Dr. Alison Brown, UCLA Samueli Professional Achievement Award Recipient

https://samueli.ucla.edu/ucla-engineering-2023-professional-achievement-awards-recipients/

UCLA Samueli

Every year, the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering selects and recognizes outstanding achievements by a number of its alumni, faculty members and students who have excelled in various fields. Below are profiles of the recipients of this year’s Professional Achievement Award and the Rising Professional Achievement Award.

Professional Achievement Award
Alison Brown Ph.D. ’85

Alison Brown is an internationally acclaimed expert in positioning, navigation and timing (PNT) technologies. She is the chair of the board, president and CEO of the NAVSYS Corporation — a Colorado-based company she founded in 1986, just one year after getting her doctoral degree from UCLA. Under Brown’s leadership, NAVSYS has provided high-quality technical products and services in global positioning systems (GPS) hardware design, systems engineering, systems analysis and software design.

For more than three decades, Brown has developed and demonstrated numerous PNT capabilities for both commercial and military systems. Thanks to her deep technical knowledge and innovative approach, Brown has been sought after to serve on multiple advisory boards including three four-year terms on the Air Force Scientific Advisory Board, and a decade on the National Defense Industrial Association’s Board of Trustees. In 2022, she was appointed to the U.S. Defense Science Board, which provides independent advice on scientific and technical matters of strategic importance.

Among her many honors, Brown has received the 2016 James S. Cogswell Outstanding Industrial Security Achievement Award from the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency. She is also a Girl Scouts Woman of Distinction, a Master of Foxhounds and founder of the Tri-Lakes and Salida Business Incubators supporting rural economic development. 

Brown earned both her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in engineering from Cambridge University in England. With a Draper Fellowship and Dupont Scholarship, she then attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where she graduated with a master’s degree in aeronautics and astronautics. She went on to pursue a Ph.D. in mechanics, aerospace and nuclear engineering at UCLA, where she published one of the earliest studies on leveraging the power of GPS for PNT applications. 

She is a member of the National Academy of Engineering, a fellow of the Institute of Navigation and an honorary fellow of Sidney Sussex College in Cambridge, England.