Michael J. Barber
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Michael J. Barber | |
|---|---|
| Born | September 16, 1960 Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S. |
| Education | Milwaukee School of Engineering (BS, 1982) |
| Alma mater | Milwaukee School of Engineering |
| Occupations | Engineer, Corporate Executive |
| Known for | X-ray imaging systems, Digital X-ray detector platform |
Board member of | Catalent, Exact Sciences, Green Bay Packers, Dentsply Sirona |
| Spouse | Jackie Herd-Barber |
| Awards | Fellow, American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering (2014) Member, National Academy of Engineering (2023) |
| Engineering career | |
| Projects | GE HealthCare Healthymagination, First touch-screen X-ray interface |
Michael J. Barber (born September 16, 1960) is an American engineer who is an executive at General Electric. His research considers X-ray electronics. He was elected Fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering in 2014.
Barber was born in Milwaukee and attended John Marshall High School.[1] As a senior, he completed an internship at General Electric, where he was based in medical imaging.[2] He studied electrical engineering at the Milwaukee School of Engineering.[3] During this time, he started to complete more internships at GE, eventually working for them full time and completing his undergraduate degree in night classes.[2]
Research and career
In 1981, Barber was appointed to the electrical engineering team at General Electric. He started his career working on software for X-ray imaging systems.[4] After eight years, he moved to computer tomography, where he developed firmware and hardware, and eventually to magnetic resonance imaging. Barber established Healthymagination, the GE strategy on global health, where he was responsible for reducing the costs associated with accessing care by more than 15%.[5]
Barber was made Chief Technology Officer of General Electric Healthcare in 2007, chief operating officer in 2013, and President of computer tomography.[3] Barber developed the United States' first touch-screen interface for X-ray imaging systems.[6] He retired from his engineering role in 2020, and was made Chief Diversity Officer.[7]
At General Electric, Barber developed the Human Resources program, including their African American forum.[8] He serves on the Board of the National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering.[9] He joined the board of Catalent in 2021.[9]