Bridge Articles

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  • Technology, humanism, and cross-disciplinary cooperation can combine to take us farther than we dreamed we could go. Good afternoon, and congratulations to our new members. I know you will find your experience with the NAE rewarding. Few organizations have so great an effect on the ...
    Author: George M. C. Fisher
    Release date: Fall 2000
    Volume: 30
    Number: 3/4
  • The events of September 11 challenged the future of our heavily engineered environment and the future of the engineering profession. An attack on our nation . . . thousands dead . . . 20 percent of downtown office space in Manhattan damaged or destroyed . . . more than 40 percent of the ...
    Author: Robert Prieto
    Release date: Spring 2002
    Volume: 32
    Number: 1
  • Engineers are packaged as problem solvers rather than creators and innovators addressing grand challenges. The best-intentioned diversity-recruitment initiatives by engineering colleges nationwide have had little success in increasing access to the richly textured future afforded by careers ...
    Author: Jacquelyn F. Sullivan
    Release date: Summer 2006
    Volume: 36
    Number: 2
  • The United States is trading the long-term health of U.S. research and education for the appearance of short-term security. William Wulf I assume that all of you have read or heard a discussion of Tom Friedman’s book (2005), The World Is Flat. But just in case, I’ll ...
    Author: Wm. A. Wulf
    Release date: Fall 2005
    Volume: 35
    Number: 3
  • Leveraging advances in commercial technologies and maintaining a well-balanced, adequately funded S&T program will be necessary to retaining our technological edge. As the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) moves into the twenty-first century, its science and technology (S&T) program ...
    Author: Delores M. Etter
    Release date: Summer 2001
    Volume: 31
    Number: 2
  • An engineer's personal experiences form the basis for an innovative educational program that uses concrete, visual problems to teach abstract math concepts to students in inner-city public schools. Many are the paths to a successful educational career, and they vary from country to ...
    Author: Mario Salvadori
    Release date: Summer 1997
    Volume: 27
    Number: 2
  • Summer 2010 Bridge article
    Author: Richard L. Garwin
    Release date: Summer 2010
    Volume: 40
    Number: 2
  • The United States needs a strong, effective missile defense system to meet the threats and uncertainties that lie ahead. Introduction In the past three years, very significant progress has been made on the development of defenses against ballistic missiles. A number of systems have been ...
    Author: Hans Mark
    Release date: Summer 2001
    Volume: 31
    Number: 2
  • Nowhere will the impacts of climate change and the need for adaptive responses be more apparent than in our vast, complex transportation system. Henry G. Schwartz Jr.
    Author: Henry G. Schwartz Jr.
    Release date: Fall 2010
    Volume: 40
    Number: 3
  • The tools and methods of industrial biotechnology could be adapted to produce pharmaceutical proteins for a pandemic influenza vaccine. At Genencor, an industrial biotechnology company, full-scale industrial manufacturing of proteins at volumes of 30,000,000 gram-active proteins per month ...
    Author: David Estell
    Release date: Fall 2006
    Volume: 36
    Number: 3
  • Systemic changes require cooperation between those who deliver care and administrators committed to the public disclosure of outcomes. Academic medical centers, the crown jewels of the medical system, have a tripartite mission. First, of course, as hospitals, they are intimately involved in ...
    Author: Paul F. Levy
    Release date: Spring 2008
    Volume: 38
    Number: 1
  • Control over agent-based systems can be achieved via modeling tools. Researchers have made considerable advances in the quantitative characterization, understanding, and control of nonliving systems. We are rather familiar with physical and chemical systems, ranging from elementary ...
    Author: Zoltán Toroczkai and Stephen Eubank
    Release date: Winter 2005
    Volume: 35
    Number: 4
  • Editor's note for Fall 2011 Bridge
    Author: Andrew Alleyne
    Release date: Fall 2011
    Volume: 41
    Number: 3
  • Requirements for greater transparency about where food comes from and how it is treated along the way are becoming more stringent. The growing world population is putting increasing strains on natural resources, including agricultural resources, and recent economic and environmental trends ...
    Author: Matthew Denesuk and Susan Wilkinson
    Release date: Fall 2011
    Volume: 41
    Number: 3
  • The keys to survival of a pandemic will be surveillance, public health planning, and a publicly agreed strategy for behavior. When talking about the development of vaccines to avert an influenza pandemic, we must keep in mind a sobering fact. A very well run vaccine development program, ...
    Author: Alan Shaw
    Release date: Fall 2006
    Volume: 36
    Number: 3
  • There has developed a broad consensus that energy systems will move towards electricity for all stationary energy uses, and to hydrogen (compressed, adsorbed, or liquefied) for transportation fuel. Over the past several decades there have been drastic changes in the perception of the ...
    Author: Henry R. Linden
    Release date: Fall 1999
    Volume: 29
    Number: 3
  • Engineers have a major role to play in preventing or reducing the ravages of terrorism. Ultimately, of course, terrorism must be addressed at its roots: poverty, hunger, political oppression, and economic injustice. But it is unlikely we will ever eliminate it. There will always be new ...
    Author: George Bugliarello
    Release date: Fall 1998
    Volume: 28
    Number: 3
  • Biology can provide tools for controlling and synthesizing materials at the molecular level. At first glance, imitating nature via biomimetics seems to be a straightforward proposition. For example, if you are a roboticist, add legs to the platform instead of wheels. Unfortunately, as is ...
    Author: Morley Stone
    Release date: Winter 2006
    Volume: 36
    Number: 4
  • Corn is replacing petroleum as a raw material in many industrial applications. The United States produces 44 percent of the world’s corn. The largest crop grown in the United States, corn occupies some 70 million acres. This versatile, natural, biodegradable, and renewable resource has ...
    Author: Sanjay V. Malhotra, Vineet Kumar, Anthony East, Michael Jaffe
    Release date: Winter 2007
    Volume: 37
    Number: 4
  • The Army is investing in biotechnology to realize the goals of Transformation. The U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) has embarked on an extraordinary process of change called Transformation, that is, the creation of a highly responsive, networked, joint force capable of making swift ...
    Author: John A. Parmentola
    Release date: Fall 2004
    Volume: 34
    Number: 3
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