Photo of Mladen Čičić

Mladen CICIC

Je suis maître de conférences à CentraleSupélec, Université Paris-Saclay, au Laboratoire des signaux et systèmes (L2S), dans le pôle Automatique et Systèmes. Auparavant, j’ai été chercheur postdoctoral au Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, auprès de la professeure Maria Laura Delle Monache, et au GIPSA-lab, CNRS Grenoble et Inria Montbonnot, auprès du professeur Carlos Canudas-de-Wit. J’ai soutenu ma thèse de doctorat en mars 2021 à KTH Royal Institute of Technology, sous la direction du professeur Karl Henrik Johansson. / CentraleSupélec

Presentation

You may find more infromation about me on my personal site (https://sites.google.com/view/cicic), my Google Scholar, and my LinkedIn.

My research interests lie primarily in the field of traffic modelling and control, particularly focusing on mixed traffic (e.g., human-driven and Connected and Autonomous Vehicles, or combustion engine and electric vehicles), Lagrangian control, and the Front-tracking Transition System modelling framework. My research includes highway traffic control using a small subset of directly controlled vehicles, from both the Lagrangian and the multi-class perspective, modelling and control of electromobility and its interactions with the power grid, and platooning coordination.

Previously, I was a postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at University of California, Berkeley, working with Professor Maria Laura Delle Monache, funded by a Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation and WASP Postdoctoral Scholarship, and before that a postdoctoral researcher at GIPSA-lab, CNRS Grenoble, and a member of team DANCE at Inria Montbonnot, working with Professor Carlos Canudas-de-Wit. I defended my doctoral thesis (« Modelling and Lagrangian control of mixed traffic: platoon coordination, congestion dissipation and state reconstruction« ) in March 2021 at KTH Royal Institute of Technology, under supervision of Professor Karl Henrik Johansson. I received my B.Sc. and M.Sc. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (Automatic Control) from the Signals & Systems Department, School of Electrical Engineering, University of Belgrade.