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John Westcott

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Nationality
  
British

Fields
  
Control Systems


Doctoral advisor
  
Name
  
John Westcott

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Born
  
John Hugh Westcott3 November 1920 (
1920-11-03
)

Died
  
10 October 2014(2014-10-10) (aged 93)

Institutions
  
Thesis
  
Studies in Analysis of Servomechanisms with the Development of a New Performance Criterion (1951)

John Hugh Westcott FRS, FREng, Hon FIEE (3 November 1920 – 10 October 2014) was a British scientist specialising in control systems and Professor of Computing and Automation at Imperial College London.

Contents

Career

His career began in radar research during World War II. After a year in Germany with the Allied Commission, he obtained a scholarship to the MIT where many scientists returning from the services were addressing the early possibilities of computer applications.

He was the first to lecture on the new field of cybernetics in Britain and was a member of the Ratio Club with Grey Walter, Alan Turing, Giles Brindley and others from various fields, who met between 1949 and 1952 to discuss brain mechanisms and related issues. He researched servo-mechanisms at Imperial College London, where he headed the new Department of Computing and Control from 1966. A founder-member in 1957 of the International Federation of Automatic Control, one of the first professional bodies to liaise successfully across the Iron Curtain, he was a consultant to companies such as Shell, ICI, Westlands and British Steel Corporation in applying control systems to large and complex processes. In the 1970s and 1980s he also worked on macro-economic modelling and computer modelling for policy-evaluation.

Awards and honours

Westcott was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 1983 and a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering (FREng) in 1980.

References

John Westcott Wikipedia