Rosbelia Balza

Work place: School of Systems Engineering, Polytechnic University Institute “Santiago Mariño,” Barinas, Venezuela

E-mail: rosbelia@hotmail.com

Website:

Research Interests: Interaction Design, Computer systems and computational processes, Planning and Scheduling, Computer Architecture and Organization, Operating Systems, Systems Architecture, Information Systems, Data Structures and Algorithms, Analysis of Algorithms

Biography

Rosbelia Balza, MSc, is a system engineer with a master’s degree in management science. Currently, Balza is a professor and director of the School of Systems Engineering at the Polytechnic University Institute “Santiago Mariño” in Barinas, Venezuela. She teaches Java programming, design and evaluation of projects, data structure, databases, systems analysis & design, operating systems, computing auditing, C++ and PHP programming, and management information systems.

Author Articles
Teaching Artificial Intelligence and Robotics to Undergraduate Systems Engineering Students

By Luis Emilio Alvarez-Dionisi Mitali Mittra Rosbelia Balza

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5815/ijmecs.2019.07.06, Pub. Date: 8 Jul. 2019

The skills of artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics provide a wide window of job opportunities for the following professionals: computer scientists, mechanical engineers, system engineers, computer engineers, biomedical engineers, and electrical engineers. Additionally, other professionals benefiting from AI and robotics’ job opportunities are information technologists, informatic engineers, electronic engineers, data scientists, industrial engineers, big data engineers, and related specialists in the dynamic field of engineering robotics. Therefore, the purpose of this research was to study the effort of teaching AI and robotics to undergraduate systems engineering students at the Polytechnic University Institute “Santiago Mariño” in Barinas, Venezuela. Consequently, the methodology used in this academic research was the case study approach, which included three phases, namely Initiation Phase, Fieldwork Phase, and Closing Phase. In that sense, the design of research adopted in this study was based on the development of an exploratory single case study method. As a result, the Theoretical Framework created as a cornerstone of this research highlighted the following three research variables: (1) Robotic Applications, (2) Mechanics of Robotic Manipulation and Computer Vision, and (3) Object-oriented Analysis and Design (OOAD) and Object-oriented (OO) High-level Programming Languages. In conclusion, two nondirectional null hypotheses were tested, leading to the positive answers of the following research questions: (1) “Can undergraduate systems engineering students apply OOAD and OO High-level Programming Languages to analyze, design, and develop Robotic Applications?” and (2) “Can undergraduate systems engineering students use Mechanics of Robotic Manipulation and Computer Vision to analyze, design, and develop Robotic Applications?” as stated in this case study.

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