Doug Smith - Assistant Professor

Ocean and Naval Architectural Engineering

Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science

a headshot

B.Eng (2011) - Memorial University of Newfoundland
M.Eng (2014) - Memorial University of Newfoundland
PhD (2019) - Memorial University of Newfoundland


About

I joined the Ocean and Naval Architectural Engineering department at Memorial University of Newfoundland
as an Assistant Professor in September of 2019. I received a bachelor's degree in Ocean and Naval Architectural
Engineering in 2011 from Memorial University of Newfoundland. I received a master's degree in Ocean and
Naval Architectural Engineering in 2014 from Memorial University of Newfoundland. The focus of my masters
work was in marine hydrodynamics, specifically in the hydrodynamic interactions of two floating bodies at close
proximity. I received a doctoral degree in Ocean and Naval Architecture in 2019 from Memorial University of
Newfoundland. The focus of my PhD work was on safety management for Arctic shipping. The approach
to safety considered human factors, Safety II, and resilience concepts. Operations are seen as so called
socio-technical systems, where they are modelled and monitored using the functional resonance analysis
method (FRAM) and resilience measurement techniques.

Since joining Memorial in 2019 I have taught a wide variety of Naval Architecture courses and have been
actively supervising graduate students, at both the masters and PhD level. My research interests involve improving
the methodological frameworks that exist to consider human factors and resilience in organizational safety contexts,
as well as, using these novel techniques in practice to demonstrate their utility and, hopefully, make impactful
contributions to safety in practice. Since my approach to safety focuses, more generally, on modelling socio-technical
systems, it is not only limited to application in Naval Architecture. This has led interdisciplinary collaborations
involving functional modelling of healthcare/nursing and community infrastructures


Courses


Publications

Click the links below to be redirected to an online publication database/profile for my publications

More to come soon...


Software

A software, DynaFRAM, has been developed to visualize dynamic scenarios in FRAM models. This
software is a companion software to the FRAM model Visualizer (FMV). DynaFRAM allows the specifics
of an event or instantiation to be animated using the original "static" FRAM models. For more information
on DynaFRAM and to download it click here.


Contact

Office: EN4039
Phone: 709-864-8470
Email: d.smith[at]mun.ca

Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science
S.J. Carew Building
Memorial University of Newfoundland
St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada
A1B 3X5