Technologies for Improving Safety Data

Technologies for Improving Safety Data
Author: Jennifer Harper Ogle
Publisher: Transportation Research Board
Total Pages: 111
Release: 2007
Genre: Automatic data collection systems
ISBN: 0309097851

"Technologies for Improving Safety Data explores new technologies for the acquisition, processing, and overall management of crash, roadway inventory, and traffic operations data. The report examines the current state-of-the-practice and state-of-the-art use of technologies for efficient and effective collection and maintenance of data for highway safety analysis." -- publisher's website.

Information Technology and Computational Physics

Information Technology and Computational Physics
Author: Piotr Kulczycki
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 251
Release: 2017-05-31
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 3319442600

A broad spectrum of modern Information Technology (IT) tools, techniques, main developments and still open challenges is presented. Emphasis is on new research directions in various fields of science and technology that are related to data analysis, data mining, knowledge discovery, information retrieval, clustering and classification, decision making and decision support, control, computational mathematics and physics, to name a few. Applications in many relevant fields are presented, notably in telecommunication, social networks, recommender systems, fault detection, robotics, image analysis and recognition, electronics, etc. The methods used by the authors range from high level formal mathematical tools and techniques, through algorithmic and computational tools, to modern metaheuristics.

Strategies for Medical Technology Assessment

Strategies for Medical Technology Assessment
Author:
Publisher: DIANE Publishing
Total Pages: 227
Release: 1982
Genre: Health
ISBN: 1428924302

This report analyses the present system of identifying and testing medical technologies and of synthesizing and disseminating assess- ment information. The report focuses on the flow of information that is central to an efficient assessment system. Methods for te- sting technologies and for synthesizing information are explored, and a compendium of data and bibliographic sources are included. The re- port also describes the innovation process for medical technologies, the effects that federal policies have on that process, and the needs those policies generate for technology assessment information. It critiques the current system of assessment and provides policy options, both legislative and oversight, for congress to improve the system.