Publication statistics

Pub. period:1991-2005
Pub. count:15
Number of co-authors:27



Co-authors

Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:

Pak Chung Wong:8
Harlan Foote:5
Dan Adams:3

 

 

Productive colleagues

Jim Thomas's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:

Pak Chung Wong:18
Stephen C. North:16
Harlan Foote:8
 
 
 
May 19

Design can be art. Design can be aesthetics. Design is so simple, that's why it is so complicated.

-- Paul Rand, 1997

 
 

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Jim Thomas

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Publications by Jim Thomas (bibliography)

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2005
 
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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.

2004
 
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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. .

 
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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.

 
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Wong, Pak Chung and Thomas, Jim (2004): Visual Analytics. In IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications, 24 (5) pp. 20-21.

2003
 
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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.

 
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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. .

2000
 
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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.

 
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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-.

 
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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.

1999
 
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Wong, Pak Chung, Whitney, Paul and Thomas, Jim (1999): Visualizing Association Rules for Text Mining. In: InfoVis 1999 1999. pp. 120-123.

1998
 
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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-.

1996
 
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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) .

 
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Thomas, Jim (1996): When Cyberresearch Goes Awry: The Ethics of the Rimm 'Cyberporn' Study. In The Information Society, 12 (2) .

1991
 
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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.

Although many automated tools support the productivity of professionals (engineers, managers, architects, secretaries, etc.), none specifically address the needs of the scientific researcher. The scientist's needs are complex and the primary activities are cognitive rather than physical. The individual scientist collects and manipulates large data sets, integrates, synthesizes, generates, and records information. The means to access and manipulate information are a critical determinant of the performance of the system as a whole. One hindrance in this process is the scientist's computer environment, which has changed little in the last two decades. Extensive time and effort is demanded from the scientist to learn to use the computer system. This paper describes how chemists' activities and interactions with information were abstracted into a common paradigm that meets the critical requirement of facilitating information access and retrieval. This paradigm was embodied in EASI, a working prototype that increased the productivity of the individual scientific researcher.

© All rights reserved Schur et al. and/or Human Factors Society

 
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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.

Although many automated tools support the productivity of professionals (engineers, managers, architects, secretaries, etc.), none specifically address the needs of the scientific researcher. The scientist's needs are complex and the primary activities are cognitive rather than physical. The individual scientist collects and manipulates large data sets, integrates, synthesizes, generates, and records information. The means to access and manipulate information are a critical determinant of the performance of the system as a whole. One hindrance in this process is the scientist's computer environment, which has changed little in the last two decades. Extensive time and effort is demanded from the scientist to learn to use the computer system. A common paradigm that meets the critical requirement of facilitating information access and retrieval by the chemist is demonstrated. This paradigm was embodied in EASI, a working prototype that increased the productivity of the individual scientific researcher.

© All rights reserved Schur et al. and/or Human Factors Society

 
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Page maintainer: The Editorial Team
URL: http://www.interaction-design.org/references/authors/jim_thomas.html

Publication statistics

Pub. period:1991-2005
Pub. count:15
Number of co-authors:27



Co-authors

Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:

Pak Chung Wong:8
Harlan Foote:5
Dan Adams:3

 

 

Productive colleagues

Jim Thomas's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:

Pak Chung Wong:18
Stephen C. North:16
Harlan Foote:8
 
 
 
May 19

Design can be art. Design can be aesthetics. Design is so simple, that's why it is so complicated.

-- Paul Rand, 1997

 
 

Featured chapter

Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann

Read Steve's chapter !

 
 

Help us help you!