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Events for February 15, 2007
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Changing Project Delivery Strategy
Thu, Feb 15, 2007 @ 02:30 PM - 04:00 PM
Daniel J. Epstein Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering
University Calendar
CHANGING PROJECT DELIVERY STRATEGY: AN IMPLEMENTATION FRAMEWORK FOR THE TRANSPORTATION PROJECT SECTORGiovanni C. Migliaccio2007 Ph.D. Candidate, University of Texas at AustinUSC-CEE Faculty Candidate in Construction ManagementThursday, February 15, 20072:30 4:00pm, Kaprielian Hall, 203Abstract: For organizations such as departments of transportation, other public agencies, or private companies, the adoption of a new approach to procure services for delivery of construction projects requires significant organizational changes; these changes include modifications to both their work processes and existing organizational structures. Because these adjustments encompass many different aspects of the organization's interests, they must occur for the change initiative to be successfully implemented. Researchers at the Center for Construction Industry Studies are investigating the adoption of innovative project delivery approaches within the transportation project sector in order to better understand the dynamics of this type of organizational change. This seminar will present findings from a study of state transportation agencies that have recently implemented the design-build method for delivering highway projects.Using as a case study the new $1.3 billion SH 130 tolled expressway project in central Texas, the research team has analyzed project documentation and performed 39 interviews to individuals affiliated with owner, legal counselor, engineering consultant, and contractor. Findings suggest that project representatives institutionalize practices and routines connected to the new approach by adapting to new challenges, rather than by "overwriting" previously existing practices. Consequently, the institutionalization of innovative approaches to project delivery happens concurrently with a deinstitutionalization of the previous approaches. This concurrency produces different effects on the project environment, depending on the mediating action of some emerging industry practices and the perspectives of the involved parties.Using these findings, the presenter has developed a conceptual framework for helping owner organizations implement a new project delivery approach. This framework has been further enriched by the data from a comparative study of three transportation projects around the United States. In addition, 90 experts in the implementation of the design-build method for transportation projects were identified and invited to participate in a Delphi study to validate and populate the developed framework. Findings from all of these studies will be presented in this seminar, including preliminary findings from the ongoing Delphi study.
Location: Kaprielian Hall (KAP) - 203
Audiences: Everyone Is Invited
Contact: Georgia Lum
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Viterbi Early Career Chair Lecture: JEANNE BAMBERGER: Tracing the compositional process
Thu, Feb 15, 2007 @ 06:30 PM - 09:10 PM
Daniel J. Epstein Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering
Conferences, Lectures, & Seminars
SPEAKER: Jeanne Bamberger, http://web.mit.edu/jbambMIT Professor of Music and Urban Education, emerita,Visiting Professor, School of Education, UC-BerkeleyTITLE: Tracing the compositional process a natural experimentSHORT DESCRIPTION:
I will pick and choose among the compositional decisions the students make in an effort to demonstrate how a computer-based environment can help to make musical intuitions explicit. And how these, in turn, can reveal the implicit structures of common musical practice.This is also a guest lecture in ISE 575 Topics in Engineering Approaches to Music Cognition. This year's topic is Human-Centered Computing in Generating Music. The class website is at http://www-scf.usc.edu/~ise575/c/syllabusThe lecture is based on Jeanne Bamberger's "The development of intuitive musical understanding: a natural experiment," Psychology of Music, vol.31(1):7:36, 2003, available at http://www-scf.usc.edu/~ise575/c/papers/bamberger2003.pdf .HOST: Elaine Chew, USC Viterbi School of Engineering. Please rsvp by noon on Feb 14 to echew@usc.edu .
Location: Kaprielian Hall (KAP) - 167 (subj to change pending attendance, please rsvp)
Audiences: Everyone Is Invited
Contact: Elaine Chew