Publication statistics

Pub. period:1993-1999
Pub. count:8
Number of co-authors:5



Co-authors

Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:

Robert Spence:4
Huw Dawkes:3
Hua Su:2

 

 

Productive colleagues

Lisa Tweedie's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:

Philip J. Barnard:47
Robert Spence:34
Jon May:18
 
 
 
Jun 19

... there are no simple 'right' answers for most web design questions (at least not for the important ones). What works is good, integrated design that fills a need--carefully thought out, well executed, and tested.

-- Steve Krug, Don't Make Me Think, p. 136

 
 

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Lisa Tweedie

Picture of Lisa Tweedie. Copyright unknown.
Current place of employment:
University of Bath

Lisa is a visiting researcher at the University of Bath, Department of Computer Science.

Her current interests include: Slow Technology, Interaction Design, Technology for everyone, Visualization; Applying Design Theory to Interactivity, Dyslexia, Dyspraxia and Home Education.

Lisa is interested in technology that creates a positive "presence" in our lives rather than adds yet another source of stress. She believes that perceptual artifacts e.g. graphical, aural and tactile objects can enhance this sense of presence. She would love the opportunity to study the design theory of such interactive artefacts. She would argue that Technology design today is market led based around the pace of business. However that does not fit in with the pace of the lives of the vast majority of the worlds population: children, the elderly, carers, non-business people, rural populations, developing world populations … these people tend to travel through their day in a fairly haphazard manner, they take on new things slowly and minimal solutions tend to suffice. Thus she would call for a "slow technology" which is conservative about change and where the design focus is on simple sustainable solutions.

Lisa maintains an active collaboration with her former Supervisor Professor Robert Spence at Imperial College, London. She recently enjoyed many energetic discussion with him over the structure and content of the rewrite of his book "Information Visualization" due out late 2006.

Lisa started out doing a design based course in "Engineering Product Design" at South Bank Polytechnic. This gave her a great initial design training but she soon realised she wanted to follow a career in more human based design and switched to a degree in Human Psychology at Aston University which had a HCI, AI, Cog. Science and Ergonomics components. Her final year project was on the use of maps in Hypertext.

She then went to work as a research assistant to Phil Barnard at the Medical Research Council Applied Psychology Unit. Her research work involved lengthy experimental investigations into visual search of icon arrays. She also created the AnimICS animations that Phil used to illustrate his theory. During her time there she was able to meet and get to know many userati both at the APU and Europarc.

Bob Spence then invited her to do a PhD with him at Imperial College in the Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering. The Thesis "Exploiting Interactivity in Graphical Problem Solving: from visual cues to insight" was defended in 1997. Imperial was an exciting and eclectic international environment. She and Bob and the team around them created several innovative new visualization tools for raw data and statistical models. These included: the attribute explorer (since reimplemented by IBM), the prosection matrix and the influence explorer.

In 1996 She cowrote a sucessful EPSRC proposal for Post-Doctoral research with Professor John Nelder, Professor Robert Spence and Zahid Malik into visualisation tools for statistical modelling.  She was also Local Co-ordinator for the British HCI Conference held at Imperial College.

In 1998 she left academia to broaden her horizons in industry. She worked as an Interaction Designer at Nortel Networks designing visualization tools for network management and also the front end for a telephone fraud software based on genetic algorithms (SuperSleuth). She is a co-author on two patents based on this work.

In 1999 she moved to work for Oracle at Thames Valley Park on their UML Modelling tools. She helped design and test the tools that are now in Oracles Jdeveloper (a Java integrated development environment). It was both satisfying and terrifying to watch a software product come to market! She left Oracle in 2003.

In 2005 she taught an interaction design masters course and a final year Undergraduate Advanced HCI course in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Bath.

Lisa has an active home life with her partner, three young children, two fish and lots of stick insects. 

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Publications by Lisa Tweedie (bibliography)

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1999
 
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Tweedie, Lisa (1999): Characterizing Interactive Externalisations. In: Card, Stuart K., Mackinlay, Jock D. and Shneiderman, Ben (eds.). "Readings in Information Visualization: Using Vision to Think". Academic Presspp. 616-624

1998
 
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Spence, Robert and Tweedie, Lisa (1998): The Attribute Explorer: Information Synthesis via Exploration. In Interacting with Computers, 11 (2) pp. 137-146.

The Attribute Explorer is a visualization tool in which the graphical and interactive presentation of data supports the human acquisition of insight into that data. The underlying concept employed is that of interactive linked histograms. The advantage of the Attribute Explorer derives from its ability to support both qualitative exploration and quantitative design decisions, as well as a smooth transition between these two activities.

© All rights reserved Spence and Tweedie and/or Elsevier Science

1997
 
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Tweedie, Lisa (1997): Characterizing Interactive Externalizations. In: Pemberton, Steven (ed.) Proceedings of the ACM CHI 97 Human Factors in Computing Systems Conference March 22-27, 1997, Atlanta, Georgia. pp. 375-382.

