A
A+
A++
Events
2007
-
Dr. Douglas participated in the ICLEPS research meeting at the University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
-
Dr. Douglas presented a paper on measuring student participation in online classes at CELDA 2007 in Algarve, Portugal.
-
Dr. Douglas presented a paper on a web-based framework to support knowledge sharing in organizations at ColleCTer Iberoamérica 2007 in Córdobe, Argentina.
-
Dr. Douglas presented papers at the 8th International Conference on Information Technology Based Higher Education and Training (ITHET) in Kumamoto, Japan and the HCI International Conference in Beijing, China. He also visited Dalian Maritime University in China to present KCRG work.
-
Dr. Douglas participated in the ICLEPS research meeting in Tallahassee.
2006
-
Dr Douglas attended the Advanced Distributed Learning Initiative’s Performance Fest in Clearwater. He took part in discussions about the Department of Defense’s S1000D-SCORM Testbed. KCRG is a partner in this project. Its role is to integrate the lessons learned from the Net-PI project and in collaboration with SkillsNet demonstrate how performance and skills analysis knowledge can be linked to solution objects.
-
On March 11 and 12, Dr. Ian Douglas, Jasmeet Sachdeva, Preetha Anamalai, and Niranjan Potnis attended the 44th ACM Southeast Conference.
-
Dr. Douglas presented the Net-PI prototypes and their implications for reuse at the Advanced Distributed Learning Initiative’s International PlugFest.
2005
-
Ian Douglas and Judd Butler attended the Coast Guard’s annual Human Performance Technology
Workshop September 7-9, 2005 in Williamsburg, Virginia and presented a workshop entitled
Performance-Centered Knowledge Management.
-
This PowerPoint presentation is a summary of the AOOPA project and the implications and
applications of that work.
-
On May 2-5, 2005, Judd Butler attended the Coast Guard Innovation Expo in Santa Clara, CA
May 2-6, 2005. The conference focused on emerging innovations from the Coast
Guard, industry, and other government agencies that will enhance the Coast
Guard's ability to continue to excel in meeting its mission requirements.
-
Krystyna Orizondo and Shannon Loewy, two of KCRG's student assistants, presented
their Honors theses at the Learning Systems Institute's Human Factors Lab.
- On April 12-15, 2005, Dr. Joe Sasson attended the 43rd International Performance Improvement Conference and presented a talk entitled: Net-Centric Performance Improvement: A new way to promote collaboration and information reuse in performance analysis, solution implementation, and performance evaluation.
-
Two students of the KCRG Team presented their Master theses at the 43rd ACM Southeast Conference: Pure Object-based Domain Model for Enterprise Systems by Hang Wu and Ontology-Supported Sharing by Hang Wu, and Reuse of Knowledge in Diverse Environments by Stanislav Ustymenko.
2004
-
Members of the KCRG team attended the 2004 I/ITSEC Conference in Orlando. This annual
conference promotes cooperation among the Armed Services, industry, academia, and
various government agencies in pursuit of improved training and education programs
and identification of common training issues. Team members presented a paper and hosted an
exhibit booth to demonstrate the potential of Net-Centric Performance Improvement.
-
The KCRG team has become very interested in the relevance of ontologies for its analysis
prototypes. It's obvious that ontologies would be an improvement over traditional keyword
searches for locating analysis objects and solution objects. This work is just beginning,
but it has great potential to enhance our existing work.
- Tim Tate, the Director of the Department of Defense Job Performance Technology Center (JPT), visited LSI in May 2004. He briefed a number of Florida State faculty and students on the work of JPT: testing of technological solutions, showcasing innovative tools, and collaborating with government and industry partners.
Pictures
-
KCRG is a unique workplace. Faculty and students from eleven countries learn and create together.
Some of FSU's brightest graduate students, representing seven different academic departments,
are selected to collaborate on significant projects and contribute to team products.