Mackinlay, Jock D.: Difference between revisions
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''' Jock D. Mackinlay ''' received his PhD in computer science from Stanford University, where he pioneered the automatic design of graphical presentations of relational information. He joined Xerox PARC in 1986, where he collaborated with the User Interface Research Group to develop many novel applications of computer graphics for information access, coining the term "Information Visualization". | ''' Jock D. Mackinlay ''' received his PhD in computer science from Stanford University, where he pioneered the automatic design of graphical presentations of relational information. He joined Xerox PARC in 1986, where he collaborated with the User Interface Research Group to develop many novel applications of computer graphics for information access, coining the term "Information Visualization". | ||
Much of the fruits of this research can be seen in his published book, Readings in Information Visualization: Using Vision to Think (Morgan Kauffman, written and edited with Stuart K. Card and Ben Shneiderman). | Much of the fruits of this research can be seen in his published book, [http://infovis.ifs.tuwien.ac.at/index.php/Card%2C_S._and_Mackinlay%2C_J._and_Shneiderman%2C_B.:_Readings_in_Information_Visualization_-_Using_Vision_to_Think%2C_Morgan_Kaufmann%2C_1999 Readings in Information Visualization: Using Vision to Think] (Morgan Kauffman, written and edited with Stuart K. Card and Ben Shneiderman). | ||
== External links == | == External links == |
Revision as of 18:05, 7 September 2005
Jock D. Mackinlay received his PhD in computer science from Stanford University, where he pioneered the automatic design of graphical presentations of relational information. He joined Xerox PARC in 1986, where he collaborated with the User Interface Research Group to develop many novel applications of computer graphics for information access, coining the term "Information Visualization".
Much of the fruits of this research can be seen in his published book, Readings in Information Visualization: Using Vision to Think (Morgan Kauffman, written and edited with Stuart K. Card and Ben Shneiderman).