382 results on '"Murray-Rust P"'
Search Results
2. (Un)making AI Magic: a Design Taxonomy
- Author
-
Lupetti, Maria Luce and Murray-Rust, Dave
- Subjects
Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
This paper examines the role that enchantment plays in the design of AI things by constructing a taxonomy of design approaches that increase or decrease the perception of magic and enchantment. We start from the design discourse surrounding recent developments in AI technologies, highlighting specific interaction qualities such as algorithmic uncertainties and errors and articulating relations to the rhetoric of magic and supernatural thinking. Through analyzing and reflecting upon 52 students' design projects from two editions of a Master course in design and AI, we identify seven design principles and unpack the effects of each in terms of enchantment and disenchantment. We conclude by articulating ways in which this taxonomy can be approached and appropriated by design/HCI practitioners, especially to support exploration and reflexivity.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Unpacking Human-AI interactions: From interaction primitives to a design space
- Author
-
Tsiakas, Kostas and Murray-Rust, Dave
- Subjects
Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
This paper aims to develop a semi-formal design space for Human-AI interactions, by building a set of interaction primitives which specify the communication between users and AI systems during their interaction. We show how these primitives can be combined into a set of interaction patterns which can provide an abstract specification for exchanging messages between humans and AI/ML models to carry out purposeful interactions. The motivation behind this is twofold: firstly, to provide a compact generalisation of existing practices, that highlights the similarities and differences between systems in terms of their interaction behaviours; and secondly, to support the creation of new systems, in particular by opening the space of possibilities for interactions with models. We present a short literature review on frameworks, guidelines and taxonomies related to the design and implementation of HAI interactions, including human-in-the-loop, explainable AI, as well as hybrid intelligence and collaborative learning approaches. From the literature review, we define a vocabulary for describing information exchanges in terms of providing and requesting particular model-specific data types. Based on this vocabulary, a message passing model for interactions between humans and models is presented, which we demonstrate can account for existing systems and approaches. Finally, we build this into design patterns as mid-level constructs that capture common interactional structures. We discuss how this approach can be used towards a design space for Human-AI interactions that creates new possibilities for designs as well as keeping track of implementation issues and concerns.
- Published
- 2024
4. Grasping AI: experiential exercises for designers
- Author
-
Murray-Rust, Dave, Lupetti, Maria Luce, Nicenboim, Iohanna, and van der Hoog, Wouter
- Subjects
Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) are increasingly integrated into the functioning of physical and digital products, creating unprecedented opportunities for interaction and functionality. However, there is a challenge for designers to ideate within this creative landscape, balancing the possibilities of technology with human interactional concerns. We investigate techniques for exploring and reflecting on the interactional affordances, the unique relational possibilities, and the wider social implications of AI systems. We introduced into an interaction design course (n=100) nine 'AI exercises' that draw on more than human design, responsible AI, and speculative enactment to create experiential engagements around AI interaction design. We find that exercises around metaphors and enactments make questions of training and learning, privacy and consent, autonomy and agency more tangible, and thereby help students be more reflective and responsible on how to design with AI and its complex properties in both their design process and outcomes.
- Published
- 2023
5. Agency and legibility for artists through Experiential AI
- Author
-
Hemment, Drew, Vidmar, Matjaz, Panas, Daga, Murray-Rust, Dave, Belle, Vaishak, and Ruth, Aylett
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computers and Society ,J.5 ,K.4.2 - Abstract
Experiential AI is an emerging research field that addresses the challenge of making AI tangible and explicit, both to fuel cultural experiences for audiences, and to make AI systems more accessible to human understanding. The central theme is how artists, scientists and other interdisciplinary actors can come together to understand and communicate the functionality of AI, ML and intelligent robots, their limitations, and consequences, through informative and compelling experiences. It provides an approach and methodology for the arts and tangible experiences to mediate between impenetrable computer code and human understanding, making not just AI systems but also their values and implications more transparent, and therefore accountable. In this paper, we report on an empirical case study of an experiential AI system designed for creative data exploration of a user-defined dimension, to enable creators to gain more creative control over the AI process. We discuss how experiential AI can increase legibility and agency for artists, and how the arts can provide creative strategies and methods which can add to the toolbox for human-centred XAI., Comment: 1st International Workshop on Explainable AI for the Arts (XAIxArts), ACM Creativity and Cognition (C&C) 2023. Online, 3 pages. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2306.00635
- Published
- 2023
6. Experiential AI: A transdisciplinary framework for legibility and agency in AI
- Author
-
Hemment, Drew, Murray-Rust, Dave, Belle, Vaishak, Aylett, Ruth, Vidmar, Matjaz, and Broz, Frank
