Pub. period:1991-2005
Pub. count:15
Number of co-authors:27
Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:
Pak Chung Wong:8Jim Thomas's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:
Pak Chung Wong:18 Design can be art. Design can be aesthetics. Design is so simple, that's why it is so complicated.
-- Paul Rand, 1997
Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann
Read Steve's chapter !
Wong, Pak Chung, Mackey, Patrick, Perrine, Ken, Eagan, James, Foote, Harlan and Thomas, Jim (2005): Dynamic Visualization of Graphs with Extended Labels. In: InfoVis 2005 - IEEE Symposium on Information Visualization 23-25 October, 2005, Minneapolis, MN, USA. p. 10.
Wong, Pak Chung, Hetzler, Elizabeth G., Posse, Christian, Whiting, Mark A., Havre, Susan, Cramer, Nick, Shah, Anuj R., Singhal, Mudita, Turner, Alan and Thomas, Jim (2004): IN-SPIRE InfoVis 2004 Contest Entry. In: InfoVis 2004 - 10th IEEE Symposium on Information Visualization 10-12 October, 2004, Austin, TX, USA. .
Thomas, Jim (2004): New Frontiers for Visualization. In: Deussen, Oliver, Hansen, Charles D., Keim, Daniel A. and Saupe, Dietmar (eds.) VisSym 2004 - Symposium on Visualization May 19-21, 2004, Konstanz, Germany. p. 5.
Wong, Pak Chung and Thomas, Jim (2004): Visual Analytics. In IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications, 24 (5) pp. 20-21.
Jaech, Jeremy, North, Stephen C., Peery, Mike, Schroeder, Will and Thomas, Jim (2003): The Visualization Market: Open Source vs. Commercial Approaches. In: Turk, Greg, Wijk, Jarke J. van and II, Robert J. Moorhead (eds.) 14th IEEE Visualization 2003 Conference VIS 2003 19-24 October, 2003, Seattle, WA, USA. pp. 21-24.
Wong, Pak Chung, Foote, Harlan, Adams, Dan, Cowley, Wendy and Thomas, Jim (2003): Dynamic Visualization of Transient Data Streams. In: InfoVis 2003 - 9th IEEE Symposium on Information Visualization 20-21 October, 2003, Seattle, WA, USA. .
Wong, Pak Chung, Foote, Harlan, Leung, L. Ruby, Jurrus, Elizabeth, Adams, Dan and Thomas, Jim (2000): Vector fields simplification - a case study of visualizing climate modeling and simulation data sets. In: IEEE Visualization 2000 2000. pp. 485-488.
Wong, Pak Chung, Cowley, Wendy, Foote, Harlan, Jurrus, Elizabeth and Thomas, Jim (2000): Visualizing Sequential Patterns for Text Mining. In: InfoVis 2000 2000. pp. 105-.
Wong, Pak Chung, Foote, Harlan, Leung, L. Ruby, Adams, Dan and Thomas, Jim (2000): Data Signatures and Visualization of Scientific Data Sets. In IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications, 20 (2) pp. 12-15.
Wong, Pak Chung, Whitney, Paul and Thomas, Jim (1999): Visualizing Association Rules for Text Mining. In: InfoVis 1999 1999. pp. 120-123.
Hetzler, Elizabeth G., Whitney, Paul, Martucci, Lou and Thomas, Jim (1998): Multi-Faceted Insight Through Interoperable Visual Information Analysis Paradigms. In: InfoVis 1998 - IEEE Symposium on Information Visualization 19-20 October, 1998, Research Triangle Park, NC, USA. pp. 137-.
Thomas, Jim (1996): Introduction: A Debate about the Ethics of Fair Practices for Collecting Social Science Data in Cyberspace. In The Information Society, 12 (2) .
Thomas, Jim (1996): When Cyberresearch Goes Awry: The Ethics of the Rimm 'Cyberporn' Study. In The Information Society, 12 (2) .
Schur, Anne, Feller, Dave, DeVaney, Mike, Thomas, Jim and Yim, Morgan (1991): EASI: An Electronic Assistant for Scientific Investigation. In: Proceedings of the Human Factors Society 35th Annual Meeting 1991. pp. 393-397.
© All rights reserved Schur et al. and/or Human Factors Society
Schur, Anne, Feller, Dave, DeVaney, Mike, Thomas, Jim and Yim, Morgan (1991): An Electronic Assistant for Scientific Investigation Working Prototype. In: Proceedings of the Human Factors Society 35th Annual Meeting 1991. p. 1167.
© All rights reserved Schur et al. and/or Human Factors Society
Pub. period:1991-2005
Pub. count:15
Number of co-authors:27
Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:
Pak Chung Wong:8Jim Thomas's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:
Pak Chung Wong:18 Design can be art. Design can be aesthetics. Design is so simple, that's why it is so complicated.
-- Paul Rand, 1997
Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann
Read Steve's chapter !