, and Associate Head for Graduate Studies and Research, at Purdue University School of Aviation and Transportation Technology in West Lafayette, Indiana. She earned her BS, MS, and PhD in Industrial Engineering from The University of Texas at Arlington. She has aerospace industry and university academic experience. Her research focuses on data driven analysis and process improvement in sustainability, process automation, and general aviation. © American Society for Engineering Education, 2022 Powered by www.slayte.com Preliminary Identification and Analysis of Encoding Errors in GA Pilot Weather Reports (PIREPs)ABSTRACTPilot Weather
Professor of the faculty) in 1996. In 2000, he joined the faculty of the Department of Electrical and Computer En- gineering at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Mass., where he became a Full Professor and director of the Center for Electromagnetic Modeling and Design in 2008. His current research interests include WBANs, applied antenna design, and computational electromagnetics. Page 25.147.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2012 An AM Radio Project in a Lower-level ECE ClassAbstractThe complex impedance concept has traditionally been a challenge for an
Commonwealth University Qatar in Doha, Qatar. She has published two recent articles: "Two Separate Cultures and Freedoms," published in the University of Richmond International Education Newsletter in Spring 2005 and "Young Speaks on Cities," written for the University of Richmond Magazine in 2001. Her most recent collection of poems, a booklet designed and illustrated by Aida Hashim and entitled Grains of Sand Upon the Desert Floor, appeared in the VCUQ Seventh Annual Faculty Exhibition held in 2005. In addition to publishing articles and writing poetry she presented several professional workshops and papers, the most recent of which, "Making Connections Among Culture, Personality, and content in
experience, and weather. This year theMCC Drone Design Team is made up of 12 students, including 4 returning members and 8 true freshman. As acommunity college design team, one of our main constraints is the student graduation rate. Students graduate atdouble the rate compared to a 4 year institution, forcing team leaders to quickly educate and prepare freshman stu-dents for competition. A limited budget is also a constraining factor that most teams face when creating a new sys-tem. Our team developed the BFL system with parts from legacy systems, $3800 from internal university sources,and 3 business sponsorships. Without these resources, our team would not have been able to create this new systemand sustain the AUVSI-SUAS design team. One
Society for Engineering Education, 2021Web-Based Cryptomining DetectionDima Kudriashov, EPAM Systems, Seattle, Washington, USAVijay Anand, Department of Information Systems and Technology, University of Missouri, St. Louis, Missouri,USAA drastic surge on the cryptocurrency market of late 2017 and early 2018 lead to development andwidespread implementation of web-based cryptomining. Initially providing a valid alternative to aregular advertisement-based forms of monetization, cryptomining quickly became a novelty form ofmalware by silently executing in the background without obtaining explicit consent from a user, anactivity later became commonly known as drive-by mining or cryptojacking. To solve the issue oftimely detection and prevention of
Creating a Community of Scholars for Large Applied Research Contracts in an Academic Infrastructure Douglas S. Cairns1*, Roberta Amendola1, Dilpreet Bajwa,1 Cambrie Monfort, Jared Nelson2, and Cecily Ryan11 Mechanical & Industrial Engineering, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT, USA, 2 Sustainable Product Design & Innovation, Keene State College, Keene, NH, USA. *Author of CorrespondenceAbstractLarge applied research contracts are attractive to universities. They increase the researchexpenditures and research portfolio, leading to substantial external funding, and to higherresearch rankings via peer comparisons. These external resources