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Professor James D. Lee received his BS, MS, and Ph.D. degrees from National Taiwan University, Rice University, and Princeton Universities in 1964, 1967, and 1971, respectively.
He has been in faculty positions at The George Washington University (1972-1981, 1990-present), West Virginia University (1982), University of Minnesota (1983-1985) in addition to government positions at NIST (1985-1989) and NASA (1989-1990). At GWU, he has been teaching more than 15 different courses, including Continuum Mechanics, Finite Element Analysis, Fracture Mechanics, Nanomechanics, Mechanical Vibration, Optimal Control Theory, Robotics, Ordinary and Partial Differential Equations, Linear Algebra.
He has performed research in diversified research fields including (1) Classical continuum mechanics, (2) Nonlocal theory, (3) Biomechanics, (4) Poroelasticity (tumor growth), (5) 3D/4D printing, (6) Microcontinuum physics (thermomechanical-electromagnetic coupling), (7) Finite element and meshless analyses, (8) Nanomechanics (multiple length-time scale modeling), (9) Fracture mechanics and Fatigue, (10) Optimal control theory (parallel link robotics, structural control for earthquake resistance).
He has received research grants from NSF and Department of Transportation. He is a Fellow of ASME and an Honorary Fellow of the Australian Institute of High Energetic Materials.
He has published about two hundred journal papers, book chapters, and books. The most recently published book, entitled “Advanced Continuum Theories and Finite Element Analyses”, consists of four parts: (I) Classical Continuum Mechanics, (II) Microcontinuum Field Theories, (III) Finite Element Analyses, (IV) Special Topics (Nonlocal Theory, Mechanobiology, 4D Printing, Poroelasticity, and Nematic Liquid Crystal).