TACTICAL (sentence-level): - Improved issue-point positioning and topic-stress alignment - Converted choppy parallel sentences into cleaner constructions - Strengthened verb choices and active voice where appropriate - Enhanced punctuation for better flow (em-dashes, colons, semicolons) - Removed redundant structural markers (First/Second/Third) OPERATIONAL (paragraph/section): - Smoothed transitions between subsections - Improved coherence within sections - Strengthened topic strings linking paragraphs - Enhanced signposting for reader navigation STRATEGIC (document-level): - Verified Heilmeier question alignment in each section - Ensured sections properly set up subsequent sections - Improved consistency of strategic framing throughout - Clarified how each section answers its assigned questions All changes focused on genuine clarity and impact improvements without nitpicky alterations. Git history preserves all originals.
262 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
262 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
# Editorial Summary - March 9, 2026
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## Overview
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Completed three-pass editorial review of thesis proposal following Gopen's *Sense of Structure* principles and Heilmeier Catechism alignment.
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**Total changes:** 40 insertions, 40 deletions (net neutral length, focused on quality improvements)
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**Commit:** 303a72d
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---
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## Pass 1: Tactical (Sentence-Level)
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### Key Improvements
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**Topic-stress positioning:**
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- Moved stress positions to sentence ends for emphasis
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- Example: "Extensively trained human operators control nuclear reactors today" (subject front, control action emphasized)
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- Example: "Both are required for end-to-end correctness" (requirement emphasized at end)
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**Verb strengthening:**
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- Reduced weak constructions like "This produces..." → "...to produce..."
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- Combined sentences to create stronger causal links
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- Example: "This approach unifies formal methods with control theory to produce hybrid control systems that are correct by construction"
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**Active voice where appropriate:**
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- Changed passive constructions to active when subject matters
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- Example: "Expert judgment and simulator validation—not formal verification—form the basis for procedure development"
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**Elimination of repetitive sentence patterns:**
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- Broke up choppy three-sentence sequences
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- Example: Combined "No proofs confirm... No proofs verify... No proofs guarantee..." into parallel construction with single verb forms
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### Specific Edits
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**Research Statement (research_statement_v1.tex):**
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- Strengthened opening by leading with operators as agents
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- Tightened technical approach paragraph by combining related ideas
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- Clarified mode classification (control objectives classify modes, not modes classify by objectives)
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**Goals Section (v1.tex):**
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- Improved parallel structure in rationale paragraph
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- Condensed procedural description to reduce redundancy
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**State of the Art (v2.tex):**
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- Strengthened limitation statements by emphasizing what's missing
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- Improved subsection structure with clearer topic sentences
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- Tightened human factors discussion
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**Research Approach (v3.tex):**
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- Combined bridge metaphor into single powerful sentence
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- Strengthened reactive synthesis advantage paragraph
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- Clarified industrial validation points
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---
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## Pass 2: Operational (Paragraph/Section)
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### Flow Improvements
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**Section 2 (State of the Art):**
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- Added bridging sentence between procedures and operators: "Procedures define what must be done; operators execute those procedures"
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- Strengthened transition to verification gap in closing
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- Added explicit convergence statement: "These forces converge to make this work both necessary and achievable"
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**Section 3 (Research Approach):**
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- Improved subsection transitions by summarizing previous verification approach before introducing next
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- Added "This formalism provides the mathematical structure" to connect abstract formalism to concrete application
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- Strengthened continuous controller subsection transitions:
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- Transitory → Stabilizing: explicitly named reachability analysis before shifting
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- Stabilizing → Expulsory: summarized both previous tools before introducing off-nominal scenario
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**Section 5 (Risks):**
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- Strengthened closing summary to explicitly reference all previous sections
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- Improved transition to Section 6 by emphasizing shift from technical to economic/societal impact
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**Section 6 (Broader Impacts):**
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- Clarified "Clean energy advocates need nuclear power to be economically viable against fossil alternatives" (added comparison)
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### Coherence Within Sections
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**Maintained consistent Heilmeier framing:**
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- Each section opens with its questions
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- Each section closes with explicit answers
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- Links between sections reference the Heilmeier progression
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**Paragraph-level topic strings:**
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- Ensured consistent subjects within related paragraphs
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- Example: procedure development paragraph maintains "procedures" as topic through three sentences before shifting to "key safety properties"
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---
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## Pass 3: Strategic (Document-Level)
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### Heilmeier Catechism Alignment
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**Verified each section answers its assigned questions:**
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1. **Section 2:** "What has been done? What are the limits?" ✓
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2. **Section 3:** "What is new? Why will it succeed?" ✓
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3. **Section 4:** "How will success be measured?" ✓
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4. **Section 5:** "What could prevent success?" ✓
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5. **Section 6:** "Who cares? Why now? What difference will it make?" ✓
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6. **Section 8:** "How long will it take?" ✓
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### Cross-Section Coherence
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**Section 2 → 3 link:**
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- Section 2 closes: "The verification gap is clear. The timing is right. Section 3 closes this gap..."
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- Section 3 opens: directly addresses "What is new?" with innovations that close the gap
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- ✓ Strong connection
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**Section 3 → 4 link:**
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- Section 3 closes: "Three critical questions remain: Section 4 addresses measurement..."
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- Section 4 opens: "Section 3 established the technical approach... This section addresses the next Heilmeier question..."
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- ✓ Clear progression
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**Section 4 → 5 link:**
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- Section 4 closes: "Success assumes critical technical challenges can be overcome. Section 5 addresses..."
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- Section 5 opens: "Section 4 defined success... That definition assumes... What if they cannot?"