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computers and Society ,J.5 ,K.4.2 - Abstract
Experiential AI is presented as a research agenda in which scientists and artists come together to investigate the entanglements between humans and machines, and an approach to human-machine learning and development where knowledge is created through the transformation of experience. The paper discusses advances and limitations in the field of explainable AI; the contribution the arts can offer to address those limitations; and methods to bring creative practice together with emerging technology to create rich experiences that shed light on novel socio-technical systems, changing the way that publics, scientists and practitioners think about AI., Comment: 10 pages, 3 appendices
- Published
- 2023
7. Respect as a Lens for the Design of AI Systems
- Author
-
Seymour, William, Van Kleek, Max, Binns, Reuben, and Murray-Rust, Dave
- Subjects
Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
Critical examinations of AI systems often apply principles such as fairness, justice, accountability, and safety, which is reflected in AI regulations such as the EU AI Act. Are such principles sufficient to promote the design of systems that support human flourishing? Even if a system is in some sense fair, just, or 'safe', it can nonetheless be exploitative, coercive, inconvenient, or otherwise conflict with cultural, individual, or social values. This paper proposes a dimension of interactional ethics thus far overlooked: the ways AI systems should treat human beings. For this purpose, we explore the philosophical concept of respect: if respect is something everyone needs and deserves, shouldn't technology aim to be respectful? Despite its intuitive simplicity, respect in philosophy is a complex concept with many disparate senses. Like fairness or justice, respect can characterise how people deserve to be treated; but rather than relating primarily to the distribution of benefits or punishments, respect relates to how people regard one another, and how this translates to perception, treatment, and behaviour. We explore respect broadly across several literatures, synthesising perspectives on respect from Kantian, post-Kantian, dramaturgical, and agential realist design perspectives with a goal of drawing together a view of what respect could mean for AI. In so doing, we identify ways that respect may guide us towards more sociable artefacts that ethically and inclusively honour and recognise humans using the rich social language that we have evolved to interact with one another every day., Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of the 2022 AAAI/ACM Conference on AI, Ethics, and Society (AIES '22)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Towards a multi-stakeholder value-based assessment framework for algorithmic systems
- Author
-
Yurrita, Mireia, Murray-Rust, Dave, Balayn, Agathe, and Bozzon, Alessandro
- Subjects
Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
In an effort to regulate Machine Learning-driven (ML) systems, current auditing processes mostly focus on detecting harmful algorithmic biases. While these strategies have proven to be impactful, some values outlined in documents dealing with ethics in ML-driven systems are still underrepresented in auditing processes. Such unaddressed values mainly deal with contextual factors that cannot be easily quantified. In this paper, we develop a value-based assessment framework that is not limited to bias auditing and that covers prominent ethical principles for algorithmic systems. Our framework presents a circular arrangement of values with two bipolar dimensions that make common motivations and potential tensions explicit. In order to operationalize these high-level principles, values are then broken down into specific criteria and their manifestations. However, some of these value-specific criteria are mutually exclusive and require negotiation. As opposed to some other auditing frameworks that merely rely on ML researchers' and practitioners' input, we argue that it is necessary to include stakeholders that present diverse standpoints to systematically negotiate and consolidate value and criteria tensions. To that end, we map stakeholders with different insight needs, and assign tailored means for communicating value manifestations to them. We, therefore, contribute to current ML auditing practices with an assessment framework that visualizes closeness and tensions between values and we give guidelines on how to operationalize them, while opening up the evaluation and deliberation process to a wide range of stakeholders., Comment: Accepted at the 2022 ACM Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency (FAccT'22)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Exploring the acceptability of digital contact tracing for UK students
- Author
-
Murray-Rust, Dave, Soares, Luis, Gorkovenko, Katya, and Rooksby, John
- Subjects
Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction ,Computer Science - Computers and Society - Abstract
Contact tracing systems control the spread of disease by discovering the set of people an infectious individual has come into contact with. Students are often mobile and sociable and therefore can contribute to the spread of disease. Controls on the movement of students studying in the UK were put in place during the Covid-19 pandemic, and some restrictions may be necessary over several years. App based digital contact tracing may help ease restrictions by enabling students to make informed decisions and take precautions. However, designing for the end user acceptability of these apps remains under-explored. This study with 22 students from UK Universities (inc. 11 international students) uses a fictional user interface to prompt in-depth interviews on the acceptability of contact tracing tools. We explore intended uptake, usage and compliance with contact tracing apps, finding students are positive, although concerned about privacy, security, and burden of participating.
