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## Spring Meeting Moved from from April 14th to April 21. ## CU Denver / Mines Seminar Statistical Approaches in the NIST World Trade Center Analysis - James J. Filliben ## K-12 Meetings ## Dinners and other ideas ** Spring meeting time change We just realized that Friday April 14th is Good Friday and may conflict with some members plans so the date was moved to the following week - April 21st. ** Seminar Friday, February 03, 2006 4:00 pm - 6:00 pm CU-Denver Building, Room 656 Statistical Approaches in the NIST World Trade Center Analysis James J. Filliben, National Institute of Standards and Technology Chancellor's Scholar Invited Lecture and First Joint Seminar with the Colorado School of Mines. Keywords: Graphical Data Analysis, Experiment Design, Orthogonality, Time Series Analysis, Sensitivity Analysis, Problem-Solving Framework, Exploratory Data Analysis, Inference Feasibility, Statistical Analysis (Full Abstract at the end of the note.) ** K-12 Outreach Update There will be meetings on Monday February 13th and/or Tuesday February 21st to discuss topics that might motivate students to be interested in statistics and be fun to present. We are trying to take advantage of some of the materials that has been developed by the American Statistical Association. In short, our goal is to choose and practice a couple talks to be given to students of different levels. We are placing the following assumptions. 1.) This may be the students first exposure to statistics and first impressions are very important. 2.) The talks should support the teachers curriculum - we know that teachers don't have nearly enough time to achieve everything that is expected. 3.) Student (particularly high school students) are different. While many of us are used to talking to colleagues and people who are paid to listen, students are not. Therefore in many ways, a presentation to students has more challenges than a professional talk. If this interests you, contact me for additional details. ** Dinners and other events. The chapter officers (Deb, Nels, Shahar and I ) met yesterday. We hope to plan another evening talk in the next month. On a different topic, dinners associated with recent events such as the K-12 meeting, Dr. Clark and Dr Rubin's talk were very enjoyable. We will try and coordinate a couple more. Details for the student participation in the spring meeting will be available soon. As always, if you have any suggestions for the chapter, please let us know. Thanks, M ***************************** Full Abstract The Congressionally-mandated NIST Federal Building and Fire Safety Investigation of the World Trade Center disaster has currently come to completion. The buildings' degradation immediately prior to collapse was extremely complicated, with structural, thermal, dynamic, and stochastic interdependencies existent across both time and space. Four pre-collapse stages (a simplification of reality) will be discussed: aircraft impact, fire spread, thermal propagation through insulation, and structural deformation. Engineering issues and the statistical methodologies to address these issues will be discussed. A major challenge in the statistical analysis of the World Trade Center was the relatively meager amount of data--little physical evidence existed on important events in the core of the WTC buildings. In this regard, the study was both assisted--and complicated--by reliance on computational engineering virtual data--primarily in the form of NIST's FDS (Fire Dynamics Simulator) and phase-specific FEA (finite element analysis) computational models. As analyses progress from component to sub-assembly to global, such computational models require characterization, sensitivity analysis, and validation--it will be shown how statistically designed experiments played a major role in this regard. Various other statistical analysis techniques (e.g., complex demodulation for assessing post-impact building oscillation frequency and--indirectly--building damage) will also be discussed. For the NIST WTC study's detailed engineering conclusions and recommendations, see the extensive (10,000 page) final report via http://wtc.nist.gov. Reception to follow. -- Matt Pocernich National Center for Atmospheric Research Research Applications Laboratory (303) 497-8312 _______________________________________________ Cowystats mailing list Cowystats@ucar.edu http://mailman.ucar.edu/mailman/listinfo/cowystats |
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