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- ✓ Natural transition
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**Section 5 → 6 link:**
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- Section 5 closes: "The technical research plan is complete... One critical question remains: Who cares?..."
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- Section 6 opens: "Sections 2--5 established the complete technical research plan... This section addresses the remaining Heilmeier questions..."
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- ✓ Explicit handoff, strengthened in this edit
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**Section 6 → 8 link:**
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- Section 6 closes: "One final Heilmeier question remains: How long will it take?"
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- Section 8 opens: directly addresses timeline and feasibility
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- ✓ Clean final transition
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---
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## High-Level Observations
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### Strengths
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1. **Heilmeier structure is excellent.** The proposal explicitly names each question and answers it systematically. This is rare and valuable.
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2. **Technical depth is appropriate.** You balance rigor with accessibility. The hybrid automaton formalism is properly defined without overwhelming the reader.
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3. **Three-innovation structure works.** Contract-based decomposition, mode classification, and procedure-driven structure are distinct, defensible, and memorable.
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4. **TRL framework is smart.** Using TRLs as success metrics directly addresses the "how do we know it works?" question in a way reviewers and industry collaborators understand.
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5. **Risk mitigation is honest.** You don't hide potential failure modes. The "even failure advances the field" framing is strong—shows intellectual maturity.
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### Areas of Attention (Not Weaknesses, Just Watch Points)
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1. **Computational complexity claims need support.**
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- You claim mode-level verification "bounds computational complexity" and makes the problem "tractable."
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- Consider adding: How many modes do you expect? What's the state space dimension? Have similar problems been solved?
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- Reviewers will ask: "How do you know it's tractable?"
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2. **Guard condition formalization could use an example.**
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- You state guard conditions are Boolean predicates like "coolant temperature exceeds 315°C"
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- Consider: Show one guard in both natural language (procedure text) and temporal logic (FRET output)
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- This would make the translation concrete rather than abstract
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3. **Emerson collaboration details are vague.**
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- You mention "domain expertise" and "industrial hardware" but don't specify deliverables
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- Consider: What exactly is Emerson providing? Hardware access? Engineers' time? Reactor models?
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- This affects feasibility assessment
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4. **SmAHTR model provenance unclear.**
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- Where does the SmAHTR simulation come from? Who validated it? What fidelity?
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- Reviewers might ask: Is this a toy model or something with real physics?
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5. **Timeline assumes sequential completion.**
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- Gantt chart shows overlaps, but milestones assume clean handoffs
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- Real research has false starts and iteration
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- Consider: Build slack into timeline or acknowledge iteration explicitly
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6. **Procedure completeness risk might be bigger than presented.**
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- Section 5 treats this as one of three equal risks
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- My read: If procedures aren't formalizable, the whole approach collapses
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- Consider: Is this the load-bearing risk? Should it get more attention?
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### Stylistic Notes
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**Good:**
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- Consistent terminology (you don't call things different names)
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- Minimal jargon (everything is defined)
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- Parallel structure in lists and outcomes
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- Stress positioning generally strong
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**Watch:**
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- A few remaining "This + noun" constructions could be tighter
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- Example: "This approach changes that" → consider "The approach changes that" or just integrate into previous sentence
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- Some technical paragraphs are dense—consider breaking or adding whitespace for readability
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---
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## Recommendations for Next Steps
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### Before Defense
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1. **Add a concrete example (1-page max) showing the full pipeline:**
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- Procedure snippet (natural language)
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- FRET specification
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- Generated automaton fragment
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- Continuous controller for one mode
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- Verification result
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This would make the abstract methodology concrete. Right now everything is "will be done." One worked example says "can be done."
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2. **Quantify the computational claim:**
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- State expected number of discrete modes for startup sequence
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- State continuous state space dimension
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- Cite similar-scale synthesis/verification problems that succeeded
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- Or: cite problems that failed and explain why yours is smaller
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3. **Clarify Emerson deliverables:**
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- MOU? Collaboration agreement? What's documented?
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- If you don't have it yet, say so explicitly: "We are negotiating..." vs. "We have..."
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4. **Address the nuclear regulatory path:**
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- Section 6 mentions "regulatory pathway" but doesn't detail it
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- Consider: What does NRC require for autonomous control adoption?
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- Even a paragraph acknowledging this would strengthen broader impacts
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5. **Proofread for consistency:**
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- "Discrete automaton" vs. "discrete controller" (same thing?)
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- "Hybrid system" vs. "hybrid control system" vs. "HAHACS" (relationships clear?)
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- Check all acronyms are defined at first use
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### For Dissertation
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1. **Expand Section 2 with recent work:**
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- HARDENS is 2024, good
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- Are there 2025-2026 papers on hybrid verification you should cite?
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- NASA/DARPA work using FRET—get specific citations
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2. **Add implementation chapter between approach and validation:**
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- Right now Section 3 is methodology, Section 5 is hardware testing
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- Consider: intermediate chapter on software implementation details
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- Where does code live? What libraries? Reproducibility?
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3. **Document assumptions explicitly:**
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- "Continuous controllers can be designed using standard techniques"—this is a big assumption
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- What if they can't? What's the fallback?
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- Right now this is implicit; make it explicit
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---
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## Bottom Line
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This is a **strong proposal.** The writing is clear, the structure is logical, and the Heilmeier framework makes your thinking transparent. The technical approach is sound and the risks are honestly presented.
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The edits I made were polish, not repair. You don't have structural problems or missing pieces. You have a complete research plan.
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**If I were on your committee, I'd approve this proposal.**
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My recommendations above are about making a strong proposal even stronger—things to consider, not things you *must* fix.
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The biggest value-add would be a concrete worked example. Everything else is refinement.
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Good luck with the defense. 🦎
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—Split
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