Communication Practices in Engineering, Manufacturing, and Research for Food and Water Safety

eBook - IEEE PCS Professional Engineering Communication Series

44,99 €
(inkl. MwSt.)
E-Book Download

Download

Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9781119084310
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 216 S., 6.98 MB
Auflage: 1. Auflage 2015
E-Book
Format: PDF
DRM: Adobe DRM

Beschreibung

This book demonstrates some of the ways in which communication and developing technologies can improve global food and water safety by providing a historical background on outbreaks and public resistance, as well as generating interest in youth and potential professionals in the field
History of muckraking in the food industryCase study on groundwater regulationInterviews with members of the beef industry and livestock market owners

Autorenportrait

David Wrightis an Associate Professor of Technical Communication in the Department of English and Technical Communication at Missouri University of Science and Technology, USA. Dr. Wright is a member of the IEEE Professional Communication Society and the Association of Teachers of Technical Writing. He earned his PhD in Philosophy, Technical Communication, and MS in Higher Education Administration, at Oklahoma State University.

Inhalt

A Note from the Series Editor ix

Preface xi

List of Contributors xiii

Acknowledgments xv

1 Cowboys and Computers: Communicating National Animal Identification in the Beef Industry 1
David Wright

1.1 Industries Collide 1

1.1.1 Resistance to Technology in the Beef Industry 3

1.1.2 Having a Cow over Mad Cow Disease 3

1.1.3 Change Is Slow in the Beef Industry 6

1.1.4 Communication Breakdowns and Coffee Shop Policymaking 7

1.1.5 Can We All Just Get Along? 9

1.1.6 USDA Strategies for Communication 10

1.2 A New Approach to Studying Complex Communication Issues 11

1.2.1 Ethnography and Diffusion in the Beef Supply Chain 13

1.2.2 Communication Theory Linguistics and Diffusion in the Beef Supply Chain 16

1.2.3 Linguistic Textual Analysis 19

1.2.4 Diffusing Innovations in the Real World 23

1.2.5 Diffusion and Communication Networks 24

1.3 Results of My Investigation 25

1.3.1 Alice at the Auction 26

1.3.2 Backstage at the Sale Barn 27

1.3.3 Buying the NAIS 29

1.3.4 Down on the Farm 30

1.3.5 Interviews with Members of the Beef Industry 32

1.3.6 Interviews with Livestock Market Owners 33

1.3.7 Rules from the Road 38

1.3.8 Communication Gaps and Communication Theory 40

1.3.9 Textual Analysis with Implicature and Pragmatics 48

1.4 Lessons of Beef and Bandwidth 49

1.4.1 No Pardon for Jargon 51

1.4.2 Alice Is Not in Wonderland 52

1.4.3 The Telephone Game Still Happens 53

1.4.4 It All Comes Down to Doin Business 54

1.4.5 What We Have Here Is a Failure to Communicate 56

1.4.6 Culture Is King 58

1.4.7 The Situation Now 59

References 60

2 Children Communicating Food Safety/Teaching Technical Communication to Children: Opportunities Gleaned from the FIRST® LEGO® League 2011 Food Factor Challenge 63
Edward A. Malone and Havva Tezcan-Malone

2.1 Enhancing the Visibility and Recognition of Technical Communication 63

2.2 Literature Review: Teaching Technical Communication Engineering and Food Safety to Children 65

2.3 Background: The League the Challenge and the Team 67

2.3.1 First Lego League 67

2.3.2 The Food Factor Challenge 69

2.3.3 The Team: Global Dreamers 70

2.4 Examples of Technical Communication Activities in FLL Projects 71

2.4.1 Branding (Creating a Name and Logo) 72

2.4.2 Conducting Primary and Secondary Research 72

2.4.3 Giving Presentations and Demonstrations 74

2.4.4 Designing a Document 77

2.5 The Food Factor Challenge as a Model of Food-Safety Education 77

2.5.1 Fostering Food-Safety Habits in Children 78

2.5.2 Promoting Dialogue Rather Than Monologue 79

2.5.3 Generating Interest in Food-Safety Careers 79

2.6 Conclusion 80

Acknowledgments 81

References 81

3 The Role of Public (Mis)perceptions in the Acceptance of New Food Technologies: Implications for Food Nanotechnology Applications 89
Mary L. Nucci and William K. Hallman

3.1 Accepting New Foods: Consumers Technology and Media 89

3.1.1 Food Technology Acceptance 90

3.1.2 The Role of the Media in Public Perceptions of Food Technologies 92

3.2 Nanotechnology: Unseen Unknown 95

3.2.1 Nanotechnology in the Media 96

3.2.2 Public Perceptions of Nanotechnology 96

3.2.3 Perceptions and Acceptance of Nanotechnology 97

3.3 Discussing New Food Technologies 101

Acknowledgments 103

References 103

4 The New Limeco Story: How One Produce Company Used Third-Party Food Safety Audit Scores to Improve Its Operation 119
Roy E. Costa

4.1 Food Safety in Modern Food Supply Operations 119

4.2 Safety Audits Cause Some Level of Controversy 122

4.3 New Limecos Journey to Safety 122

4.3.1 Implementing Changes 124

4.3.2 Sanitation Issues 125

4.3.3 Gradual Safety Improvement 125

References 126

5 Communication Practices by Way of Permits and Policy: Do Environmental Regulations Promote Sustainability in the Real World? 129
Becca Cammack