- Published
- 2022
10. Blockchain and Beyond: Understanding Blockchains through Prototypes and Public Engagement
- Author
-
Murray-Rust, Dave, Elsden, Chris, Nissen, Bettina, Tallyn, Ella, Pschetz, Larissa, and Speed, Chris
- Subjects
Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction ,Computer Science - Computers and Society - Abstract
This paper presents an annotated portfolio of projects that seek to understand and communicate the social and societal implications of blockchains, distributed ledgers and smart contracts. These complex technologies rely on human and technical factors to deliver cryptocurrencies, shared computation and trustless protocols but have a secondary benefit in providing a moment to re-think many aspects of society, and imagine alternative possibilities. The projects use design and HCI methods to relate blockchains to a range of topics, including global supply chains, delivery infrastructure, smart grids, volunteering and charitable giving, through engaging publics, exploring ideas and speculating on possible futures. Based on an extensive annotated portfolio we draw out learning for the design of blockchain systems, broadening participation and surfacing questions around imaginaries, social implications and engagement with new technology. This paints a comprehensive picture of how HCI and design can shape understandings of the future of complex technologies., Comment: (Preprint - accepted to TOCHI 30/11/2021)
- Published
- 2021
11. Using chemical structure in open-source chemical text mining
- Author
-
Murray-Rust P and Corbett PT
- Subjects
Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Semantic physical science
- Author
-
Murray-Rust Peter and Rzepa Henry S
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract The articles in this special issue arise from a workshop and symposium held in January 2012 (Semantic Physical Science’). We invited people who shared our vision for the potential of the web to support chemical and related subjects. Other than the initial invitations, we have not exercised any control over the content of the contributed articles.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The semantics of Chemical Markup Language (CML) for computational chemistry : CompChem
- Author
-
Phadungsukanan Weerapong, Kraft Markus, Townsend Joe A, and Murray-Rust Peter
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract This paper introduces a subdomain chemistry format for storing computational chemistry data called CompChem. It has been developed based on the design, concepts and methodologies of Chemical Markup Language (CML) by adding computational chemistry semantics on top of the CML Schema. The format allows a wide range of ab initio quantum chemistry calculations of individual molecules to be stored. These calculations include, for example, single point energy calculation, molecular geometry optimization, and vibrational frequency analysis. The paper also describes the supporting infrastructure, such as processing software, dictionaries, validation tools and database repositories. In addition, some of the challenges and difficulties in developing common computational chemistry dictionaries are discussed. The uses of CompChem are illustrated by two practical applications.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The semantics of Chemical Markup Language (CML): dictionaries and conventions
- Author
-
Murray-Rust Peter, Townsend Joe A, Adams Sam E, Phadungsukanan Weerapong, and Thomas Jens
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract The semantic architecture of CML consists of conventions, dictionaries and units. The conventions conform to a top-level specification and each convention can constrain compliant documents through machine-processing (validation). Dictionaries conform to a dictionary specification which also imposes machine validation on the dictionaries. Each dictionary can also be used to validate data in a CML document, and provide human-readable descriptions. An additional set of conventions and dictionaries are used to support scientific units. All conventions, dictionaries and dictionary elements are identifiable and addressable through unique URIs.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Ami - The chemist's amanuensis
- Author
-
Brooks Brian J, Thorn Adam L, Smith Matthew, Matthews Peter, Chen Shaoming, O'Steen Ben, Adams Sam E, Townsend Joe A, and Murray-Rust Peter
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract The Ami project was a six month Rapid Innovation project sponsored by JISC to explore the Virtual Research Environment space. The project brainstormed with chemists and decided to investigate ways to facilitate monitoring and collection of experimental data. A frequently encountered use-case was identified of how the chemist reaches the end of an experiment, but finds an unexpected result. The ability to replay events can significantly help make sense of how things progressed. The project therefore concentrated on collecting a variety of dimensions of ancillary data - data that would not normally be collected due to practicality constraints. There were three main areas of investigation: 1) Development of a monitoring tool using infrared and ultrasonic sensors; 2) Time-lapse motion video capture (for example, videoing 5 seconds in every 60); and 3) Activity-driven video monitoring of the fume cupboard environs. The Ami client application was developed to control these separate logging functions. The application builds up a timeline of the events in the experiment and around the fume cupboard. The videos and data logs can then be reviewed after the experiment in order to help the chemist determine the exact timings and conditions used. The project experimented with ways in which a Microsoft Kinect could be used in a laboratory setting. Investigations suggest that it would not be an ideal device for controlling a mouse, but it shows promise for usages such as manipulating virtual molecules.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The semantic architecture of the World-Wide Molecular Matrix (WWMM)
