|
For Immediate Release
November 1, 1996
NEW GEORGIA TECH CENTER LOOKS TO THE FUTURE OF TEST AND
EVALUATION RESEARCH
As research budgets shrink across the country, the Georgia Institute
of Technology is making a new commitment to finding less expensive, more
efficient ways to test new technologies for both commercial and defense
organizations.
Building on more than 30 years of experience, the university has established
the Test and Evaluation Research
and Education Center (TEREC), as well as the country's only test and
evaluation graduate program.
"Georgia Tech and the Georgia
Tech Research Institute (GTRI) have been working in this area for
a long time," said Dr. Sam Blankenship, director of the new center. "We
have a number of things we've been doing over the years that actually
established our reputation. It makes sense for a center to be here and
for it to be a national resource."
The idea for the new center arose in 1991 from discussions between GTRI
researchers and the chief scientist of the Air Force Operational Testing and Evaluation
Center (AFOTEC) in New Mexico.
Initial operations began in August 1995, with startup funding from AFOTEC
and subsequent support from test and evaluation organizations in the U.S.
Department of Defense and the private sector. TEREC is controlled by a
board of advisers, made up of sponsor representatives, who review operations
each year to ensure that the needs of the test and evaluation community
are being met.
The center encompasses work done by faculty associates across Georgia
Tech's 330-acre campus, as well as at other universities around the United
States. A current project involves joint work with New Mexico State University.
Part of TEREC's mission is to focus on broad topics that benefit the
industry as a whole. Researchers look for new ways to test everything
from cars and computer software to aircraft, spacecraft and weapons systems.
"The center is intended to provide an international focal point for
T&E research and education, and a catalyst for the invention of the future
of our discipline," said Blankenship, who also is director of special
projects for GTRI s Advanced Programs Office and a principal research
scientist for the Electronics Systems Laboratory.
For a current commercial project on new Internet product development,
Georgia Tech scientists are providing research, analysis and technical
services in the areas of methodology, planning, human factors analysis
and security.
TEREC also is leading a study for the U.S. Office of the Secretary of
Defense on first principles or physics-based models of munitions effectiveness,
with an eye toward using these models to predict test results. The project
involves collaboration with several commercial and defense organizations,
national laboratories and other universities.
Future projects may include looking for ways to quantify the economic
value of test and evaluation in light of limited resources, an emerging
topic of importance. U.S. space and defense industry leaders, in particular,
want to close redundant test facilities, but need ways to determine which
approach is most cost-effective.
Other areas of interest include microelectronic mechanical systems (MEMs)
that can gather data without interfering with operations; intelligent
systems like fuzzy logic, neural networks and artificial intelligence;
and fidelity and realism in computer modeling and simulation.
Georgia Tech's graduate program in test and evaluation, which is separate
from TEREC, began in 1993. Graduates earn a certificate either in conjunction
with an undesignated master of science degree in systems analysis from
the School
of Industrial and Systems Engineering, or a master of science from
the School
of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
Classes are taught on campus or by video and may one day be available
on the Internet. Participants include those looking to earn a master's
degree and the certificate, and those who already have a master's and
want the certificate to show "they have gone beyond the call of duty,"
said Dr.
Jerry Banks, a professor in the School of Industrial & Systems Engineering.
Banks oversees the graduate program with Dr.
George Vachtsevanos, a professor in the School of Electrical and Computer
Engineering.
Video classes are popular with students from several walks of life,
including those who don't have time to pursue a degree full-time and those
serving in the military.
"Typically, we have an officer posted to a remote location, with lots
of time after hours, who pursues this option to its completion," Banks
said.
Future goals for TEREC include setting up a visiting professorship and
producing the first scholarly journal in test and evaluation research.
"Test and evaluation as it's practiced now as part of systems engineering
has only been around for three or four decades," Blankenship said. "A
lot of the people who founded what we do are still alive and working,
but they won't be for long. What we would like to do with this visiting
professor slot is have a place where people can come on sabbatical or
early retirement and write a book, if they've been wanting to do that,
or pursue some project that would help capture their expertise."
More information on TEREC is available on the World Wide Web at: http://www.terec.gatech.edu/terec/.
RESEARCH NEWS AND PUBLICATIONS OFFICE
Georgia Institute of Technology
75 Fifth Street, N.W., Suite 100
Atlanta, Georgia 30308
MEDIA RELATIONS CONTACTS:
John Toon (404-894-6986);
Internet: john.toon@edi.gatech.edu;
FAX: (404-894-4545)
TECHNICAL:
Dr. Sam Blankenship (404-894-7311);
Internet: sam.blankenship@gtri.gatech.edu
WRITER: Amanda Crowell
|