Dealing with Huge Amounts of Information
28 Apr 1998 18:58
Facts don't do what I want them to
Limits of human attention; filtering; searching; broad-catch; information
overload (does it exist?); information underload ("everything I know is
wrong!"); sensory overload; visual display; effects of visual displays on the
thoughts of their users (e.g., do astronomers come to think that Saturn really
does have the colors they assign to different UV frequencies?); use of senses
other than sight.
Do the practices of detector
electronics suggest any general strategies?
Simulation.
See:
- Stewart Brand, The Media Lab
- Alfred Crosby, The Measure of Reality [Early history of
quantification]
- David Gelernter, Mirror Worlds
- Gary King, A Solution to the Ecological Inference Problem:
Reconstructing Individual Behavior from Aggregate Data [Review]
- Metropolis and Rota (eds.), A New Era in Computation
- The Onion, Congress Passes
Freedom from Information Act
- Edward R. Tufte [How to make graphics which are actually worth
botthering with]
- The Visual Display of Quantitative Information
- Visual Explanations
To read:
- A. Capocci, F. Slanina and Y.-C. Zhang, "Filtering information in a
connected network," cond-mat/0207362 [An
interesting problem, even if it does not "introduce a new kind of
information theory"]
- Stephen Hall, Mapping the Next Millennium
- Gregory Kramer (ed.), Auditory Display: Sonification,
Audification, and Auditory Interfaces
- National Research Council, Massive Data Sets
- Pickover (ed.), Frontiers of Scientific Visualization.
- Tufte, Envisioning Information
- Pramod K. Varshney, Distributed Detection and Data
Fusion
- D. O. Whiteson and N. A. Naumann, "Support-vector regression as a
signal discriminator in high-energy phyiscs," Neurocomputing 55
(2003): 251--264
- John Willinsky, Technologies of Knowing: A Proposal for the
Human Sciences
- Richard Zippel, Electronic Notebooks
Too much information
Running through my brain
Too much information
Driving me insane
(Alright, so that's the Police, not T. Heads. So sue me.)