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From Data to Knowledge Making Sense and Meaning in an Information World

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From Data to Knowledge Making Sense and Meaning in an Information World
AT&T Executive Education & Conference Center, Room 102
Location
Venue

AT&T Executive Education & Conference Center, Room 102

Address

1900 University Ave

Austin, Texas

United States

Event Dates
2/6/2013 11:30 AM - 1:00 PM
Event Details

From Data to Knowledge: Making Sense and Meaning in an Information World - Feb 6, 2013

by Gayle Hight on November 16, 2012

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"What we are unleashing upon ourselves is profound, life changing and it requires study. Forty per cent of the time you are interacting with information spaces, you are trying to recover from error, to organize information, to make sense of what you are seeing. What should be there, might have been there, could have been put there, what once was there. That is the reality of the information infrastructure and the environment we have created. " Dr. Andrew Dillon, Dean, UT School of Information.

RSVP: Sorry, this event is SOLD OUT. A synopsis and full video will be posted on the Texas Enterprise site in mid-February.

When Wednesday, February 6, 2013

11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.

Where

AT&T Executive Education & Conference Center

Room 203

1900 University Ave.

Austin, TX 78705

Cost $20. Includes box lunch. Reservations are limited. Walk-ups are welcome on a space available basis. A limited number of lunches may be available for purchase.

Parking Garage parking is available at the AT&T Conference Center.

Event Description

The explosion in new information tools and services can require us to engage in continual information navigation at the expense of comprehension. In his talk, Dillon will explain how the ability to exploit technology is as much a psychological as a technological problem. Dr. Dillon will review:

Human civilization has moved through several information ages to reach the current situation.

How our information processing capacity is limited by our underlying architecture and how to design for this, not against it.

How future tools can augment natural human psychology and how this might be exploited to our advantage and our disadvantage.

You Will Learn -

How your own information-processing tendencies are influenced by tools and by your own psychological makeup.

To manage your own and your organization's information-seeking activities.

To recognize the sweep of information technologies and to distinguish the hype from the reality of any new information tool.

BIO

Andrew Dillon is the Dean, School of Information at The University of Texas at Austin. 
He is the Louis T. Yule Regents Professor of Information, Professor of Psychology, and Information, Risk & Operations Management

.

Ph.D. Loughborough University of Technology

B.A., M.A. University College Cork

Dr. Dillon has been an active researcher of the human response to information technology for the last 20 years, graduating from the National University of Ireland (M.A. first class) and Loughborough University of Technology before being appointed Research Fellow at the Human Sciences & Advanced Technology Research Institute in the UK. He moved to Indiana University in 1994 where, amongst other duties, he developed and served as the founding Director of the Masters in Human- Computer Interaction at the School of Informatics.

Dillon joined the University of Texas at Austin in January 2002 as dean and professor of the School of Information. Defying professional categorization, he has held appointments in departments or schools of cognitive science, computer science, psychology, instructional systems technology, management information systems, library and information science, and informatics. Having published more than 100 articles and books on various aspects of human information behavior and design, Dillon serves or has served on the editorial boards of many leading journals such as the International Journal of Human-Computer Studies, Interacting with Computers, the Journal of Documentation, and the Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. He has received research funding from NSF, Microsoft, and CEC among others.

Texas Enterprise Speaker Series Sponsors:

AT&T Executive Education and Conference Center

Strategic Partnerships

Learn More: From Data to Knowledge Making Sense and Meaning in an Information World

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