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List of Papers for 2007:
(in reverse chronological order)

ESD-WP-2007-28 Stopping Pandemic Flu: Government and Community Interventions in a Multi-Community Model

by Karima R. Nigmatulina, MIT Operations Research Center, and
Richard C. Larson, MIT Engineering Systems and Civil and Environmental Engineering, Engineering Systems Division

Focusing on mitigation strategies for global pandemic influenza, we use elementary mathematical models to evaluate the implementation and timing of intervention strategies such as travel restrictions, vaccination, social distancing and improved hygiene. A spreadsheet model of infection spread between several linked heterogeneous communities is based on analytical calculations and Monte Carlo simulations. Since human behavior will likely change during the course of a pandemic, thereby altering the dynamics of the disease, we incorporate a feedback parameter into our model to reflect altered behavior. Our results indicate that while a flu pandemic could be devastating; there are coping methods that when implemented quickly and correctly can significantly mitigate the severity of a global outbreak.

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ESD-WP-2007-26 Measuring Systems Engineering Success:
Insights from Baseball

by Craig Blackburn, MIT Lean Advancement Initiative and
Ricardo Valerdi, MIT Lean Advancement Initiative

Optimizing the efficiency of socio-technical systems and determining accurate measurements of performance is a critical issue in many systems engineering enterprises. In our analysis we explore some of the recurring themes of Michael Lewis’s study of baseball, depicted in the best selling book Moneyball, and make the connection to corresponding Systems Engineering principles of interest. The paper will focus on the Systems Engineering roadmap inspired by Lewis’ study for developing and refining a meaningful set of metrics for organizational transformation. The following steps are highlighted to convey this transformation with the assistance of metrics: identify and understand value in the enterprise and your organization; consider an integrated system focus in your organization; use cost analysis methods to implement a strategy for executing the transformation; and manage risk throughout operations and improve the process continuously.

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ESD-WP-2007-25 Ranking the Risks from Multiple Hazards in a Small Community

by Hua Li, MIT Engineering Systems Division;
George E. Apostolakis*, MIT Engineering Systems Division and
Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering;
Joseph Gifun, MIT Department of Facilities;
William VanSchalkwyk, MIT Office of the Executive Vice President & Treasurer;
Susan Leite, MIT Office of Environment, Health & Safety; and
David Barber, MIT Campus Police

Natural hazards, human-induced accidents, and malicious acts have caused great losses and disruptions to society. After September 11, 2001, critical infrastructure protection has become a national focus in the United States and is likely to remain one for the foreseeable future. Damage to our infrastructures and assets could be mitigated through pre-disaster planning and actions. We have developed a systematic methodology to assess and rank the risks from these multiple hazards in a community of 20,000 people. It is an interdisciplinary study that includes probabilistic risk assessment, decision analysis, and expert judgment. Scenarios are constructed to show how the initiating events evolve into undesirable consequences. A value tree, based on multi-attribute utility theory, is used to capture the decision maker’s preferences about the impacts on the infrastructures and other assets. The risks from random failures are ranked according to their Expected Performance Index, which is the product of frequency, probability, and consequence of a scenario. Risks from malicious acts are ranked according to their Performance Index as the frequency of attack is not available. A deliberative process is used to capture the factors that could not be addressed in the analysis and to scrutinize the results. This methodology provides a framework for the development of a risk-informed decision strategy. Although this study uses the Massachusetts Institute of Technology campus as a test-bed, it is a general methodology that could be used by other similar communities and municipalities.

*Corresponding author

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ESD-WP-2007-24 Decision Support and Systems Interoperability in Global Business Management

by Shoumen Palit Austin Datta, Engineering Systems Division, MIT and MIT Forum for Supply Chain Innovation;
JrJung Lyu and Ping-Shun Chen, Department of Industrial and Information Management, National Cheng Kung University

Globalization of business and volatility of financial markets has catapulted ‘cycle-time’ as a key indicator of operational efficiency in business processes. Systems automation holds the promise to augment the ability of business and healthcare networks to rapidly adapt to changes or respond, with minimal human intervention, under ideal conditions. Currently, system of systems (SOS) or organization of networks contribute minimally in making decisions because collaboration remains elusive due the challenges of complexity. Convergence and maturity of research offers the potential for a paradigm shift in interoperability. This paper explores some of these trends and related technologies. Irrespective of the characteristics of information systems, the development of various industry-contributed ontologies for knowledge and decision layers, may spur self-organizing SOS to increase the ability to sense and respond. Profitability from pervasive use of ontological frameworks and agent-based modeling may depend on the ability to use them through better enterprise and extraprise exchange.

