2008 Seminars
Sunday, Apr. 20th, 2008 2:00 pm Building 22, Room 119
Title: An Approach for Experience Reuse within the Context of Decision Making
Abstract: 
Effective knowledge management (KM) is critical for organizations in the 
public and private sectors.  Projects success depends heavily on the experience 
of organizational individuals.  Much of such experience is manifested in a form 
of lessons learned (LL) by individuals over time.  The problem is that LL 
management systems (LLMSs) poorly serve their intended goal of promoting 
knowledge sharing and reuse.  Two reasons are paramount for this failure.  
First, most lessons are described as a set of free-text fields buried in LL 
databases.  Second, LLMSs are typically not integrated into the organization’s 
projects development processes.  This seminar presents an experience reuse 
approach for effective experience dissemination within the context of decision 
making.
 
Tuesday, Apr. 22nd, 2008 2:30 pm Building 22, Room 132
Title: Independent System Assurance™: A Methodology and Environment
Abstract: 
The Independent System Assurance™ (ISA) is a proprietary of SONEX, 
Enterprises, Inc.   ISA incorporates Quality Assurance and Configuration 
Management into the broader Independent Verification and Validation function.  
The innovative ISA™ concept, consistent with current industrial standards, 
introduces a repertoire of effective AI-based tools oriented on enhancing the 
success potential of major programs.  These tools assure Program Manager near 
real-time oversight and assessment of all technical, life cycle and program 
management activities.  This seminar presents the ISA AI-based tools along with 
related open research problems. 
 
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2007 Seminars
Tuesday, Mar. 13th, 2007 2:30 pm Building 22, Room 132
Title: Handling Imprecision and Uncertainty in Software Quality Control
Abstract: 
In today's software systems development, non-functional requirements (e.g., 
dependability, maintainability) are becoming more and more important. 
Simultaneously, the increasing pressure to develop software in less time and at 
lower costs may suggest compromising such quality features. These constraints 
necessitate that tools for effective and efficient quality control are available 
to software quality engineers. Many approaches have been suggested to build such 
tools. However, these approaches fail to effectively make use of variety of 
accessible quality-related information.  This is due to the fact that such 
information is characterized as being imprecise and uncertain. This seminar 
presents a framework that utilizes Type-2 fuzzy logic to allow effective 
utilization of imprecise and uncertain information during the course of quality 
control.
 
Saturday, Mar. 17th, 2007 2:00 pm Building 22, Room 119
Title: Automatic Software Test Data Generation: An Evolutionary Approach
Abstract: 
The software industry has learned over time that software testing costs a 
considerable amount of a software project budget.  Hence, software quality 
managers have been looking for solutions to reduce testing costs and time. As 
for black-box testing, present attempts for automating acceptance test scenarios 
generation rely on the requirements specification and use cases. However, the 
problem is that these attempts assume that exhaustive requirements specification 
is feasible, which is not the case. Accordingly, specification-based acceptance 
test scenarios generation would not be effective enough. On the other hand, 
present approaches for automatic generation of test cases for white-box testing 
have shown to be ineffectual. This seminar presents attempts for using Genetic 
Algorithms for automatic test data generation for acceptance testing as a form 
of white-box testing and for black-box testing considering path-coverage as the 
adequacy criterion.