Presentations (Bioterrorism and Complex Systems Workshop)

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This collection contains the presentations made during the Bioterrorism and Complex Systems Workshop. Please enter text in the search box above or click on one of the browse options to explore this collection.

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Now showing 1 - 5 of 10
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    Homeland Security intelligence and operations
    (2011) Wright, Phillip
    This presentation from Phillip Wright of Booz Allen Hamilton addressed the Department of Homeland Security's history and components as well as its role in the intelligence framework.
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    Crisis and emergency risk communication (CERC)
    (2011) Houston, Brian
    This presentation was made as part of the Reporting, Risk Communication, and Dissemination Panel which discussed the continuum of the intelligence cycle and production, and the synergy with effective, dynamic, risk communication and transparency as the foundation for actionable intelligence.
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    Bioterrorism
    (2011) Stewart, George Cameron, 1953-
    This presentation was made during the Observables and Indicators & Warning Panel which provided an expert-centered overview of phenomenology and information necessary to support assessment of CBRNE threats. These assessments shape the effective policy and decision-making of health and food protection and security locally, nationally, and transnationally. Perspectives address data and information necessary to support critical decision-making tasks under stress.
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    A one health discipline : the case for integrating science, medicine and public health
    (2011) Simpson, Gary
    The keynote speaker, Gary Simpson, addressed the challenges of planning for, identifying and responding to infectious disease outbreaks and offered some solutions.
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    Early detection and prediction: actionable data/information
    (2011) Cui, Helen
    This presentation was made as part of the Information Management and Information Assurance: Collection and Analysis Panel which considered some of the most innovative approaches to solving national security challenges involving validation and fusion of disparate information in an unsecure bandwidth-limited environment. The panel addressed the continuous balance between "need to know," "need to share," and effective knowledge management.
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