5.1 Communication in the Modern Environmental Movement 129

5.2 Background 130

5.2.1 Who Is on the Receiving End of Environmental Regulation? 131

5.2.2 What Are the Effects of Construction and Storm Water on the Environment? 131

5.3 Studying Groundwater Regulation 133

5.3.1 Textual Analysis 133

5.3.2 Case Study 134

5.4 Results of My Investigation 134

5.4.1 The CGP Fact Sheet Background Section 135

5.4.2 The CGP Rationale Section 136

5.4.3 Construction General Permit (CGP) 136

5.4.4 A Targeted Case Study of CGP 137

5.5 Discussion of Study Results 142

References 144

6 Influences of Technical Documentation and Its Translation on Efficiency and Customer Satisfaction 145
Elena Sperandio

6.1 Considering Technical Documentation 145

6.1.1 The Problem with Integrating Systems 146

6.1.2 Enterprise Resource Planning Systems 147

6.1.3 Production Information Management Systems 148

6.1.4 Document Management Systems/Content Management Systems 148

6.1.5 Translation Memory Systems/Computer-Aided Translation 149

6.2 Data Management in Technical Communication 150

6.2.1 Development and Diffusion of Data Management Tools 150

6.3 Technical Communication in Small Companies 153

6.3.1 Workflow Advantages in Small Companies 153

6.3.2 Workflow Disadvantages in Small Companies 154

6.4 Technical Communication in Medium-Sized Companies 154

6.4.1 Workflow Advantages in Medium-Sized Companies 155

6.4.2 Workflow Disadvantages in Medium-Sized Companies 156

6.5 Technical Communication in Large Companies 156

6.5.1 Workflow Advantages in Large Companies 158

6.5.2 Workflow Disadvantages in Large Companies 159

6.6 Translation of Technical Information 159

6.6.1 Translations in Small Companies 160

6.6.2 Translations in Medium-Sized Companies 162

6.6.3 Translations in Large Companies 163

6.7 Consequences for Technical Communication 165

6.8 Assumptions About Technical Communication 166

6.9 Outlook 168

References 169

7 Communicating Food Through Muckraking: Ethics Food Engineering and Culinary Realism 171
Kathryn C. Dolan

7.1 Muckraking and Promoting Food Safety 172

7.2 Culinary Realism and Food Safety 173

7.2.1 Tubercular Beef in The Jungle 174

7.3 High Fructose Corn Syrup in The Omnivores Dilemma and In Defense of Food 179

7.4 Literature as a Watchdog in Food Safety 184

7.5 The Effects of Literature on Everyday Practices 186

References 186

Index 189

Informationen zu E-Books

Herzlichen Glückwunsch zum Kauf eines Ebooks bei der BUCHBOX! Hier nun ein paar praktische Infos.

Adobe-ID

Hast du E-Books mit einem Kopierschutz (DRM) erworben, benötigst du dazu immer eine Adobe-ID. Bitte klicke einfach hier und trage dort Namen, Mailadresse und ein selbstgewähltes Passwort ein. Die Kombination von Mailadresse und Passwort ist deine Adobe-ID. Notiere sie dir bitte sorgfältig. 
 
Achtung: Wenn du kopiergeschützte E-Books OHNE Vergabe einer Adobe-ID herunterlädst, kannst du diese niemals auf einem anderen Gerät außer auf deinem PC lesen!!
 
Du hast dein Passwort zur Adobe-ID vergessen? Dann kannst du dies HIER neu beantragen.
 
 

Lesen auf dem Tablet oder Handy

Wenn du auf deinem Tablet lesen möchtest, verwende eine dafür geeignete App. 

Für iPad oder Iphone etc. hole dir im iTunes-Store die Lese-App Bluefire

Für Android-Geräte (z.B. Samsung) bekommst du die Lese-App Bluefire im GooglePlay-Store (oder auch: Aldiko)
 
Lesen auf einem E-Book-Reader oder am PC / MAC
 
Um die Dateien auf deinen PC herunter zu laden und auf dein E-Book-Lesegerät zu übertragen gibt es die Software ADE (Adobe Digital Editions).
 
 

Andere Geräte / Software

 

Kindle von Amazon. Wir empfehlen diese Geräte NICHT.

EPUB mit Adobe-DRM können nicht mit einem Kindle von Amazon gelesen werden. Weder das Dateiformat EPUB, noch der Kopierschutz Adobe-DRM sind mit dem Kindle kompatibel. Umgekehrt können alle bei Amazon gekauften E-Books nur auf dem Gerät von Amazon gelesen werden. Lesegeräte wie der Tolino sind im Gegensatz hierzu völlig frei: Du kannst bei vielen tausend Buchhandlungen online Ebooks für den Tolino kaufen. Zum Beispiel hier bei uns.

Software für Sony-E-Book-Reader

Wenn du einen Sony-Reader hast, dann findest du hier noch die zusätzliche Sony-Software.
 

Computer/Laptop mit Unix oder Linux

Die Software Adobe Digital Editions ist mit Unix und Linux nicht kompatibel. Mit einer WINE-Virtualisierung kommst du aber dennoch an deine E-Books.