor Pingbo Tang and Ethos Collaborative Principal Damon Weiss are working side by side again—looking for ways to recognize potential issues in operating and maintaining our country’s aging water treatment facilities.

Civil and Environmental Engineering

Tang awarded Dowd Fellowship to develop simulations

Tang plans to develop dynamic decision-making games for operating and maintaining various civil infrastructure systems based on the research data, digital models, and relevant materials accumulated by him over the past decade.

Civil and Environmental Engineering

The rise of digital twins

Part Two: A Space Ripe for Innovation & Industry Collaboration

Civil and Environmental Engineering

The rise of digital twins

Collaborating with industry leaders while combining infrastructure, data analysis, and computing expertise, CEE faculty are working on numerous digital twin projects. Their research aims to predict and prevent vehicle and equipment failures, maintain smart habitats in space, and optimize the safety, equity, and sustainability of various infrastructure systems.

Civil and Environmental Engineering

CEE students explore the future in 3D with Mega City 2070

Created by the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) based on extensive research, Mega City 2070 immerses users in a realistic 3D model of a city home to 50 million people in the year 2070. As students tour this futuristic and interconnected built environment, they can delve into articles, reports, videos, and discussions regarding transportation; construction and materials; energy and utilities; structure and architecture; and water, waste, and environment.

2022 Faculty Awards announced

The 2022 Engineering Faculty Awards winners have been announced.

Civil and Environmental Engineering

Xiong awarded Smith Graduate Fellowship

Xiong's research focuses on developing intelligent human-automation collaboration for supporting reliable and adaptive civil infrastructure management systems, such as buildings, bridges, and air traffic systems.

Civil and Environmental Engineering

Wang awarded Liang Ji-Dan Fellowship

This fellowship is created to honor Liang Ji-Dang, a Chinese classic scholar. Liang devoted himself to education and he always stressed the importance of retaining the fundamentals of Chinese culture but at the same time diligently pursuing the best of Western science and technology.

Civil and Environmental Engineering

Reimagining advanced infrastructure systems: Inside CEE's new AIS facilities

Combining sensing, artificial intelligence, system engineering, economics, public policy, and more to address challenges, the AIS group has for years been conducting, pioneering research utilizing several different lab facilities in Porter Hall and across campus.