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ESD-WP-2007-23 Congestion Pricing: A Parking Queue Model

by Richard C. Larson, Center for Engineering Systems Fundamentals, MIT, and Katsunobu Sasanuma, MIT

Congestion pricing imposes a usage fee on a public resource during times of high demand. Road pricing involves cordoning off a section of the city and imposing a fee on vehicles that enter it. Parking pricing increases the costs of on-street and perhaps off-street parking. Following an historical review, we develop a new queueing model of the parking pricing problem, recognizing that many urban drivers are simply looking for available on-street parking. Often, reducing the number of such “cruising drivers” would reduce urban road congestion dramatically, perhaps as effectively as cordoning off the center city.

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ESD-WP-2007-22 Pandemic Flu: Yes, We Can Do Something About It!

by Richard C. Larson, Center for Engineering Systems Fundamentals, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

The emergence of influenza with virulence comparable to the famous 1918-1919 “Spanish Flu” has the potential to kill hundreds of millions of people worldwide. Should we find ourselves being forced to ‘live with the flu,’ it is imperative that we recognize that there are things that we can do – many simple – that may decrease the chance of our loved ones, our co-workers and ourselves becoming infected with the flu. The key is to decrease the number of new infections created by each newly infected person. And this relates to mathematical modeling of the disease, a very simple example of which is shown here.

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ESD-WP-2007-21 A Novel Engineering Systems Approach for Bioengineering Education: the MIT-Portugal Collaboration

by Junjay Tan, Massachusetts Institute of Technology;
Dava J. Newman , Massachusetts Institute of Technology;
Joaquim M.S. Cabral, Institute for Biotechnology and Bioengineering;
Manuel Mota, Institute for Biotechnology and Bioengineering; and
Manuel Nunes da Ponte, 5Instituto de Tecnologia Química e Biológica

This paper discusses the importance of an engineering systems approach to international bioengineering education and how a new educational research program, the MIT-Portugal Program Bioengineering Systems focus area, aims to develop future global bioengineering leaders. The program, comprising both post-graduate advanced studies and doctoral programs, commences in September 2007. Several other international-collaborative educational and research programs—such as the Cambridge-MIT Institute, the Singapore MIT Alliance, and the Socrates/Erasmus “Erasmus Programme”—offer lessons learned in international collaboration. The MPP Bioengineering Systems program differs from these programs in several respects. The unique collaboration in MPP offers an engineering systems approach, a joint degree offered by three Portuguese universities, and collaborative teaching and research efforts between MIT and Portuguese faculty and students.

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ESD-WP-2007-20 Protecting the Force: Reducing Combat Vehicle Accidents via Improved Organizational Processes

by Nathan A. Minami, MIT and Stuart Madnick, MIT

Despite extraordinary efforts by leaders at all levels throughout the U.S. Army, dozens of soldiers are killed each year as a result of both combat and motor vehicle accidents. The objective of this study is to look beyond the events and symptoms of accidents which normally indicate human error, and instead study the upper-level organizational processes and problems that may constitute the actual root causes of accidents. Critical to this process is identifying critical variables, establishing causality between variables, and quantifying variables that lead to both resilience against accidents and propensities for accidents. After reviewing the available literature we report on our development of a System Dynamics model, which is an analytical model of the system that allows for extensive simulation. The results of these simulations suggest that high-level decisions that balance mission rate and operations tempo with troop availability, careful management of the work-rest cycle for deployed troops, and improvement of the processes for evaluating the lessons learned from accidents, will lead to a reduction in Army combat and motor vehicle accidents.

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ESD-WP-2007-19 Teaching Systems Thinking to Engineering Undergraduates Using the CLIOS Process
To be presented at the International Conference on Engineering Education, August 2007

by Joseph Sussman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

The introductory science courses taken by engineering undergraduates are usually intensely reductionist in form, silos in physics, chemistry, biology, and so forth. Then, their engineering subjects in the early undergraduate years often tend to be reductionist as well, focusing on a fairly narrow view of the engineering issues practitioners face. Even the design classes often do not account for the socio-technical context for much of the engineering design space that involves a complex interaction between various technologies and the multiple stakeholder views.

