News Archive
CIM welcomes Dr Yair Grinberger from Heidelberg University
Dr Yair Grinberger from GIScience Group of the Institute of Geography, Heidelberg University is visiting CIM this week (29 October to 2 November 2018) and will be giving a seminar within the WISC Seminar Series on Thursday (see details below).
Yair is based in the room B1.13 (Social Science Building) and is discussing collaborations with CIM researchers around the topics of urban analytics, time geography and digital ethnographic methods.
We warmly welcome Yair to CIM and look forward to fruitful conversations.
Emma Uprichard on Complexity, Big Data and Policy
Emma Uprichard, Reader at CIM, is presenting her work on “Complexity, Big Data and Policy” in Dublin at , 24-27 October 2018.
New CIM Turing Fellows for 2018-2020
We are pleased to announce that Associate Professor João Porto de Albuquerque and Assistant Professors Greg McInerny and Michael Castelle have been named Turing Fellows at the Alan Turing Institute for 2018-2020, and are 3 of 19 new Turing Fellows from the 91 this year. The Turing Fellowship programme is designed to help increase interaction, collaboration, and research across disciplines related to the fields of data science and AI, as well as to deliver public benefit to the UK and beyond.
Adopting complex ways of working and Making Systems Thinking Real in Government
Emma Uprichard (a reader at CIM) will be presenting her work on complex systems for policy challenges at a series of high-profile events hosted by the Public Service Research Group, UNSW Canberra at ADFA.
Congratulations to CIM PhD student Esteban Damiani who successfully defended his thesis last Friday.
Congratulations to CIM PhD student Esteban Damiani who successfully defended his thesis last Friday. The title of the thesis is 'An ethnography of Facebook and the production of values in a political campaign. A study of the uses of Facebook for the 2014 Frente Amplio national elections in Uruguay'. The examiners were DrAdam Arvidsson and Dr Emma Uprichard.
Commonism (On cohabitation)
Maria Puig de la Bellacasa will be speaking at La Biennale di Venezia within the event Commonism (On cohabitation), part of the Swamp School curated by Nomeda and Gediminas Urbonas (MIT) September 24-29 2018. See full programme here . The title of Maria’s talk (conceived and presented with Dimitris Papadopoulos) is: Eco-commoning in the Aftermath: Sundews, Mangroves and Swamp Insurgencies.
Workshop on platial analysis
Workshop on platial analysis (PLATIAL'18)
The concept of 'place' is about to become one of the major research themes in the interdisciplinary field of geographical information science (GIScience), as well as in adjoining fields. Briefly put, while locations provide objective references (e.g., point coordinates), places are the units utilized by humans to approach the geographic world. On the one hand, the current 'platial turn' is caused by the plethora of particularly urban geographic datasets that have become available in the last years, many of which are user-generated (e.g., geosocial media feeds). These so-called ambient geospatial datasets mirror small and limited glimpses of the everyday lives of people and how these approach and experience the geographic world into the digital sphere. Ambient geographic datasets may thus be understood as something deeper than just mere 'attributes referenced over point locations', which is why they have recently been conjectured to be of platial rather than of spatial nature. 'Platial' can hereby be understood as the place-based counterpart to the space-based adjective 'spatial'.
Creative Time Costings Research Project Featured at London Exhibition
The research project Creative Time Costings - featuring the Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies' Celia Lury with Principal Investigator Jo Briggs (Northumbria) alongside Sue Ball (Media and Arts Partnership), Graham Pullin (University of Dundee), Sarah Teasley (Royal College of Art), and the Leeds Creative Timebank — is featured in the , running from 20th September-23rd September 2018. The exhibition is part of the London Design Fair and has been developed by researchers from a range of design disciplines including product, graphics, interaction, fashion, and furniture collaborating with other specialist areas such as healthcare, business, engineering, and elsewhere.
Located in the Old Truman Brewery in London, the showcase will give a flavour of 67 projects in total with a mixture of physical exhibits and digital displays.
Project lead Jo Briggs, Associate Professor in Design at Northumbria said: "Creative Temporal Costings was a three-month ‘sprint’ project comprising an experimental social design intervention undertaken with Leeds Creative Timebank to investigate the value of creative collaborative exchange in an emerging ‘parallel’ non-monetary economy; and to test and develop new research methods for social design, to prototype new forms of collaborative research oriented towards social change.”
For more information about Creative Temporal Costings and a link to the catalogue produced by artists at Leeds Creative Timebank click and
Workshop: Making sense of humanitarian geospatial data
One of the key challenges to achieve the goal of improving the life conditions for people who live in disadvantaged communities in low and middle-income countries is the lack of accurate and up-to-date spatial data about urban areas and vulnerable communities without access to basic services and in humanitarian need.
Sci-Fi Pie Charts: an MSc dissertation on films
We spoke to Edvin Dudinskij about his CIM MSc dissertation in which he investigates the use of visualisation in Science Fiction movies.