9 research outputs found

    Proceedings of the 2004 ONR Decision-Support Workshop Series: Interoperability

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    In August of 1998 the Collaborative Agent Design Research Center (CADRC) of the California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo (Cal Poly), approached Dr. Phillip Abraham of the Office of Naval Research (ONR) with the proposal for an annual workshop focusing on emerging concepts in decision-support systems for military applications. The proposal was considered timely by the ONR Logistics Program Office for at least two reasons. First, rapid advances in information systems technology over the past decade had produced distributed collaborative computer-assistance capabilities with profound potential for providing meaningful support to military decision makers. Indeed, some systems based on these new capabilities such as the Integrated Marine Multi-Agent Command and Control System (IMMACCS) and the Integrated Computerized Deployment System (ICODES) had already reached the field-testing and final product stages, respectively. Second, over the past two decades the US Navy and Marine Corps had been increasingly challenged by missions demanding the rapid deployment of forces into hostile or devastate dterritories with minimum or non-existent indigenous support capabilities. Under these conditions Marine Corps forces had to rely mostly, if not entirely, on sea-based support and sustainment operations. Particularly today, operational strategies such as Operational Maneuver From The Sea (OMFTS) and Sea To Objective Maneuver (STOM) are very much in need of intelligent, near real-time and adaptive decision-support tools to assist military commanders and their staff under conditions of rapid change and overwhelming data loads. In the light of these developments the Logistics Program Office of ONR considered it timely to provide an annual forum for the interchange of ideas, needs and concepts that would address the decision-support requirements and opportunities in combined Navy and Marine Corps sea-based warfare and humanitarian relief operations. The first ONR Workshop was held April 20-22, 1999 at the Embassy Suites Hotel in San Luis Obispo, California. It focused on advances in technology with particular emphasis on an emerging family of powerful computer-based tools, and concluded that the most able members of this family of tools appear to be computer-based agents that are capable of communicating within a virtual environment of the real world. From 2001 onward the venue of the Workshop moved from the West Coast to Washington, and in 2003 the sponsorship was taken over by ONR’s Littoral Combat/Power Projection (FNC) Program Office (Program Manager: Mr. Barry Blumenthal). Themes and keynote speakers of past Workshops have included: 1999: ‘Collaborative Decision Making Tools’ Vadm Jerry Tuttle (USN Ret.); LtGen Paul Van Riper (USMC Ret.);Radm Leland Kollmorgen (USN Ret.); and, Dr. Gary Klein (KleinAssociates) 2000: ‘The Human-Computer Partnership in Decision-Support’ Dr. Ronald DeMarco (Associate Technical Director, ONR); Radm CharlesMunns; Col Robert Schmidle; and, Col Ray Cole (USMC Ret.) 2001: ‘Continuing the Revolution in Military Affairs’ Mr. Andrew Marshall (Director, Office of Net Assessment, OSD); and,Radm Jay M. Cohen (Chief of Naval Research, ONR) 2002: ‘Transformation ... ’ Vadm Jerry Tuttle (USN Ret.); and, Steve Cooper (CIO, Office ofHomeland Security) 2003: ‘Developing the New Infostructure’ Richard P. Lee (Assistant Deputy Under Secretary, OSD); and, MichaelO’Neil (Boeing) 2004: ‘Interoperability’ MajGen Bradley M. Lott (USMC), Deputy Commanding General, Marine Corps Combat Development Command; Donald Diggs, Director, C2 Policy, OASD (NII

    Innovations for Requirements Analysis, From Stakeholders' Needs to Formal Designs

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    14th MontereyWorkshop 2007 Monterey, CA, USA, September 10-13, 2007 Revised Selected PapersWe are pleased to present the proceedings of the 14thMontereyWorkshop, which took place September 10–13, 2007 in Monterey, CA, USA. In this preface, we give the reader an overview of what took place at the workshop and introduce the contributions in this Lecture Notes in Computer Science volume. A complete introduction to the theme of the workshop, as well as to the history of the Monterey Workshop series, can be found in Luqi and Kordon’s “Advances in Requirements Engineering: Bridging the Gap between Stakeholders’ Needs and Formal Designs” in this volume. This paper also contains the case study that many participants used as a problem to frame their analyses, and a summary of the workshop’s results

    Proceedings of the 12th European Workshop on Natural Language Generation (ENLG 2009)

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    Front-Line Physicians' Satisfaction with Information Systems in Hospitals

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    Day-to-day operations management in hospital units is difficult due to continuously varying situations, several actors involved and a vast number of information systems in use. The aim of this study was to describe front-line physicians' satisfaction with existing information systems needed to support the day-to-day operations management in hospitals. A cross-sectional survey was used and data chosen with stratified random sampling were collected in nine hospitals. Data were analyzed with descriptive and inferential statistical methods. The response rate was 65 % (n = 111). The physicians reported that information systems support their decision making to some extent, but they do not improve access to information nor are they tailored for physicians. The respondents also reported that they need to use several information systems to support decision making and that they would prefer one information system to access important information. Improved information access would better support physicians' decision making and has the potential to improve the quality of decisions and speed up the decision making process.Peer reviewe

    La terminología de la gastronomía puertorriqueña y su traducción al inglés

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    [ES] La cocina se presenta como un espacio en el que los alimentos se transforman en cultura. La receta, particularmente, aquella que se enmarca en el contexto de un libro vinculado a una cocina nacional, se configura como un acto de comunicación especializada en el que se integran el conocimiento técnico y la definición de la identidad. Estudiamos el entramado que subyace a la terminología utilizada en cinco libros de recetas de Puerto Rico, en su versión original y en su traducción al inglés. Los textos de los que extraemos los términos objeto de análisis se publicaron en momentos clave de la historia puertorriqueña: la década de los cincuenta del siglo XX, marcada por los cambios políticos en la isla con respecto a su relación con Estados Unidos, y la primera década del siglo XXI, momento en que el movimiento “foodie” se encuentra en auge. A fin de representar los términos en una base de datos terminológica que dé cuenta de las categorías y relaciones conceptuales del dominio, combinamos el estudio de corpus paralelos con fuentes de referencia, estudios semánticos y ontologías que describen el dominio culinario desde diferentes perspectivas. El estudio se inserta en los Estudios de Traducción y en la Terminología. [EN] In the kitchen, food transforms into culture. Recipes, particularly those framed in the context of recipe books linked to a national cuisine, stand as an act of specialized communication that combines technical knowledge with the definition of identity. We describe the framework that underlies the terminology used in a sample of recipes from five iconic Puerto Rican cookbooks, both in their original version in Spanish and in their English translation. The texts included in the corpus were published during key periods in Puerto Rican history, the fifties of the 20th century, an era marked by political changes on the island dealing with its relationship to the United States, and the first decade of the 21st century, a decade characterized by a “foodie boom”. In order to create a terminological database that gives an adequate account of the categories and conceptual relations of this domain, we combine the analysis of parallel corpora with lexicographic resources, semantic studies, and ontologies that describe the culinary domain from different points of view. The theoretical framework includes literature from both Translation Studies and Terminology
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