Information theory

Human information interaction

Human-information interaction or HII is the formal term for information behavior research in archival science; the term was invented by Nahum Gershon in 1995. HII is not transferable from analog to digital research because nonprofessional researchers greatly emphasize the need for further elaboration of context and scope finding aid elements. Researchers in HII take on many tasks, including helping to design information systems from a biological perspective that conform to the requirements of different segments of society, along with other behaviour intended to improve interaction between humans and information systems. HII is generally considered to be multi-disciplinary as different disciplines have different viewpoints on these interactions and their consequences. HII is considered especially important due to humanity's dependence on information and the technology needed to access it. (Wikipedia).

Video thumbnail

Communication

If you are interested in learning more about this topic, please visit http://www.gcflearnfree.org/ to view the entire tutorial on our website. It includes instructional text, informational graphics, examples, and even interactives for you to practice and apply what you've learned.

From playlist Communicating Effectively

Video thumbnail

Introduction and Definition of Communication | Human Communication | Study Hall

You cannot escape communication! No matter what we're doing, we're always communicating. Whether through verbal or non-verbal cues, communication is how we interact with our surroundings. In this episode, we discuss meaning-making, and what communication really means. ____________________

From playlist Intro to Human Communication: Course Foundations

Video thumbnail

Stanford Seminar- Capturing Human Behavior and Language for Interactive Systems

Speaker: Ethan Fast Computers are more integrated into our lives and society as time goes by yet they still don't understand many of the human actions that surround them. To make progress, we need systems that deeply understand people and capture human experience through humans' daily act

From playlist Stanford Seminars

Video thumbnail

Preview: Intro to Human Communication | Study Hall

Communication is a tool that is ingrained in our daily interactions, but have you ever wondered how it works and why it's important? Communication might be more complex than we realize as it can adapt and change depending on a wide array of factors. In this series, Cassandra Ryder guides u

From playlist Intro to Human Communication: Course Foundations

Video thumbnail

Networking

If you are interested in learning more about this topic, please visit http://www.gcflearnfree.org/ to view the entire tutorial on our website. It includes instructional text, informational graphics, examples, and even interactives for you to practice and apply what you've learned.

From playlist Networking

Video thumbnail

Perception | Human Communication | Study Hall

How does our perception affect our communication? What we take in with our senses and how our brains interpret that information doesn’t always match up because there’s often too much going on for our brains to process every single detail accurately! In this episode, we discuss percepti

From playlist Intro to Human Communication: Course Foundations

Video thumbnail

Stanford Seminar - Interactive Autonomy: A Human-Centered Approach for Safe Interactions

EE380: Computer Systems Colloquium Seminar Interactive Autonomy: A Human-Centered Approach for Safe Interactions Speaker: Dorsa Sadigh, Electrical Engineering & Computer Science, Stanford University Today's society is rapidly advancing towards robotics systems that interact and collaborat

From playlist Stanford EE380-Colloquium on Computer Systems - Seminar Series

Video thumbnail

Lecture 3.3: Alia Martin - Developing an Understanding of Communication

MIT RES.9-003 Brains, Minds and Machines Summer Course, Summer 2015 View the complete course: https://ocw.mit.edu/RES-9-003SU15 Instructor: Alia Martin Infant development of understanding speech as communicative action with information transfer, reasoning about information access and sour

From playlist MIT RES.9-003 Brains, Minds and Machines Summer Course, Summer 2015

Video thumbnail

The Design of Implicit Interactions

May 18, 2007 lecture by Wendy Ju for the Stanford University Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (CS 547). The infiltration of computer technologies into everyday life has brought the problems of traditional interaction design to a head. As we begin to design products which adapt their beh

From playlist Course | Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (2006-2007)

Video thumbnail

Dorsa Sadigh: "Beyond Theory of Mind: Learning and Influencing Conventions in Multi-Agent Intera..."

Intersections between Control, Learning and Optimization 2020 "Beyond Theory of Mind: Learning and Influencing Conventions in Multi-Agent Interactions" Dorsa Sadigh - Stanford University Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics, UCLA February 27, 2020 For more information: http://www.

From playlist Intersections between Control, Learning and Optimization 2020

Video thumbnail

CS224W: Machine Learning with Graphs | 2021 | Lecture 18 - GNNs in Computational Biology

For more information about Stanford’s Artificial Intelligence professional and graduate programs, visit: https://stanford.io/2XVImFC Lecture 18 - Graph Neural Networks in Computational Biology Jure Leskovec Computer Science, PhD We are glad to invite Prof. Marinka Zitnik from Harvard Un

From playlist Stanford CS224W: Machine Learning with Graphs

Video thumbnail

Marco Pavone: "On safe & efficient human-robot interactions via multimodal intent modeling & rea..."

Mathematical Challenges and Opportunities for Autonomous Vehicles 2020 Workshop II: Safe Operation of Connected and Autonomous Vehicle Fleets "On safe and efficient human-robot interactions via multimodal intent modeling and reachability-based safety assurance" Marco Pavone - Stanford Uni

From playlist Mathematical Challenges and Opportunities for Autonomous Vehicles 2020

Video thumbnail

Silvia Ferrari: "Active Sensing and Perception Under Pressure"

Mathematical Challenges and Opportunities for Autonomous Vehicles 2020 Workshop IV: Social Dynamics beyond Vehicle Autonomy "Active Sensing and Perception Under Pressure" Silvia Ferrari - Cornell University Abstract: Unmanned ground, aerial, and underwater vehicles or robots equipped wit

From playlist Mathematical Challenges and Opportunities for Autonomous Vehicles 2020

Video thumbnail

Stanford Seminar - Thesis Defense: Designing in-situ Interaction with Ubiquitous Robots

Lawrence Kim Stanford University January 31, 2020 As robots begin to operate in our personal space and collaborate with us, it is important to investigate how to implement seamless integration of robots to assist humans in every aspect of life. Swarms of cm-scale non-anthropomorphic robot

From playlist Stanford Seminars

Video thumbnail

Ran Blekhman: "Human genomic control of the microbiome"

Computational Genomics Summer Institute 2017 Research Talk: "Human genomic control of the microbiome" Ran Blekhman, University of Minnesota Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics, UCLA July 12, 2017 For more information: http://computationalgenomics.bioinformatics.ucla.edu/

From playlist Computational Genomics Summer Institute 2017

Video thumbnail

Stanford Seminar: Buildings Machines That Understand and Shape Human Emotion

Jonathan Gratch University of Southern California Affective Computing is the field of research directed at creating technology that recognizes, interprets, simulates and stimulates human emotion. In this talk, I will broadly overview my fifteen years of effort in advancing this nascent f

From playlist Stanford Seminars

Related pages