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Wayne W. Wakeland

Researcher at Portland State University

Publications -  105
Citations -  2076

Wayne W. Wakeland is an academic researcher from Portland State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Intracranial pressure & Software development process. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 100 publications receiving 1783 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Association of Prescription Drug Monitoring Program Use With Opioid Prescribing and Health Outcomes: A Comparison of Program Users and Nonusers.

TL;DR: Although opioid prescribing declined statewide after implementing the PDMP, registrants did not show greater declines than nonregistrants, and factors other than PDMP use may have had greater influence on prescribing trends.
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Complex analysis of intracranial hypertension using approximate entropy.

TL;DR: The results indicate that decreased complexity of intracranial pressure coincides with periods of intrACranial hypertension in brain injury, which suggests that the complex regulatory mechanisms that govern intrac Cranial pressure may be disrupted during acute periods of intrusion.
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Using design of experiments, sensitivity analysis, and hybrid simulation to evaluate changes to a software development process: a case study

TL;DR: Design of Experiments and broad range sensitivity analysis are applied to a hybrid system dynamics and discrete event simulation model of a software development process, supporting the hypothesis that consideration of these complex effects is essential for insightful interpretation of model results and effective decision-making.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Planning and improving global software development process using simulation

TL;DR: This paper describes a hybrid simulation model combining system dynamics and discrete-event models needed to effectively model global software development projects, and focuses on the use of the model to support project planning and process improvement inglobal software development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic model of nonmedical opioid use trajectories and potential policy interventions

TL;DR: Policy analysis showed that both tamper-resistant formulations and interventions to reduce informal sharing could significantly reduce nonmedical user populations and overdose deaths in the long term, but the modeled effect sizes require additional empirical support.