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Communications in engineering

Communications in engineering. Dr. Yan Liu Department of Biomedical, Industrial and Human Factors Engineering Wright State University. Factors in Professional Communications. Audience Analysis Is the communication to an expert or a general audience How formal should the communication be

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Communications in engineering

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  1. Communications in engineering Dr. Yan Liu Department of Biomedical, Industrial and Human Factors Engineering Wright State University

  2. Factors in Professional Communications • Audience Analysis • Is the communication to an expert or a general audience • How formal should the communication be • What level of detail is expected • What is the importance of the communication to the recipient(s) • What is the time available for this communication • Selection of Format to Convey Message • Written • Email, memoranda, letters, engineering report • Oral • Telephone calls, informal talk, formal presentations • Graphics • Drawings, pictures, maps

  3. Factors in Professional Communications • General Rules • The purpose of the communication should be clearly stated at beginning • The communication should be direct and to the point • Conciseness is necessity • Communications have been edited, refined, and practiced, as appropriate • Communication should be complete • Contains all the required information • Select an organizational format appropriate for the communication

  4. Why Are Engineers Often Ineffective Communicators • Many engineering students have a natural inclination for math and science but little for writing or oral communications • Engineering students often have little understanding of grammar and basic sentence and paragraph structure

  5. Writing Resources • WSU Writing Center • http://www.wright.edu/academics/writingctr/ • Helps people become more competent writers within a peer tutoring environment • WSU Writing Web • http://www.wright.edu/cola/Dept/ENG/wsuwweb/ • An online community for writers • Grammar and Language Information • The Blue Book of Grammar and Punctuation • http://www.grammarbook.com/ • An online reference guide and workbook • Grammar, Punctuation, and Capitalization • http://www.sti.nasa.gov/publish/sp7084.pdf (free to download) • A handbook for technical writers and editors from NASA • etc.

  6. Presentation Resources • Presentation Skills • http://www.mindtools.com/page8.html (career training website) • http://lorien.ncl.ac.uk/ming/dept/Tips/present/present.htm • Organization • Toastmasters International • A nonprofit educational organization that operates clubs worldwide for the purpose of helping members improve their communication, public speaking and leadership skills • http://www.toastmasters.org/ • Wright State Toastmasters meets at E103 Student Union at 12:00pm on Mondays (brookins.5@wright.edu)

  7. Engineering Report • Purpose • Records how and why the work was accomplished and what the results, recommendations, and conclusions were • Often the only document related to work that is maintained on file for future reference • Typical Elements • Title • Authors • Abstract • Introduction • Technical approach • Results and discussion • Conclusions • Acknowledgement • References • Appendix

  8. Engineering Report • Title • Brief and descriptive of your work • Clearly states what the work was about • Use adjectives that describe the distinctive features of the work (e.g. reliable, high-performance, robust, low-cost, etc.) • Avoid jargon or vernacular • Authors • Name • Affiliation • Contact information of the corresponding author • e.g. phone, email

  9. Engineering Report • Abstract • A brief (~200 words or less) statement of the essential components of the report • Objective(s) • Methods(s) used • Significant results • Conclusions • Introduction • Provide the necessary background • Describe the objective(s) • Define the scope of the investigation • Identify any previous studies or efforts that are related to the work

  10. Engineering Report • Technical Approach • Provides detailed information about how the work was accomplished • Theoretical/design principles involved • Equations used • Design sketches and diagrams • Experiment setup and design • etc. • Results and Discussion • If experiments were involved • Describe data analyses and their results • Describe any complications (e.g. missing data, outliers, etc.) and how they were handled • Statistical techniques • Understand the techniques applied and the statistics you are reporting • Try to use the simplest, appropriate technique that meets the underlying assumptions

  11. Engineering Report • Results and Discussion (Cont.) • Each major conclusion should be clearly substantiated • Any contradictory theories or results must be explained • Use carefully planned tables and graphs • Recognize the limitations of the work • Suggest future work • Conclusions • Provide a quick reference about the main conclusions for the reader with limited time • Conclusions reached in the results and discussion section are restated in a more general manner

  12. Engineering Report • References • There should be a one-to-one match between the references cited in the report and the list of references • Various styles of references • Chicago Manual of Style • http://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org • IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) Style (Use in your project reports) • http://www.ece.uiuc.edu/pubs/ref_guides/ieee.html • APA (American Psychological Association) Style • http://apastyle.apa.org/ • Appendix • Provide supporting information that is necessary yet not significant enough to be included in the body of the report • A complex mathematical proof • A questionnaire or survey instrument (unless it is the main contribution of the work)