This paper describes a subject called Engineering System Design, which attempts to create a broader perspective for third-year students in engineering—and indeed in related disciplines in management and planning. It is a combination of lectures on methods related to systems thinking and a semester-long class-wide complex socio-technical system design utilizing these methods and concepts. In recent years, the case has focused on the transportation of spent nuclear fuel to Yucca Mountain, Nevada and related issues in global climate change.

Experiences in teaching this class will be discussed and some techniques adopted to enable learning are presented.

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ESD-WP-2007-18 Holistic Trinity of Services Sciences:
Management, Social, & Engineering Sciences

by Richard C. Larson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Services industries comprise about 75% of the economy of developed nations. To design and operate services systems for today and tomorrow, we need to educate a new type of engineer who focuses not on manufacturing but on services. Such an engineer must be able to integrate 3 sciences - management, social and engineering – into her analysis of services systems. Within the context of a new research center at MIT – CESF (Center for Engineering Systems Fundamentals) – we show how newly emerging services systems require such a 3-way holistic analysis. We deliberately select some non-standard services, as many business services such as supply chains have been studied extensively.

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ESD-WP-2007-17 Unified Theory of Relativistic Identification of
Information in a Systems Age: Proposed Convergence of Unique Identification with Syntax and Semantics through Internet Protocol version 6

by Shoumen Palit Austin Datta, Research Scientist, Engineering Systems Division, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Research Director & Co-Founder, MIT Forum for Supply Chain Innovation, School of Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Unique identification of objects are helpful to the decision making process in many domains. Decisions, however, are often based on information that takes into account multiple factors. Physical objects and their unique identification may be one of many factors. In real-world scenarios, increasingly decisions are based on collective information gathered from multiple sources (or systems) and then combined to a higher level domain that may trigger a decision or action. Currently, we do not have a globally unique mechanism to identify information derived from data originating from objects and processes. Unique identification of information, hence, is an open question. In addition, information, to be of value, must be related to the context of the process. In general, contextual information is of greater relevance in the decision making process or in decision support systems. In this working paper, I shall refer to such information as decisionable information. The suggestion here is to utilize the vast potential of internet protocol version six (IPv6) to uniquely identify not only objects and processes but also relationships (semantics) and interfaces (sensors). Convergence of identification of diverse entities using the globally agreed structure of IPv6 offers the potential to identify 3.4x1038 instances based on the fact that the 128-bit IPv6 structure can support 3.4x1038 unique addresses. It is not necessary that all instances must be connected to the internet or routed or transmitted simply because an IP addressing scheme is suggested. This is a means for identification that will be globally unique and offers the potential to be connected or routed via the internet. In this working paper, scenarios offer [1] new revenue potential from data routing (P2P traffic track and trace) for telecommunication industries, [2] potential for use in healthcare and biomedical community, [3] scope of use in the semantic web structure by transitioning URIs used in RDF, [4] applications involving thousands of mobile ad hoc sensors (MANET) that demand dynamic adaptive auto-reconfiguration. This paper presents a confluence of ideas.

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ESD-WP-2007-16 The Use of Information Systems in Collocated and Distributed Teams: A Test of the 24-Hour Knowledge Factory

by Satwik Seshasai, Doctoral Candidate, Engineering Systems, MIT;
Alan J. Malter, Assistant Professor, Department of Marketing
Eller College of Management, University of Arizona; and
Amar Gupta, Thomas R. Brown Professor of Management and Technology, Eller College of Management, University of Arizona

