This talk discusses various aspects of working with data: the choices that we make when we create data, when we analyze data, and some of the social implications of those choices
In this presentation, Patti Condon discusses how we, as information professionals, can tailor our me...
Lecture for the course CSC 59970: Intro to Data Science (Week Eleven) delivered at the City Colleg...
Presented by Amy Stout at ASEE Annual Conference, June 24-27, 2007, Honolulu, HIThere’s a famous al...
(Please note that a revised version of this post has been published in the Journal for Digital Human...
You’ve probably heard a lot of “futurists” talk about data, but it’s not always clear how data relat...
One person’s signal is another’s noise. Data exist in the eye of the beholder; they are neither prod...
Our world is full of data and of analyses of these data. Why are we doing to our data what we are do...
Nicole Coleman, Stanford University What is data? Dictionaries define it as structured in...
Enthusiasm for big data is obscuring the complexity and diversity of data in scholarship and the cha...
As the understanding of science increasingly requires thinking about complex interconnected systems ...
Workshop at the Quasicon 2016 Conference, University of Michigan School of Information, Ann Arbor, M...
This chapter sets out to illustrate the dictum that there is (almost) nothing new under the sun. Mor...
223 pagesIt takes a lot of human work to do data science, and this thesis explains what that work is...
Data are increasingly interwoven in various aspects of our social lives. In our everyday and profess...
Computational projects such as Wordle can simplify our lives by extracting data and presenting it in...
In this presentation, Patti Condon discusses how we, as information professionals, can tailor our me...
Lecture for the course CSC 59970: Intro to Data Science (Week Eleven) delivered at the City Colleg...
Presented by Amy Stout at ASEE Annual Conference, June 24-27, 2007, Honolulu, HIThere’s a famous al...
(Please note that a revised version of this post has been published in the Journal for Digital Human...
You’ve probably heard a lot of “futurists” talk about data, but it’s not always clear how data relat...
One person’s signal is another’s noise. Data exist in the eye of the beholder; they are neither prod...
Our world is full of data and of analyses of these data. Why are we doing to our data what we are do...
Nicole Coleman, Stanford University What is data? Dictionaries define it as structured in...
Enthusiasm for big data is obscuring the complexity and diversity of data in scholarship and the cha...
As the understanding of science increasingly requires thinking about complex interconnected systems ...
Workshop at the Quasicon 2016 Conference, University of Michigan School of Information, Ann Arbor, M...
This chapter sets out to illustrate the dictum that there is (almost) nothing new under the sun. Mor...
223 pagesIt takes a lot of human work to do data science, and this thesis explains what that work is...
Data are increasingly interwoven in various aspects of our social lives. In our everyday and profess...
Computational projects such as Wordle can simplify our lives by extracting data and presenting it in...
In this presentation, Patti Condon discusses how we, as information professionals, can tailor our me...
Lecture for the course CSC 59970: Intro to Data Science (Week Eleven) delivered at the City Colleg...
Presented by Amy Stout at ASEE Annual Conference, June 24-27, 2007, Honolulu, HIThere’s a famous al...