Nicholas J. Shallcross Source Confirmed

Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.

Military Officer

University of Arkansas at Fayetteville

faculty

5 h-index 12 pubs 91 cited

Is this your profile? Verify and claim your profile

Biography and Research Information

OverviewAI-generated summary

Nicholas J. Shallcross is an active duty Army Officer with extensive experience as an operations research and systems analyst. His research focuses on decision analysis, set-based design, risk analysis, simulation, stochastic processes, and operations assessments. Shallcross holds a Ph.D. in Engineering from the University of Arkansas, an M.S. in Operations Research from the Air Force Institute of Technology, and a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from the Virginia Military Institute.

His recent publications explore the application of quantitative set-based design in informing program management decisions and trade-off analyses, particularly within model-based systems engineering (MBSE) frameworks. He has investigated the role of decision analysis in MBSE and reviewed research opportunities within set-based design. Shallcross is a member of several professional organizations, including the Institute for Operations Research/Management Science and the Military Operations Research Society. He has collaborated with researchers such as Gregory S. Parnell, Edward Pohl, and Zephan Wade at the University of Arkansas.

Metrics

  • h-index: 5
  • Publications: 12
  • Citations: 91

Selected Publications

  • Role of Decision Analysis in MBSE (2023) DOI
  • Role of Decision Analysis in MBSE (2022) DOI
  • A Review of Set-Based Design Research Opportunities (2022) DOI
  • MBSE Enabled Trade‐Off Analyses (2021) DOI
  • Using value of information in quantitative set‐based design (2021) DOI
  • A value of information methodology for multiobjective decisions in quantitative set‐based design (2021) DOI
  • Informing Program Management Decisions Using Quantitative Set-Based Design (2021) DOI
  • Quantitative Set-Based Design to Inform Design Teams (2021) DOI

Collaborators

Researchers in the database who share publications

Similar Researchers

Based on overlapping research topics