Recent academic and policy studies focus on offshoring as a cost-of-labor driven activity that has a direct impact on employment opportunities in the countries involved. This paper broadens this perspective by introducing and evaluating the 24-hour knowledge factory as a model of information systems offshoring that leverages other strategic factors beyond cost savings. A true 24-hour knowledge factory ensures that progress is being made on information systems related tasks at all times of day by utilizing talented information systems professionals around the globe. Many organizations currently implement other variants of offshoring that appear similar but are fundamentally distinct. The typical model is a service provider framework in which an offshore site provides service to the central site, often with two centers and a distinction between a primary center and secondary center. Entire tasks are often outsourced to the lower-cost overseas site and sent back when completed. In contrast, the 24-hour knowledge factory involves continuous and collaborative round-the-clock knowledge production achieved by sequentially and progressively distributing the knowledge creation task around the globe, completing one cycle every 24 hours. Thus, the 24-hour knowledge factory creates a virtual distributed team, in contrast to a team that is collocated in one site, either onshore or offshore. By organizing knowledge tasks in this way, the 24-hour knowledge factory has the potential to work faster, to provide cheaper solutions, and to achieve better overall performance. Previous studies have examined individual teams over time and explored various benefits of distributing work to distant teams, but have not directly compared the effect of collocation versus geographic distribution on the use of information systems and the overall performance over time of two real-world teams working on a similar task in controlled conditions. This paper highlights the concept of the 24-hour knowledge factory and tests the model in a controlled field experiment that directly compares the use of information systems and subsequent performance in collocated and globally distributed software development teams. The central finding is that while collocation versus geographic distribution changes the way teams use information systems and interact at key points during a project, each type of team has the potential to use information systems to leverage its inherent advantages, to overcome disadvantages, and ultimately, to perform equally well. In other words, one organizational structure is not inherently superior nor must structure pre-determine performance. Geographic distance introduces new challenges but these can be overcome – and even leveraged for strategic advantage. In sum, our findings suggest that firms can apply the 24-hour knowledge factory model to transition from a service provider framework in which offshoring is a short-term and unilateral cost-saving tactic to a strategic partnership between centers in which offshoring becomes a core component of a global corporate strategy.

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ESD-WP-2007-15 Low-Cost Airports for Low-Cost Airlines: Flexible Design to Manage the Risks

by Richard de Neufville, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

The paradigm of airport planning and design is changing fundamentally. Low-cost airlines have become significant drivers of airport planning, along with aircraft size and other technical factors. They have different requirements than the “legacy” carriers. They focus on cost and on alternative ways to handle passengers. Now being sizeable participants in the air transport industry, they are influencing airport design. They are central to the proliferation of secondary airports and metropolitan multi-airport systems. They are catalyzing the development of cheaper airport terminals configured internally much differently than traditional designs. These factors lead to the creation of “low-cost airports” for low cost carriers around the “legacy main airports” built to serve the “legacy airlines”. Consistent with economic theory, the competition between the legacy and low cost airlines is extending to their major factors of production, that is, the airports. This competitive reality creates great uncertainty and poses substantial strategic issues for airport and airline managers and planners.

The paradigm shift introduces great risks into practice. The paper proposes a flexible design strategy to deal with such uncertainties. This is significantly different from traditional airport master planning. The core element is to build “real options” into the design, which allow the airport owners to match the development to the way the traffic demands unfold in the decades ahead. A review of developments in Portugal illustrates the current risks in airport development, and suggests how airport owners and investors could apply flexible design process to develop a strategy that would manage these uncertainties to maximize expected value.

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ESD-WP-2007-13 An Algorithm and Metric for Network Decomposition from Similarity Matrices: Application to Positional Analyses

by Mo-Han Hsieh, Engineering Systems Division, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Christopher L. Magee, Engineering Systems Division & Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

We present an algorithm for decomposing a social network into an optimal number of structurally equivalent classes. The k-means method is used to determine the best decomposition of the social network for various numbers of subgroups. The best number of subgroups into which to decompose a network is determined by minimizing the intra-cluster variance of similarity subject to the constraint that the improvement in going to more subgroups is better than a random network would achieve. We also describe a decomposability metric that assesses how closely the derived decomposition approaches an ideal network having only structurally equivalent classes.

Three well known network data sets were used to demonstrate the algorithm and decomposability metric. These demonstrations indicate the utility of the approach and suggest how it can be used in a complementary way to the Generalized Blockmodeling.

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ESD-WP-2007-12 Combating System-Level Quality Problems in Complex Product Development

by Daniel E. Whitney, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

As products become more complex and their development involves more technologies, people, and companies, it is no longer sufficient to ensure that each part, component, or subsystem is designed and made correctly. Problems that involve many distinct elements can still arise, even if each is designed according to the specifications. Practitioners speak of Murphy’s Law and “sneak paths,” while academics refer to “emergent properties” and “undocumented interactions.” The goal of this paper is to look at this problem from the outside, focusing on Ford and two non-competing companies whose products are also complex: United Technologies and Boeing. Interviews were conducted with senior management and lower level supervisors, focusing on both official processes and anecdotal reports on what works and what does not.