This paper seeks to characterize the space of techniques that exist for interactive externalisations (visualisations). A selection of visualisations are classified with respect to: the types of data represented, the nature of the visible feedback displayed and the forms of interactivity used. Such characterization provides a method for evaluating potential designs and comparing different tools.

© All rights reserved Tweedie and/or ACM Press

1996
 
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Tweedie, Lisa, Spence, Robert, Dawkes, Huw and Su, Hua (1996): Externalising Abstract Mathematical Models. In: Tauber, Michael J., Bellotti, Victoria, Jeffries, Robin, Mackinlay, Jock D. and Nielsen, Jakob (eds.) Proceedings of the ACM CHI 96 Human Factors in Computing Systems Conference April 14-18, 1996, Vancouver, Canada. pp. 406-412.

Abstract mathematical models play an important part in engineering design, economic decision making and other activities. Such models can be externalised in the form of Interactive Visualisation Artifacts (IVAs). These IVAs display the data generated by mathematical models in simple graphs which are interactively linked. Visual examination of these graphs enables users to acquire insight into the complex relations embodied in the model. In the engineering context this insight can be exploited to aid design. The paper describes two IVAs for engineering design: The Influence Explorer and The Prosection Matrix. Formative evaluation studies are briefly discussed.

© All rights reserved Tweedie et al. and/or ACM Press

 
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Dawkes, Huw, Tweedie, Lisa and Spence, Robert (1996): VICKI: the VIsualisation Construction KIt. In: Catarci, Tiziana, Costabile, Maria Francesca, Levialdi, Stefano and Santucci, Giuseppe (eds.) AVI 1996 - Proceedings of the workshop on Advanced visual interfaces May 27-29, 1996, Gubbio, Italy. pp. 257-259.

1995
 
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Tweedie, Lisa (1995): Interactive Visualisation Artifacts: How can Abstractions Inform Design?. In: Kirby, M. A. R., Dix, Alan J. and Finlay, Janet E. (eds.) Proceedings of the Tenth Conference of the British Computer Society Human Computer Interaction Specialist Group - People and Computers X August, 1995, Huddersfield, UK. pp. 247-265.

Interactive visualisation artifacts (IVAs) are complex applications that allow users to manipulate, encode and organise data graphically. These systems are difficult to design well. This paper argues that abstractions can be used to evaluate such designs. These abstractions need to focus on the task and artifact. This paper presents both qualitative abstractions of the task and a semi-formal notation to describe IVAs (DIVA). Examples of this notation in use are given and the insights that this provides are discussed.

© All rights reserved Tweedie and/or Cambridge University Press

 
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Spence, Robert, Tweedie, Lisa, Dawkes, Huw and Su, Hua (1995): Visualization for functional design. In: Gershon, Nahum D. and Eick, Stephen G. (eds.) InfoVis 1995 - IEEE Symposium On Information Visualization 30-31 October, 1995, Atlanta, Georgia, USA. pp. 4-10.

1993
 
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May, Jon, Tweedie, Lisa and Barnard, Philip J. (1993): Modelling User Performance in Visually Based Interactions. In: Alty, James L., Diaper, Dan and Guest, D. (eds.) Proceedings of the Eighth Conference of the British Computer Society Human Computer Interaction Specialist Group - People and Computers VIII August 7-10, 1993, Loughborough University, UK. pp. 95-110.

This paper outlines a general technique for analysing user performance in visually based interactions. Such interactions are modelled as an evaluation process in which the user compares the visual structure of an object with an internally-generated propositional representation of the target. The content and structure of this propositional representation is dependent upon the context within which the target has been learnt and searched for previously. The technique is used to frame a specific model of icon search, and an experiment is described which tests the model against icon sets with different visual structures, and by keeping one set of icons constant but changing the context within which they are presented. The results provide general support for the technique, with icon search times being affected both by the number of icons which contain the 'psychological subject' of the target icon, and by the depth to which the propositional representations must be evaluated before icons can be rejected or accepted as the target.

© All rights reserved May et al. and/or Cambridge University Press

 
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Changes to this page (author)

19 Jun 2009: Modified
17 Jun 2009: Modified
28 Apr 2003: Added

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URL: http://www.interaction-design.org/references/authors/lisa_tweedie.html

Publication statistics

Pub. period:1993-1999
Pub. count:8
Number of co-authors:5



Co-authors

Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:

Robert Spence:4
Huw Dawkes:3
Hua Su:2

 

 

Productive colleagues

Lisa Tweedie's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:

Philip J. Barnard:47
Robert Spence:34
Jon May:18
 
 
 
Jun 19

... there are no simple 'right' answers for most web design questions (at least not for the important ones). What works is good, integrated design that fills a need--carefully thought out, well executed, and tested.

-- Steve Krug, Don't Make Me Think, p. 136

 
 

Featured chapter

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

Read Steve's chapter !

 
 

Latest books

The Social Design of Technical Systems: Building technologies for communities
by Brian Whitworth and Adnan Ahmad

 
Start reading

The Encyclopedia of Human-Computer Interaction, 2nd Ed.
by Mads Soegaard and Rikke Friis Dam

 
Start reading
 
 

Help us help you!