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This month's newsletter focuses on highlights during July with a more in-depth look at the activities of Translation Theme 5.  

IN THE SPOTLIGHT 

Congratulations to Eden Li and Mark Griffin for winning two awards for their conference paper in the  CIB, International Council for Research and Innovation in Building and Construction  World Building Congress 2022 ( #WBC2022 )

  • Best Paper in Technology & Innovation
  • Best Paper in Challenges and Opportunities to the Use of Data in Construction

Team News 

We farewelled Ayham in July. Ayham left UWA and the Centre to take up a research and lecturing role in the Department of Science and Technology at Qatar University in Doha. Ayham is the first Research Fellow to join the Centre, leading projects with BHP and Alcoa. We are very excited about his success but sad to see him leave.  

A number of our PhD students travelled during June/July.

  • Chau Nguyen travelled home to visit his family in Vietnam.
  • Tim Pesch travelled home to visit his family in Germany. 
  • Braden Thorne travelled to South Africa.
  • Ryan Leadbetter and Sandy Spiers both journeyed to the north of Western Australia.

Everyone is now back in Perth focusing on their research (wink).

The Centre was invited to exhibit our research at the  Data-Driven Decision (D3) Conference. Assoc Prof Wei Liu presented how the latest advances in NLP improve AI. Prof Melinda Hodkiewicz participated in a panel discussing insights, successes and failures for data-driven decisions, and Prof Michael Small judged the best presentation pitched by UWA HDR students.  


The conference focused on why data-driven decisions are essential in generating real-time insights and predictions to help optimise business performance. Exhibitors were lucky to be stationed inside, so we got the opportunity to listen to the presentations and panel discussions.

During the breaks, attendees of the conference visited our exhibition to ask questions;  PhD students Sandy Spiers and Braden Thorne did a great job explaining their research and other people's research when required (wink).


THEME 5

Introduction

In the 2022 January edition of the newsletter for 2022, we introduced the work that Theme 5 is working on to translate the Centre's outputs into industry-usable software to increase the impact of the Centre's research. 

Let's check out how Theme 5 has been working with the Centre's researchers and industry partners on translating the following projects:

Theme 5 Activities

IDEA Tool

In May, Ayham Zaitouny and John Hille demonstrated the IDEA Tool prototype to the Centres Operating Committee and senior academics.

The new Streamlit version of the IDEA tool

These demonstrations resulted in valuable feedback on the nature of the questions asked by the tool and the importance of some of the tool's technical features.

To help deliver these changes, Theme 5 undertook a minor re-engineering exercise to convert the tools' user interface to Streamlit .

The new Streamlit based version of the tool has many benefits over the previous prototype, including a more responsive user experience.

CTMTDS Website Refresh

John Hille and Alex Hunt have been working on a project to "showcase" the Centre and its researchers.  This work includes building a platform to demonstrate the tools produced.

As a culmination of the "showcase" project, the Centre's public website will soon be refreshed to incorporate outputs such as presentations, publications and software tools produced by the Centres researchers. 


Stay tuned for the transition to the new website in the coming weeks.

Schedule Optimisation Tools

John Hille and Yunlong Li have been working with Hoa Bui and Mojtaba Heydar on the improving the schedule optimisation tools project and a lot of progress has been made since the last Theme 5 update.

In addition to the schedule Visualiser Tool, the comparison and optimiser tools are now fully working prototypes.

Comparison Tool

The comparison tool is a designed to help a user compare multiple schedules at a time.  It allows a user to easily compare the duration, number of tasks and overall resource requirements between different schedules.

The tool supports the comparison of manually generated, or automatically optimised schedules generated by the optimiser tool.

The schedule comparison tool


Optimiser Tool

The optimiser tool provides a user-facing mechanism to exercise the schedule optimisation models produced by the Centre's Theme 3 researchers. Some of the main features of the tool include:

  • the ability to initialise the list of tasks from external data in several different standard formats
  • has several convenient features to validate and pre-process the input data
  • has been designed with the flexibility to optimise the schedule data using a choice of different optimisation models.

The schedule optimiser tool


Code Quality Workshop

Andrew Rohl and John Hille presented a code quality workshop at the  Australian Resources Research Centre  (ARRC).

The workshop demonstrated the importance and the mechanics of measuring code quality using standard linting tools such as pylint . Andrew and John also introduced some practical approaches to improving code quality.

The workshop was attended by the Centre's PhD students and Research Fellows.

Stay tuned for our next issue in August where we will cover:

  • Translation Theme 4 - Research Focus
  • New publications
  • Research updates

Do you have news to share?

Please email [email protected]


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