To complement the interviews, research on product development was reviewed to see what it says about development of complex systems. Analogous to the system-level problem in product development is the system accident problem. Example system accidents include capsizing ferry boats and nuclear power plant failures. System accidents have been the subject of intense research for several decades. Discussions with ESD faculty interested in system safety led me to consult this literature as well. The similarities with product development challenges are obvious: complex technical systems addressed by large groups of people with diverse skills and cultures. No one, to my knowledge, has sought to link product development research with system accident research. This study confirms my belief that such a linkage could prove very fruitful.

Complex products and systems are hard to design because a) they contain complex components, and b) because those components interact in complex and sometimes unpredictable ways. There is a limit to the ability of design and management processes to anticipate all of these emergent system behaviors. The ability of people to notice and discover these behaviors by themselves needs to be included in the way product development is managed. New attitudes and expectations are required, but new organizational structures may not be. (In fact, none of the known structures (functional, program, matrix, etc.) have proven totally satisfactory or durable.) Instead, the existing organizations need additional flexibility to accommodate some unscripted boundary crossing by people who know what to look for and are encouraged to do so. Such unscripted activities mirror the unanticipated emergent system behaviors and are so far the only proven response to them. This is the lesson from system accident and High Reliability Organization research. Yet managers of complex product development activities seem to have an irresistible urge to add more checklists, health charts, and procedures in an attempt to rein in unpredictable problems. The contrasting approaches described above could be called “top-down” and “bottom-up.” In various academic literatures, top-down is also called mechanistic, reductionist, and having the process perspective. Correspondingly, the bottom-up approach is also called organic, holistic, and taking the practice perspective. The message from this study is that neither of these approaches can be counted on to suffice alone, but that top-down has been given more play and confidence, while bottom-up has not been given enough, except in special circumstances.

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ESD-WP-2007-11 Aircraft System Design Graduate Curriculum: A Lifecycle Focus

by Earll M. Murman and Paul A. Lagacé, Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, and Engineering Systems Division, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Aircraft system design encompasses technical, social and lifecycle topics, and is suitable for graduate studies at the masters level and beyond. Several degree programs in MIT’s School of Engineering offer opportunities for students seeking subjects and degrees in this area. These programs are summarized, and one subject on Aircraft Systems Engineering is introduced as an illustration of content and pedagogy addressing lifecycle topics. Based upon several years of experience of participation in these programs and in offering curriculum, the authors put forward seven observations to stimulate further dialog and progress on this topic.

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ESD-WP-2007-10 A Classification of Uncertainty for
Early Product and System Design

by Olivier de Weck, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Claudia Eckert, University of Cambridge

Complex systems and products evolve over years to meet new requirements, while applying tried and tested technology. To maximise the reuse of components through the life span, companies need to plan for the changes that they can anticipate, and facilitate accommodation of such changes in the original architecture and design of the system. Methods such as design for flexibility or design for changeability promote incorporation of future uncertain outcomes into system and product design in one way or another. However, the degree to which future product changes can be planned depends on the uncertainties that the system, product or product family is subject to. A deeper understanding of these uncertainties is the focus of this paper. The paper first provides a brief literature survey, and discusses the sources and nature of uncertainty. This is followed by a classification of the types of uncertainties that are often encountered and that should be considered, as well as methods and techniques for modelling these uncertainties for incorporation in system design. The paper also provides examples of uncertainties for a variety of systems and products throughout and concludes with an uncertainty checklist for system architects and product designers.

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ESD-WP-2007-09 Managing Complexity with the Department of Defense Architecture Framework: Development of a Dynamic
System Architecture Model

by Matthew G. Richards, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Nirav B. Shah, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Daniel E. Hastings, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and
Donna H. Rhodes Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Architecture frameworks are tools for managing system complexity by structuring data in a common language and format. By characterizing the form, function, and rules governing systems, architecture frameworks serve as a communication tool to stakeholder communities with different views of the system and facilitate comparative evaluation across architectures. The goal of this research is to explore the applicability of architecture frameworks to the study of emergent properties of satellites. The U.S. Department of Defense Architecture Framework was selected to achieve this goal given its orientation towards technical systems in contrast to the majority of architecture frameworks focused on business enterprises. Although developed by military planners in the 1990’s to support the acquisition of interoperable information systems, the Department of Defense Architecture Framework can be used to connect operational concepts and capabilities to the technical architecture of any system. While the views of the Department of Defense Architecture Framework are well-defined, little guidance is provided on how the views are to be constructed. Vitech Corporation’s software program CORE,® a systems engineering modeling tool with the ability rapidly to produce architecture views from a common data repository, was employed to complete Department of Defense Architecture Frameworks for the Hubble Space Telescope.

