B.S., Summa Cum Laude, Computer Science, St. John Fisher College, 1995.
B.A., Cum Laude, Philosophy, St. John Fisher College, 1991.
Software Engineer, Raytheon BBN Technologies, March 1999 – Present.
Software Engineer, Raytheon Company, Software Engineering Laboratory, June 1996 – March 1999.
Associate Software Engineer, Xerox Corporation, Print Engine Development Unit, June 1995 – June 1996.
Languages |
Java, XML, HTML, C Language, C++, Perl, Ruby, SQL, UNIX shell |
Software Development Tools |
IntelliJ IDEA/CVS, Eclipse/CVS,SVN, Emacs, Microsoft Visual Studio |
APIs |
Swing, JAX-WS, JUnit, Javadoc, JUNG, JGraph |
Systems |
Windows, UNIX/Solaris, Linux, Mac |
Databases |
MySQL, Oracle |
Methodologies |
OOP/D, Design Patterns, Extreme Programming |
Ms. Fedyk is a software engineer in the Information and Knowledge Technologies department, with interests in time-critical and distributed systems. She is currently developing web services in a distributed framework operating in loose synchrony for the QIAAMU project. She has worked with a variety of computer languages, most recently Java.
Previously, Ms. Fedyk worked on the Health Care Initiative (HCI) efforts, including LIFE Sight™ (Longitudinal Information for Evaluation) and the Outcome-based Analytics IR&D.
Preceding her move to HCI, Ms. Fedyk contributed to the Analysis of Mobility Platform (AMP), a system used by US Transportation Command for long-term strategic planning and capability analysis for mobility. As a member of the AMP team from April 2005 through October 2008, Ms. Fedyk built AMP Federates (which allow external tools to participate in the Federation’s strategic planning) as well as developing enhancements to the system to improve user understanding of analysis results. Working on the AMP Federation afforded her many opportunities to interface and coordinate with several teams, internal and external to BBN.
Ms. Fedyk worked for the UltraLog program from 2000 through early 2005. During this time she successfully contributed to the UltraLog project as well as for the Future Combat Systems (FCS) Adaptive Logistics and Logistics Analysis Tool (LAT), focusing on plugin development and infrastructure software for the large-scale, distributed, adaptive, logistical planning and execution system.
Ms. Fedyk was a also member of the Ants (formerly the Advanced Logistics Project-ALP) technical team. She participated in designing and developing demand projection and inventory management software for ALP which became the basis for the demand projection and inventory management in the Generic Logistics Model (GLM) for the Cognitive Agent Architecture (COUGAAR) project . Ms. Fedyk has been the technical liaison to other teams utilizing the GLM code base.
Previously, Ms. Fedyk was engaged in the development of chemical gear logistical planning software for the Integrated Consumer Item Support (ICIS) project. ICIS assesses the Defense Logistic Agency’s ability to sustain DoD operations and identifies potential problem items in advance of operations.
Prior to working with BBN, Ms. Fedyk worked primarily in time-critical interfaces, including air-traffic-control systems and distributed battle simulators.
P. Collins, A. Fedyk, L. Goldston, G. Kratkiewicz, S. Stevens, J. Tustin, “Expanding the U.S. Transportation Command’s Analysis of Mobility Platform (AMP) Federation to Model Aerial Ports of Debarkation (APODs),” Paper No. 06S-SIW-023, Proceedings of the 2006 Spring Interoperability Workshop, Simulation Interoperability Standards Organization, April 2006, Huntsville, AL.
A. Fedyk, G. Kratkiewicz, J. Berliner, M. Davis, B. DePass, R. Lazarus, R. Bobrow, “Adaptive Optimization of Solution Time In A Distributed Multi-agent System,” International Conference on Integration of Knowledge Intensive Multi-Agent Systems (KIMAS), April 2005, Waltham, MA.
G. Kratkiewicz, A. Fedyk, D. Cerys, “Integrating a Distributed Agent-Based Simulation into an HLA Federation,” Paper No. 04S-SIW-018, Proceedings of the 2004 Spring Interoperability Workshop, Simulation Interoperability Standards Organization, April 2004, Arlington, VA.