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FIELD JOURNAL FIELD JOURNAL FIELD JOURNAL FIELD JOURNAL
A typical day for a knowledge engineer
by Dennis Michael Heher
January 28, l998
Today is Wednesday, January 28 1998. It has been, for the most part,
a normal day with no surprises. When I was younger (okay, a lot younger),
a surprise usually meant getting or doing something exciting and fun.
Now, surprises at work can mean frantically writing a document of some
sort that my manager needs as soon as possible (which means NOW) or finding
out I get to travel somewhere, usually to Johnson Space Center (JSC) in
Houston. But like I said, today did not have any surprises.
Being a Wednesday, today was my turn to drop Leah and Patrick (my two
kids) off at school. Also since its a Wednesday, I carpooled into work
today. I am lucky that a friend works nearby so we can occasionally share
the long drive to and from work. Its 9:25 a.m. when I finally arrived
at my office at NASA Ames Research Center. The first thing I always do
when I get to work is check my email, and as usual, I had about seven
or eight messages waiting for me to read. None of the messages required
any action or response on my part, so I continue the work I was doing
yesterday.
My current job is developing a software program called Principal Investigator-in-a-Box,
or PI-in-a-Box for short. This program will be used by the Neurolab crew
during the instrumentation phase of the Sleep Experiment. The Sleep Experiment
requires the crew to wear numerous electrodes which will measure all sorts
of information about the human body while they are sleeping in microgravity.
Putting all of the electrodes on, or instrumenting, takes a lot of work
and it is crucial that these electrodes be put on properly. This is where
PI-in-a-Box helps out. We, the developers of PI-in-a-Box here at Ames
and at MIT, have tried to capture some of the expertise of the Sleep Experiment
principal investigators (these are the scientists who've designed this
experiment) and put this knowledge into a computer program.
Every once in awhile, I stop my work to read and reply to email. Today
the email came from the scientists and engineers at the University of
California, San Diego (UCSD) and from Brigham & Woman's Hospital (BWH),
which is where the principal investigators for the Sleep Experiment are
from. Some of the email is from the people at JSC who are helping us put
this experiment together.
At around 11:58 a.m., when I would rather be eating lunch or exercising,
I got a phone call. This call is the "telecon", or teleconference, which
happens at this time every other Wednesday and includes people from UCSD,
BWH, JSC, and myself at Ames. Altogether, there are 15 of us joining in
on the telecon and we discuss primarily the baseline data collection session
(which is where the scientists collect data before the Neurolab flight)
scheduled for next week and the MITS, or Mission Integrated Test Simulation,
which will occur later in February. Having a telecon with 15 people usually
lasts a long time, since everybody has something to say, and this telecon
is no exception. At 1:38, or 1 hour 40 minutes after it started, the telecon
is over.
I ate a quick lunch at my desk and got back to what I was doing before
the telecon. The afternoon is pretty quiet with only a single other phone
call, a discussion with a colleague about the Neurolab mission, reviewing
my travel plans for February, and a few more email messages. Since I carpooled
today, it was important that I leave on time to pick up my friend. At
5:22 I turn off my computers and leave for the day. I can't wait to get
home to see my wife and kids.
Today was pretty much a typical day. When I don't have a telecon at
lunch time, I try to either exercise at the fitness center here at Ames
or go for a long run. Some days I'll have a meeting or two to attend,
but I didn't today. For the most part, today was typical.
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