Showing posts with label ADVAT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ADVAT. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Advanced Analytic Techniques (The Blog) Is Back!

Check out www.advat.blogspot.com!
Each year, I teach a class called Advanced Analytic Techniques (AAT) here at Mercyhurst.  It is a seminar-style class designed to allow grad students to dig into a variety of analytic techniques and (hopefully) master one or two.   

The students get to pick both the topic and the technique on which they wish to focus so you wind up with some pretty interesting studies at the end.  For example, we have applied the traditional business methodology of "best practices" to western European terrorist groups and the traditional military technique of Intelligence Preparation of The Battlefield to the casino industry.

As you can imagine, some of these projects gain a bit of notoriety for their unique insights.  One of my former students, Jeff Welgan, even had his AAT project written up in the book Hyperformance.

Beyond this deep dive that each student is required to do, the class is also designed to teach students how to evaluate analytic techniques for things such as validity and flexibility.  To help with this process, each week we take a quick look at an analytic technique that no one in the class is using in their projects.  

We start this process with a tour d'horizon of the available literature on the method with a particular focus on the literature that is higher up the evidence pyramid and relevant to intelligence analysis.  At the end of the week, one member of the class runs an abbreviated demo of the technique using the other half of the class as guinea pigs.  Once we are done, we all sit down and write up our thoughts about the method.  Last week, for example, we took a (quick) look at SWOT.  This week we will be examining various forms of Red Teaming.

All of this - the summaries and critiques of the articles we have found, and our overall "evaluation" of the technique - gets posted onto the Advanced Analytic Techniques blog each week.  Over the years, the blog has become increasingly popular and I certainly encourage everyone to take a look and, if you have a comment, join in!

Monday, March 18, 2013

Advanced Analytic Techniques Is Back Up And Posting Again!

www.advat.blogspot.com
Each spring, I teach a class called Advanced Analytic Techniques (AAT) here at Mercyhurst.  It is a seminar-style class designed to allow grad students to dig into a variety of analytic techniques and (hopefully) master one or two.   

The students get to pick both the topic and the technique on which they wish to focus so you wind up with some pretty interesting studies at the end.  For example, we have applied the traditional business methodology of "best practices" to western European terrorist groups and the traditional military technique of Intelligence Preparation of The Battlefield to the casino industry.

As you can imagine, some of these projects gain a bit of notoriety for their unique insights.  One of my former students, Jeff Welgan, even had his AAT project written up in the book Hyperformance.

Beyond this deep dive that each student is required to do, the class is also designed to teach students how to evaluate analytic techniques for things such as validity and flexibility.  To help with this process, each week we take a quick look at an analytic technique that no one in the class is using in their projects.  

We start this process with a tour d'horizon of the available literature on the method with a particular focus on the literature that is higher up the evidence pyramid and relevant to intelligence analysis.  At the end of the week, half of the class runs an abbreviated demo of the technique using the other half of the class as guinea pigs.  Once we are done, we all sit down and write up our thoughts about the method.  Last week, for example, we took a (quick) look at Decision Trees.  This week we will be examining various forms of crime mapping.

All of this - the summaries and critiques of the articles we have found, and our overall "evaluation" of the technique - gets posted onto the Advanced Analytic Techniques blog each week.  Over the years, the blog has become increasingly popular and I certainly encourage everyone to take a look and, if you have a comment, join in!

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Geospatial Analysis Of Gerrymandering In Pennsylvania (An Advanced Analytic Techniques Project)

One of my students, Karl Gustafson, used an interesting combination of geospatial and political data to create a video (see below) that examines some historic cases of gerrymandering in Pennsylvania.  He used this as background for looking into what appears to be some pretty clear cases of gerrymandering in the making.


While the production quality on the video is none too slick, Karl does a good job of using a series of overlays, a clear, direct script and the features of Google Earth to explain what gerrymandering is and how it has been used ion the past and how it is currently being used to literally re-shape Pennsylvania politics.

You can see Karl's evaluation of the methods and processes he used here.