Data Tracking in the DoD, from Army Logistics to Net-Centric Warfare

Posted August 31, 2004 | | Amplify

THE CONCEPT OF DATA QUALITY

Data is largely intangible: particularly to organizations such as the US Army, electronic entries in a database seem insignificant compared to the physical assets of equipment, personnel, and materiel. However, data has value when used to support decisions, and organizations incur costs to collect, store, and transmit data. Of course, the use of data to derive information and support decisions depends on the accuracy or quality of that data.

About The Author
Christopher Hanks
Christopher H. Hanks is a Senior Mathematician at the RAND Corporation in Santa Monica, California. He completed his Ph.D. in algebraic topology at Northwestern University in 1975 and taught college mathematics for three years before taking up a career in defense analysis. Since joining RAND in 1993, Dr. Hanks's research has focused on logistics and acquisition issues, with particular emphasis on financial and business management methods used… Read More
Lionel Galway
Lionel A. Galway is a Senior Statistician at the RAND Corporation in Santa Monica, California, USA. He has a Ph.D. in statistics from Carnegie Mellon University and has done graduate work in physics and neurobiology. His research at RAND has focused on military logistics for the US Air Force, Army, and Navy; military personnel issues; and statistical aspects of a broad variety of public policy problems. He is also a professor of statistics at… Read More
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