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EMEASEC 2018
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SERC Forum and Review
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Come join us for dinner and networking at Roosters to celebrate our success with the INCOSE Inaugural Western States Regional Conference! In addition, we will discuss officer elections and Utah Engineers Council (UEC) awards. Dinner will be complimentary for members with appetizers, main course, and soft drinks. Alcoholic beverages will be available for purchase. Nonmembers are welcome and can pay their own way. Please RSVP to confirm your attendance.
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Bob Scheurer, Boeing: "Mission Engineering, Digital Engineering, MBSE, and the Like: The One Underlying Essential Attribute"
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http://www.incose.org/ChaptersGroups/Chapters/ChapterSites/north-texas/chapter-events
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Proliferation of electronic medical records caused a revolution in the previously slow-moving healthcare IT space. Possession of large volumes of patient data and scientific knowledge in medicine leads to new opportunities in analytics - from patient safety to predictive modeling to intelligent management of payment models. Walls between multiple data types in healthcare - life sciences, provider care, medical device engineering - have come down to pave the way for new border-crossing technologies taking advantage of the wealth of data. However, data overload and abundance of computer modeling algorithms pose their challenges. This presentation introduces the audience to this new world of opportunities and challenges for AI in medicine.
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A Systems Engineering Approach to Positive Train Control - Tom Colacioppo
The Future of Healthcare Through a Systems Approach - Dr. Alan Ravitz
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INCOSE UK Annual Systems Engineering Conference 2018
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Systems engineering is a practice and a profession in transition. In 2014, INCOSE published Systems Engineering Vision 2025, a vision of how the world is changing and where we believed systems engineering must be in 2025 to deliver the necessary results. But today’s world moves fast. The needs and nature of the systems we engineer are changing at an unprecedented rate. So too are the tools we leverage and the context within which we operate. As we work to transform Vision 2025 into reality, the challenge itself continues to evolve.
Four years later, where have we made progress and where are we falling short? More importantly, as we look beyond Vision 2025, what do we see – in the world around us, in the systems we must engineer, in our practice and profession? What must we do to engineer our future?
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This briefing (the first of four parts) introduces systems engineers to some of the important and relevant aspects of software engineering. Read More...
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