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Showing papers on "Open design published in 2000"


18 Jun 2000
TL;DR: A description of the toy robot design contest, its organization, its pedagogic principles and its impacts are described to show how open design projects can create meaningful and exciting learning experiences for students in Electrical and Computer Engineering.
Abstract: In our curricula, freshmen use an autonomous robotic platform to get introduced to fundamental concepts in Electrical and Computer Engineering. Using this platform, teams of students interested by the challenge are invited to apply knowledge acquired during their first year of studies by participating in a toy robot design contest. Initiated in 1999, the challenge is to design a mobile robot to help autistic children. The goal of this paper is to describe the contest, its organization, its pedagogic principles and its impacts in order to show how open design projects can create meaningful and exciting learning experiences for students in Electrical and Computer Engineering.

38 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Adopting the accepted norms of experimental design will give a scientific method to conduct, verify, and report comparative performance evaluations of CAD algorithms.
Abstract: A few years ago, during a well-attended open Design Automation Conference benchmark forum, a panellist pointed out that "...reporting experimental results is a science and an art. A survey of the literature may reveal a consistent methodology.... Also, we should address the verification of reported results." In retrospect, the suggestion may have hinted at the vast body of techniques commonly known as experimental design. However, this forum was not ready to expand on the subject. Most search engines currently on the Web return tens of thousands of URLs in response to keyword searches using terms such as experimental design or design of experiments. Few, if any, of these search results point to an evaluation of CAD algorithms. In contrast, the experimental design methodology, pioneered by Fischer during the 1920s in agricultural research, is now firmly established in science and manufacturing. Its application to biomedical research can save lives. Biomedical journals have strict guidelines on how to report experimental results so others may replicate experiments. A URL from a medical school points to a concise illustration of a simple experimental design flow and the terminology used. Adopting the accepted norms of experimental design will give us a scientific method to conduct, verify, and report comparative performance evaluations of CAD algorithms.

4 citations