2,175 research outputs found

    Synergizing Roadway Infrastructure Investment with Digital Infrastructure for Infrastructure-Based Connected Vehicle Applications: Review of Current Status and Future Directions

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    The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.The safety, mobility, environmental and economic benefits of Connected and Autonomous Vehicles (CAVs) are potentially dramatic. However, realization of these benefits largely hinges on the timely upgrading of the existing transportation system. CAVs must be enabled to send and receive data to and from other vehicles and drivers (V2V communication) and to and from infrastructure (V2I communication). Further, infrastructure and the transportation agencies that manage it must be able to collect, process, distribute and archive these data quickly, reliably, and securely. This paper focuses on current digital roadway infrastructure initiatives and highlights the importance of including digital infrastructure investment alongside more traditional infrastructure investment to keep up with the auto industry's push towards this real time communication and data processing capability. Agencies responsible for transportation infrastructure construction and management must collaborate, establishing national and international platforms to guide the planning, deployment and management of digital infrastructure in their jurisdictions. This will help create standardized interoperable national and international systems so that CAV technology is not deployed in a haphazard and uncoordinated manner

    Technology Partnerships: The PALNI Success Story

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    Libraries have often been early adopters of new technologies. But, until the 1960s and the beginnings of the computer age, these technologies and bibliographic tools were limited in their ability to effect wide-scale resource sharing

    Managerial Strategies for Maximizing Benefits From Electronic Health Record Systems

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    In 2009, the U.S. government allocated $27 billion to health care agencies for electronic health records (EHRs) implementation. The increased use of EHR systems is expected to drive down health care costs and increase profits. To meet this anticipated return on investment (ROI), hospital managers need to be able to successfully design, deploy, and manage EHR systems. The purpose of this single case study was to explore organizational management strategies that hospital managers can use to ensure their investments in EHRs meet targeted ROIs and work efficiency goals. The conceptual framework for this study was based on the technology acceptance model. Primary data were collected from a criterion sample of 6 hospital managers with direct experience designing and implementing successful EHRs in a small hospital in the Northeastern United States. Secondary data were collected using public financial records available on the Internet. After cataloging and grouping the raw data, 4 emergent themes were identified: (a) training, (b) the role of organizational management strategies, (c) technological barriers, and (d) ongoing support and maintenance. Findings may contribute to social change through an increase in the quality of patient care and making health care records more accessible to doctors in isolated areas

    The work of reuse: birth certificate data and healthcare accountability measurements

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    Data reuse – long a key focus of information studies and CSCW research on eScience – is increasingly a major issue in organizations attempting to leverage data gathered using information systems for accountability functions such as performance measurements. Carrying out organizational analytics and performance measurements for accountability typically rests on the ability to successfully reuse existing, procurable data. We present results from an ethnographic study of the practices of recording birth certificate data and related attempts to assess and improve birth certificate data in response to a new re-use of birth certificate data for measurements introduced to hold hospitals accountable for the quality of the care they are delivering. Drawing on literature on data reuse and information infrastructure, we describe the situated work that must take place in order for birth certificate data to be reused for accountability purposes, and the organizational capacity building that must take place to facilitate the reuse of birth certificate data for measurement oriented to organizational improvement and accountability

    Boston Unplugged: Mapping a Wireless Future

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    Reviews a variety of models that would allow Boston to provide free or low-cost high-speed Internet access citywide. Outlines the benefits and mechanics of citywide WiFi, and lists factors to consider in designing, developing, and deploying a system

    School Finance Systems and Their Responsiveness to Performance Pressures: A Case Study of North Carolina

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    Details the mechanisms of and influences on the state's school finance system, changes caused by increased performance pressures, local officials' views on alternative allocation of resources, and obstacles to linking resources to student learning

    Beyond the Bubble: Technology and the Future of Student Assessment

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    Provides an overview of information technology's potential to enable better assessments of student achievement. Outlines promising models for testing complex skills, cognition, and learning and for utilizing such assessments to improve instruction

    Transportation data InTegration and ANalytic

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    State transportation agencies regularly collect and store various types of data for different uses such as planning, traffic operations, design, and construction. These large datasets contain treasure troves of information that could be fused and mined, but the size and complexity of data mining require the use of advanced tools such as big data analytics, machine learning, and cluster computing. TITAN (Transportation data InTegration and ANalytics) is an initial prototype of an interactive web-based platform that demonstrates the possibilities of such big data software. The current study succeeded in showing a user-friendly front end, graphical in nature, and a scalable back end capable of integrating multiple big databases with minimal latencies. This thesis documents how the key components of TITAN were designed. Several applications, including mobility, safety, transit performance, and predictive crash analytics, are used to explore the strengths and limitations of the platform. A comparative analysis of the current TITAN platform with traditional database systems such as Oracle and Tableau is also conducted to explain who needs to use the platform and when to use which platform. As TITAN was shown to be feasible and efficient, the future research direction should aim to add more types of data and deploy TITAN in various data-driven decision-making processes.Includes bibliographical reference

    ACLP - Broadband Planning Tool Kit - October 2022

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    This Tool Kit provides state and local policymakers with a range of resources and analyses for use during broadband planning. The Tool Kit focuses on the array of grant and other funding opportunities available to states and localities as a result of the Infrastructure Investment & Jobs Act, as well as other pandemic-era stimulus programs. However, the Tool Kit is also useful for broadband planning outside of these specific funding programs. Indeed, the Tool Kit offers foundational planning resources that can be used now and in the future by officials, ISPs, and other stakeholders in the broadband space
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