- Author
-
Murray-Rust Peter, Adams Sam E, Downing Jim, Townsend Joe A, and Zhang Yong
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract The World-Wide Molecular Matrix (WWMM) is a ten year project to create a peer-to-peer (P2P) system for the publication and collection of chemical objects, including over 250, 000 molecules. It has now been instantiated in a number of repositories which include data encoded in Chemical Markup Language (CML) and linked by URIs and RDF. The technical specification and implementation is now complete. We discuss the types of architecture required to implement nodes in the WWMM and consider the social issues involved in adoption.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The Quixote project: Collaborative and Open Quantum Chemistry data management in the Internet age
- Author
-
Adams Sam, de Castro Pablo, Echenique Pablo, Estrada Jorge, Hanwell Marcus D, Murray-Rust Peter, Sherwood Paul, Thomas Jens, and Townsend Joe
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract Computational Quantum Chemistry has developed into a powerful, efficient, reliable and increasingly routine tool for exploring the structure and properties of small to medium sized molecules. Many thousands of calculations are performed every day, some offering results which approach experimental accuracy. However, in contrast to other disciplines, such as crystallography, or bioinformatics, where standard formats and well-known, unified databases exist, this QC data is generally destined to remain locally held in files which are not designed to be machine-readable. Only a very small subset of these results will become accessible to the wider community through publication. In this paper we describe how the Quixote Project is developing the infrastructure required to convert output from a number of different molecular quantum chemistry packages to a common semantically rich, machine-readable format and to build respositories of QC results. Such an infrastructure offers benefits at many levels. The standardised representation of the results will facilitate software interoperability, for example making it easier for analysis tools to take data from different QC packages, and will also help with archival and deposition of results. The repository infrastructure, which is lightweight and built using Open software components, can be implemented at individual researcher, project, organisation or community level, offering the exciting possibility that in future many of these QC results can be made publically available, to be searched and interpreted just as crystallography and bioinformatics results are today. Although we believe that quantum chemists will appreciate the contribution the Quixote infrastructure can make to the organisation and and exchange of their results, we anticipate that greater rewards will come from enabling their results to be consumed by a wider community. As the respositories grow they will become a valuable source of chemical data for use by other disciplines in both research and education. The Quixote project is unconventional in that the infrastructure is being implemented in advance of a full definition of the data model which will eventually underpin it. We believe that a working system which offers real value to researchers based on tools and shared, searchable repositories will encourage early participation from a broader community, including both producers and consumers of data. In the early stages, searching and indexing can be performed on the chemical subject of the calculations, and well defined calculation meta-data. The process of defining more specific quantum chemical definitions, adding them to dictionaries and extracting them consistently from the results of the various software packages can then proceed in an incremental manner, adding additional value at each stage. Not only will these results help to change the data management model in the field of Quantum Chemistry, but the methodology can be applied to other pressing problems related to data in computational and experimental science.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. CML: Evolution and design
- Author
-
Murray-Rust Peter and Rzepa Henry S
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract A retrospective view of the design and evolution of Chemical Markup Language (CML) is presented by its original authors.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Open Bibliography for Science, Technology, and Medicine
- Author
-
Jones Richard, MacGillivray Mark, Murray-Rust Peter, Pitman Jim, Sefton Peter, O'Steen Ben, and Waites William
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract The concept of Open Bibliography in science, technology and medicine (STM) is introduced as a combination of Open Source tools, Open specifications and Open bibliographic data. An Openly searchable and navigable network of bibliographic information and associated knowledge representations, a Bibliographic Knowledge Network, across all branches of Science, Technology and Medicine, has been designed and initiated. For this large scale endeavour, the engagement and cooperation of the multiple stakeholders in STM publishing - authors, librarians, publishers and administrators - is sought.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. OSCAR4: a flexible architecture for chemical text-mining
- Author
-
Jessop David M, Adams Sam E, Willighagen Egon L, Hawizy Lezan, and Murray-Rust Peter
