PhD - Aerospace Engineering (feedback control emphasis)            
            University of Texas at Austin - 2010        
             
					Tyler Summers
Assistant Professor - Mechanical Engineering
 							 Affiliate - Electrical Engineering
 													Professional Preparation
            M.S. - Aerospace Engineering (feedback control emphasis)            
University of Texas at Austin - 2007
            University of Texas at Austin - 2007
            B.S. - Mechanical Engineering            
Texas Christian University - 2004
        Texas Christian University - 2004
Research Areas
Research Description
Dr. Summers' research interest are in feedback control and optimization in complex dynamical networks, emphasizing theoretical tools and computational methods and driven by applications to electric power networks and distributed robotics.
Appointments
            Postdoctoral Fellow
            
ETH Zurich [2011–2015]
Department of Electrical Engineering and Information Technology
            ETH Zurich [2011–2015]
Department of Electrical Engineering and Information Technology
            Fulbright Scholar
            
The Australian National University [2007–2008]
                             
                    
            The Australian National University [2007–2008]
            MS and PhD Candidate
            
University of Texas at Austin [2005–2010]
Cockrell School of Engineering
                University of Texas at Austin [2005–2010]
Cockrell School of Engineering
News Articles
Engineer Receives Young Investigator Award for Technology Work
 Dr. Tyler Summers, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering in the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science, has been awarded a $350,000 grant to study the best ways to connect sensors and actuators into networks.
            Dr. Tyler Summers, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering in the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science, has been awarded a $350,000 grant to study the best ways to connect sensors and actuators into networks. The grant was awarded through the U.S. Army’s Young Investigator Program.
Summers said that an increasingly networked world has led to many new sensing technologies that provide unprecedented data streams from important complex systems, such as a power grid or urban transportation networks.
Dr. Tyler Holt Summers awarded $500,000 from NSF
 Dr. Tyler Holt Summers received $500,000 from the National Science Foundation (NSF) for his research on CAREER: Data-Driven Control of Dynamical Networks: Robustness, Risk, and Network Architectures.
            Dr. Tyler Holt Summers received $500,000 from the National Science Foundation (NSF) for his research on CAREER: Data-Driven Control of Dynamical Networks: Robustness, Risk, and Network Architectures.