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WORLDCOMP'10 Tutorial: Dr. Brian J. d'Auriol

Last modified 2010-06-22 18:30


Visualization for the Beginner, the Researcher, the Advanced Architect and Whoever Else ...
Dr. Brian J. d'Auriol
Kyung Hee University, Korea

Date: July 13, 2010
Time: 6:00-9:30 PM
Location: Copper Room


DESCRIPTION

    The proliferation of low and moderate cost visualization enabled systems and applications have brought the potential of high quality visualizations to end user communities. There is a wide-spread and increasing popularity and adoption of visualization as an effective means to present information and data. However, in many cases, visualizations are constrained by the particular system and users may have only limited background in visualization. In its simplest application, a graph or other picture is sufficient to get the point across. In these cases, the visualization designer may rely on intuition and experience to construct the visual. However, in most cases, a deeper knowledge of the end user’s requirements combined with more effective visual displays facilitates the end user’s understanding of the information or data. In mission or time critical applications, the presented information should be understood in as short an amount of time as possible. This tutorial covers information and data modeling, visualization modeling, a compendium of information and data data visualization techniques ranging from simple visual presentations to more advanced presentations, and various visualization related aspects such as the use of color, shapes, interactions and metrics. Topics and examples range from simple applications suitable for practical applications to research level concepts. A ‘hands-on’ paper-based and question-answer style engages the tutorial participants.


OBJECTIVES

    This tutorial will:
      • enable the participants to understand more about the visualization processes, techniques and related aspects that can be used to provide effective visualizations,
      • survey various visualization applications and systems,
      • pose research level questions that may motivate research activities,

INTENDED AUDIENCE

    This tutorial is intended for faculty, engineers, scientists, department managers and policy makers, and students who wish to learn about how to more effectively present information and data visually.

BIOGRAPHY OF INSTRUCTOR

    Brian J. d'Auriol received the BSc(CS) and Ph.D. degrees from the University of New Brunswick in 1988 and 1995, respectively. Currently, he is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Computer Engineering at Kyung Hee University, Global Campus, Republic of Korea. Previously, he had been a researcher at the Ohio Supercomputer Center, USA and Assistant Professor at The University of Texas at El Paso, USA and at The University of Manitoba, Canada; and a Visiting Assistant Professor at The University of Akron, USA, and Wright State University, USA. He has organized and chaired the International Conference on Communications in Computing (CIC) 2000-2008 and the 11th Annual International Symposium on High Performance Computing Systems (HPCS'97) in 1997. He has published over 70 papers in international journals and conferences. His research includes information and data visualization, optical bus computing models and ubiquitous sensor networks. He is a member of the ACM and IEEE (Computer Society).

Academic Co-Sponsors
The Berkeley Initiative in Soft Computing (BISC)
University of California, Berkeley, USA

Collaboratory for Advanced Computing and Simulations (CACS)
University of Southern California, USA

Intelligent Data Exploration and Analysis Laboratory
University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA

Harvard Statistics Department Genomics & Bioinformatics Laboratory
Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

BioMedical Informatics & Bio-Imaging Laboratory
Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA


Hawkeye Radiology Informatics, Department of Radiology, College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa, USA

Minnesota Supercomputing Institute
University of Minnesota, USA

Center for the Bioinformatics and Computational Genomics
Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia, USA

Medical Image HPC & Informatics Lab (MiHi Lab)
University of Iowa, Iowa, USA


The University of North Dakota
Grand Forks, North Dakota, USA


NDSU-CIIT Green Computing and Communications Laboratory

Knowledge Management & Intelligent System Center (KMIS)
University of Siegen, Germany

UMIT, Institute of Bioinformatics and Translational Research, Austria
SECLAB of University of Naples Federico II
University of Naples Parthenope, & Second University of Naples, Italy

National Institute for Health Research
World Academy of Biomedical Sciences and Technologies
High Performance Computing for Nanotechnology (HPCNano)
Supercomputer Software Department (SSD), Institute of Computational Mathematics & Mathematical Geophysics, Russian Academy of Sciences

International Society of Intelligent Biological Medicine

The International Council on Medical and Care Compunetics

The UK Department for Business, Innovation and Skills

VMW Solutions Ltd.
Scientific Technologies Corporation
HoIP - Health without Boundaries

Space for Earth Foundation
Medical Modeling and Simulation Database (EVMS) of Eastern Virginia Medical School & the American College of Surgeons

Corporate Sponsor


Other Co-Sponsors
Manjrasoft (Cloud Computing Technology company), Melbourne, Australia

Hodges' Health


 


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