Georgia Institute of TechnologySchool of Civil & Environmental Engineering Ford Environmental Science and Technology windowsGeorgia Tech Sign and TrolleyStructures lab

Dominic Assimaki - Assistant Professor

Contact Information

Room: Mason 213
Phone: 404/894-7598
dominic.assimaki@ce.gatech.edu

Research Interests & Bio

Dominic Assimaki - Assistant Professor

Dr. Assimaki maintains a personal website with more details on her current research and students. (more details)

RESEARCH INTERESTS

Numerical methods in earthquake engineering, nonlinear dynamic soil behavior, soil-structure interaction, scattering of seismic waves in heterogeneous media, inverse problems in geophysics

BRIEF BIOGRAPHY

Dr. Dominic Assimaki joined the School of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology as an Assistant Professor in July 2005. She received her BS in Civil Engineering from the National Technical University of Athens (Athens, Greece) in 1998. She continued her studies at the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at MIT (Cambridge, MA) where she obtained an MS in 2000 and a ScD in 2004. During her doctoral studies, she also participated in the European Research Training Network SAFERR as a Young Researcher in GDS (Paris, France, January 2001-September 2002), and received a graduate research fellowship from the National Technical University of Athens (Athens, Greece, September 2002-August 2002). After graduating from MIT, she worked as a post-doctoral researcher at the Institute for Crustal Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara (February 2004-June 2005). Her primary research interests are in numerical methods in earthquake engineering and geophysics, and include forward simulations of dynamic nonlinear soil response, soil-structure interaction and scattering phenomena in heterogeneous media, as well as inverse problems. She is a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers, the Earthquake Engineering Research Institute, the American Geophysical Union, the Seismological Society of America, the International Association for Computer Methods and Advances in Geomechanics, and the Southern California Earthquake Center.