Upon characterizing Hubble within this common structure, the value of the Department of Defense Architecture Framework for conducting dynamic quantitative analyses of system architectures was explored. A methodology is proposed and tested for evaluating human and robotic architectures for on-orbit servicing—the extension of the useful life of spacecraft through refueling, upgrading, repair, relocation, et al. In particular, a multi-year servicing campaign is modeled for Hubble including behavioral threads that characterize the Orbiting Observatory, servicing architecture, and science customers. Preliminary results indicate that, when coupled with an executable model, the Department of Defense Architecture Framework can be utilized for dynamic quantitative evaluation of space system architectures. The paper concludes with lessons learned from using the Department of Defense Architecture Framework and proposes improvements for the application of its static views to model-based systems engineering.

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ESD-WP-2007-08 Superfund: An Assessment of Superfund Site Remedy Selectioin and Implementation
Final Report – ESD.10 Introduction to Technology and Policy

by Lisa M. Jakobovits, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Valerie J. Karplus, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Robert E. Love, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
J. Decker Ringo, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Timothy A. Sutherland, MIT, Technology and Policy Program

Click here to download a three page Executive Summary (.pdf).

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ESD-WP-2007-07 Strategies for Water Reclamation: The Role of Policy and Technology in the Las Vegas Water Supply
Final Report – ESD.10 Introduction to Technology and Policy

by Anna N. Allen, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Christopher W. Evans, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Tarek Rached, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Hsin Min Wong, MIT, Technology and Policy Program

Click here to download a three page Executive Summary (.pdf).

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ESD-WP-2007-06 Policy Issues in Implementing Smart Cards in Urban Public Transit Systems
Final Report – ESD.10 Introduction to Technology and Policy

by Makoto Eguchi, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Susan Fredholm, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Shan Liu, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Paulina Ponce de León Baridó, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Jacqueline Ye, MIT

Click here to download a three page Executive Summary (.pdf).

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ESD-WP-2007-05 Barriers to the Success of 100%
Maritime Cargo Container Scanning
Final Report – ESD.10 Introduction to Technology and Policy

by R. Cirincione, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
A. Cosmas, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
C. Low, MIT
J. Peck, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
J. Wilds, MIT, Technology and Policy Program

Click here to download a three page Executive Summary (.pdf).

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ESD-WP-2007-04 Pathways to a Trusted Electronic Voting System
Final Report – ESD.10 Introduction to Technology and Policy

by Jeremiah Connolly, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Romain Lévy, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Johnathan Lindsey, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Judith Maro, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Juan Martin, MIT, Technology and Policy Program

Click here to download a four page Executive Summary (.pdf).

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ESD-WP-2007-03 Avian Influenza Pre-Pandemic Procurement:
Recommendations for the US Federal Government
Final Report – ESD.10 Introduction to Technology and Policy

by Sarah Bird, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Timothy Heidel, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Meghan McGuinness, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Katsunobu Sasanuma, MIT
Junjay Tan, MIT, Technology and Policy Program

Click here to download a five page Executive Summary (.pdf).

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ESD-WP-2007-02 U.S. response to an Oil Import Disruption
Role of the Federal Government in Light Duty Vehicle Transportation
Final Report – ESD.10 Introduction to Technology and Policy

by Kyle Frazier, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Romain Lacombe, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Dai Ohama, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Faaiza Rashid, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Monica Rush, MIT, Technology and Policy Program

Click here to download a one page Executive Summary (.pdf).

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ESD-WP-2007-01 Identifying the Dynamics of Technology Transition: ADS-B Adoption in the National Airspace System
Final Report – ESD.10 Introduction to Technology and Policy

by Norma Campos, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Robert Holcombe, MIT
Misha Leybovich, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Zoe Szajnfarber, MIT, Technology and Policy Program
Hidigunnur Thorsteinsson, MIT, Technology and Policy Program

Click here to download a three page Executive Summary (.pdf).

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