  13. IEEE Reference Style • References in the Text • References must be numbered in the order in which they appear in the text • Once you label the source, use the same number in all subsequent references • Each reference number should be enclosed by square brackets on the text line, with a space before the bracket and before the punctuation • e.g. “Visualization is crucial to data analysis; it provides a front line of attack, revealing intricate structure in data that cannot be absorbed in any other way [6].” • Do not include author(s) in the reference; if you want to stress the author(s), mention the author(s) in the sentence • e.g. “Cleveland argued that visualization is crucial to data analysis; it provides a front line of attack, revealing intricate structure in data that cannot be absorbed in any other way [6].” • It is not necessary to say "in reference [27]. . . ." "In [27] . . ." is sufficient • To cite more than one source at a time • Vastly preferred: [1],[3],[5] or [1] – [5] • Acceptable: [1, 3, 5] or [1 – 5]

  14. IEEE Reference Style • Reference List • References must be listed in the same order they were cited in text (numerical order) • List only one reference per bracketed number • Capitalization and italicization • Every important word in the title of a book must be capitalized and italicized • Prepositions and articles are not capitalized unless they are the first words in the title • Every important word in the title of a journal or conference must be capitalized and italicized • Capitalize only the first word of the title of an article, book chapter, thesis, or dissertation • Capitalize the "v" in volume for a book title but not for a journal • Abbreviations • You must either spell out the entire name of each journal or conference proceeding you reference or use accepted abbreviations; You must consistently do one or the other • To indicate a page range (e.g. pp. 111-222) • Reference one page only, use only one p (e.g. p. 111)

  15. IEEE Reference Style • Reference List (Cont.) • Author names • <first initial>. <middle initial> <last name> • e.g. D. L. Tao • Two authors • <first author> and <second author> • e.g. D. L. Tao and L. A. Stevens • Three or more authors • <first author>, <second author>, <third author>, … and <last author> • e.g. D. L. Tao, S. Al Kuran, and L. A. Stevens

  16. Book S. M. Hemmingsen, Soft Science. Saskatoon: University of Saskatchewan Press, 1997. • Book Chapter A. Rezi and M. Allam, "Techniques in array processing by means of transformations," in Control and Dynamic Systems, Vol. 69, Multidimensional Systems, C. T. Leondes, Ed. San Diego: Academic Press, 1995, pp. 133-180 • Journal G. Liu, K. Y. Lee, and H. F. Jordan, "TDM and TWDM de Bruijn networks and shufflenets for optical communications," IEEE Transactions on Computers, vol. 46, pp. 695-701, June 1997. • Conference proceeding S. Al Kuran, "The prospects for GaAs MESFET technology in dc-ac voltage conversion," in Proceedings of the Fourth Annual Portable Design Conference, 1997, pp. 137-142. • Report (Technical report, Memoranda) K. E. Elliott and C. M. Greene, "A local adaptive protocol," Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, France, Tech. Rep. 916-1010-BB, July 1997.

  17. Thesis (M.S. Thesis) or Dissertation (Ph.D. Dissertation) H. Zhang, "Delay-insensitive networks," M.S. thesis, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, Canada, 1997. • Manual Bell Telephone Laboratories Technical Staff, Transmission System for Communications, Bell Telephone Laboratories, 1995. • From the internet Computational, Optical, and Discharge Physics Group, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, "Hybrid plasma equipment model: Inductively coupled plasma reactive ion etching reactors," December 1995, http://uigelz.ece.uiuc.edu/Projects/HPEM-ICP/index.html. • Patent K. Kimura and A. Lipeles, "Fuzzy Controller Component," U. S. Patent 14,860,040, December 14, 1996.

  18. Plagiarism • You must cite all sources of information in your work • What is Plagiarism • Presenting someone else’s ideas, work, or words as if they were your own • Copying from a source without citing it • Using the same words without using quotation marks (even with a citation) • More Information • Wright State University Writing Center: http://www.wright.edu/academics/writingctr/resources/plagiarism.html

  19. Oral Presentation • Means to Control Anxiety • Well prepared and has a thorough understanding of the material to be presented • Become familiar with the size and layout of the room • Availability of audio system and podium, the location of light switches, position of projectors, etc. • Wear the proper attire • Break the “barrier” between the speaker and audience by getting some sort of dialogue going • Self introduction, talk about fun “hot topics”, etc.

  20. Oral Presentation • Title Slide • Title of the presentation • To which group, organization or meeting the presentation is being given • Presenter’s name, affiliation, contact information • Date of the presentation • Outline • Outline of the topics to be discussed • Body • Introduction • Technical approach • Results and discussion • Conclusions

  21. Oral Presentation • Use of Visual Aids • Advantages • Catch the audiences’ attention • Facilitate understanding • Disadvantages • Preparation time • Cost

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