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract The Open-Source Chemistry Analysis Routines (OSCAR) software, a toolkit for the recognition of named entities and data in chemistry publications, has been developed since 2002. Recent work has resulted in the separation of the core OSCAR functionality and its release as the OSCAR4 library. This library features a modular API (based on reduction of surface coupling) that permits client programmers to easily incorporate it into external applications. OSCAR4 offers a domain-independent architecture upon which chemistry specific text-mining tools can be built, and its development and usage are discussed.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. CMLLite: a design philosophy for CML
- Author
-
Townsend Joe A and Murray-Rust Peter
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract CMLLite is a collection of definitions and processes which provide strong and flexible validation for a document in Chemical Markup Language (CML). It consists of an updated CML schema (schema3), conventions specifying rules in both human and machine-understandable forms and a validator available both online and offline to check conformance. This article explores the rationale behind the changes which have been made to the schema, explains how conventions interact and how they are designed, formulated, implemented and tested, and gives an overview of the validation service.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Mining chemical information from open patents
- Author
-
Jessop David M, Adams Sam E, and Murray-Rust Peter
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract Linked Open Data presents an opportunity to vastly improve the quality of science in all fields by increasing the availability and usability of the data upon which it is based. In the chemical field, there is a huge amount of information available in the published literature, the vast majority of which is not available in machine-understandable formats. PatentEye, a prototype system for the extraction and semantification of chemical reactions from the patent literature has been implemented and is discussed. A total of 4444 reactions were extracted from 667 patent documents that comprised 10 weeks' worth of publications from the European Patent Office (EPO), with a precision of 78% and recall of 64% with regards to determining the identity and amount of reactants employed and an accuracy of 92% with regards to product identification. NMR spectra reported as product characterisation data are additionally captured.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Open Data, Open Source and Open Standards in chemistry: The Blue Obelisk five years on
- Author
-
O'Boyle Noel M, Guha Rajarshi, Willighagen Egon L, Adams Samuel E, Alvarsson Jonathan, Bradley Jean-Claude, Filippov Igor V, Hanson Robert M, Hanwell Marcus D, Hutchison Geoffrey R, James Craig A, Jeliazkova Nina, Lang Andrew SID, Langner Karol M, Lonie David C, Lowe Daniel M, Pansanel Jérôme, Pavlov Dmitry, Spjuth Ola, Steinbeck Christoph, Tenderholt Adam L, Theisen Kevin J, and Murray-Rust Peter
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract Background The Blue Obelisk movement was established in 2005 as a response to the lack of Open Data, Open Standards and Open Source (ODOSOS) in chemistry. It aims to make it easier to carry out chemistry research by promoting interoperability between chemistry software, encouraging cooperation between Open Source developers, and developing community resources and Open Standards. Results This contribution looks back on the work carried out by the Blue Obelisk in the past 5 years and surveys progress and remaining challenges in the areas of Open Data, Open Standards, and Open Source in chemistry. Conclusions We show that the Blue Obelisk has been very successful in bringing together researchers and developers with common interests in ODOSOS, leading to development of many useful resources freely available to the chemistry community.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Semantic science and its communication - a personal view
- Author
-
Murray-Rust Peter
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract The articles in this special issue represent the culmination of about 15 years working with the potential of the web to support chemical and related subjects. The selection of papers arises from a symposium held in January 2011 ('Visions of a Semantic Molecular Future') which gave me an opportunity to invite many people who shared the same vision. I have asked them to contribute their papers and most have been able to do so. They cover a wide range of content, approaches and styles and apart from the selection of the speakers (and hence the authors) I have not exercised any control over the content.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. ChemicalTagger: A tool for semantic text-mining in chemistry
- Author
-
Hawizy Lezan, Jessop David M, Adams Nico, and Murray-Rust Peter
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract Background The primary method for scientific communication is in the form of published scientific articles and theses which use natural language combined with domain-specific terminology. As such, they contain free owing unstructured text. Given the usefulness of data extraction from unstructured literature, we aim to show how this can be achieved for the discipline of chemistry. The highly formulaic style of writing most chemists adopt make their contributions well suited to high-throughput Natural Language Processing (NLP) approaches. Results We have developed the ChemicalTagger parser as a medium-depth, phrase-based semantic NLP tool for the language of chemical experiments. Tagging is based on a modular architecture and uses a combination of OSCAR, domain-specific regex and English taggers to identify parts-of-speech. The ANTLR grammar is used to structure this into tree-based phrases. Using a metric that allows for overlapping annotations, we achieved machine-annotator agreements of 88.9% for phrase recognition and 91.9% for phrase-type identification (Action names). Conclusions It is possible parse to chemical experimental text using rule-based techniques in conjunction with a formal grammar parser. ChemicalTagger has been deployed for over 10,000 patents and has identified solvents from their linguistic context with >99.5% precision.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Bioclipse: an open source workbench for chemo- and bioinformatics
