J
Jeanne M. VanBriesen
Researcher at Carnegie Mellon University
Publications - 104
Citations - 6295
Jeanne M. VanBriesen is an academic researcher from Carnegie Mellon University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Wastewater. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 101 publications receiving 5663 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeanne M. VanBriesen include Alcoa & Durham University.
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
Cost-effective outbreak detection in networks
Jure Leskovec,Andreas Krause,Carlos Guestrin,Christos Faloutsos,Jeanne M. VanBriesen,Natalie S. Glance +5 more
TL;DR: This work exploits submodularity to develop an efficient algorithm that scales to large problems, achieving near optimal placements, while being 700 times faster than a simple greedy algorithm and achieving speedups and savings in storage of several orders of magnitude.
Journal ArticleDOI
The battle of the water sensor networks (BWSN): A design challenge for engineers and algorithms
Avi Ostfeld,James G. Uber,Elad Salomons,Jonathan W. Berry,William E. Hart,Cynthia A. Phillips,Jean-Paul Watson,G. Dorini,Philip Jonkergouw,Zoran Kapelan,Francesco di Pierro,Soon-Thiam Khu,Dragan Savic,Demetrios G. Eliades,Marios M. Polycarpou,Santosh R. Ghimire,Brian D. Barkdoll,R. Gueli,Jinhui Jeanne Huang,Edward A. McBean,William James,Andreas Krause,Jure Leskovec,Shannon L. Isovitsch,Jianhua Xu,Carlos Guestrin,Jeanne M. VanBriesen,Mitchell J. Small,Paul S. Fischbeck,Ami Preis,Marco Propato,Olivier Piller,Gary B. Trachtman,Zheng Yi Wu,Thomas M. Walski +34 more
TL;DR: The Battle of the Water Sensor Networks (BWSN) was undertaken as part of the 8th Annual Water Distillery Safety Week, which explored how design algorithms compare to the efforts of human designers for practical design of sensor networks.
Journal ArticleDOI
Efficient Sensor Placement Optimization for Securing Large Water Distribution Networks
TL;DR: It is shown how the method presented here can be extended to multicriteria optimization, selecting placements robust to sensor failures and optimizing minimax criteria.
Journal ArticleDOI
Life cycle greenhouse gas emissions of Marcellus shale gas
Mohan Jiang,W. Michael Griffin,Chris Hendrickson,Paulina Jaramillo,Jeanne M. VanBriesen,Aranya Venkatesh +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the life cycle greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the production of Marcellus shale natural gas and compared its emissions with national average US natural gas emissions produced in the year 2008.
Journal ArticleDOI
Life Cycle Water Consumption and Wastewater Generation Impacts of a Marcellus Shale Gas Well
TL;DR: The life cycle study results indicate that when gas end use is not considered hydraulic fracturing is the largest contributor to the life cycle water impacts of a Marcellus shale gas well.