- Author
-
Wagener Johannes, Eklund Martin, Kuhn Stefan, Willighagen Egon L, Helmus Tobias, Spjuth Ola, Murray-Rust Peter, Steinbeck Christoph, and Wikberg Jarl ES
- Subjects
Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Abstract Background There is a need for software applications that provide users with a complete and extensible toolkit for chemo- and bioinformatics accessible from a single workbench. Commercial packages are expensive and closed source, hence they do not allow end users to modify algorithms and add custom functionality. Existing open source projects are more focused on providing a framework for integrating existing, separately installed bioinformatics packages, rather than providing user-friendly interfaces. No open source chemoinformatics workbench has previously been published, and no sucessful attempts have been made to integrate chemo- and bioinformatics into a single framework. Results Bioclipse is an advanced workbench for resources in chemo- and bioinformatics, such as molecules, proteins, sequences, spectra, and scripts. It provides 2D-editing, 3D-visualization, file format conversion, calculation of chemical properties, and much more; all fully integrated into a user-friendly desktop application. Editing supports standard functions such as cut and paste, drag and drop, and undo/redo. Bioclipse is written in Java and based on the Eclipse Rich Client Platform with a state-of-the-art plugin architecture. This gives Bioclipse an advantage over other systems as it can easily be extended with functionality in any desired direction. Conclusion Bioclipse is a powerful workbench for bio- and chemoinformatics as well as an advanced integration platform. The rich functionality, intuitive user interface, and powerful plugin architecture make Bioclipse the most advanced and user-friendly open source workbench for chemo- and bioinformatics. Bioclipse is released under Eclipse Public License (EPL), an open source license which sets no constraints on external plugin licensing; it is totally open for both open source plugins as well as commercial ones. Bioclipse is freely available at http://www.bioclipse.net.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Communication and re-use of chemical information in bioscience
- Author
-
Mitchell John BO, Murray-Rust Peter, and Rzepa Henry S
- Subjects
Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Abstract The current methods of publishing chemical information in bioscience articles are analysed. Using 3 papers as use-cases, it is shown that conventional methods using human procedures, including cut-and-paste are time-consuming and introduce errors. The meaning of chemical terms and the identity of compounds is often ambiguous. valuable experimental data such as spectra and computational results are almost always omitted. We describe an Open XML architecture at proof-of-concept which addresses these concerns. Compounds are identified through explicit connection tables or links to persistent Open resources such as PubChem. It is argued that if publishers adopt these tools and protocols, then the quality and quantity of chemical information available to bioscientists will increase and the authors, publishers and readers will find the process cost-effective.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Chemistry in Bioinformatics
- Author
-
Mitchell John, Murray-Rust Peter, and Rzepa Henry
- Subjects
Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Abstract Chemical information is now seen as critical for most areas of life sciences. But unlike Bioinformatics, where data is openly available and freely re-usable, most chemical information is closed and cannot be re-distributed without permission. This has led to a failure to adopt modern informatics and software techniques and therefore paucity of chemistry in bioinformatics. New technology, however, offers the hope of making chemical data (compounds and properties) free during the authoring process. We argue that the technology is already available; we require a collective agreement to enhance publication protocols.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Experiential AI
- Author
-
Hemment, Drew, Aylett, Ruth, Belle, Vaishak, Murray-Rust, Dave, Luger, Ewa, Hillston, Jane, Rovatsos, Michael, and Broz, Frank
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Experiential AI is proposed as a new research agenda in which artists and scientists come together to dispel the mystery of algorithms and make their mechanisms vividly apparent. It addresses the challenge of finding novel ways of opening up the field of artificial intelligence to greater transparency and collaboration between human and machine. The hypothesis is that art can mediate between computer code and human comprehension to overcome the limitations of explanations in and for AI systems. Artists can make the boundaries of systems visible and offer novel ways to make the reasoning of AI transparent and decipherable. Beyond this, artistic practice can explore new configurations of humans and algorithms, mapping the terrain of inter-agencies between people and machines. This helps to viscerally understand the complex causal chains in environments with AI components, including questions about what data to collect or who to collect it about, how the algorithms are chosen, commissioned and configured or how humans are conditioned by their participation in algorithmic processes., Comment: To appear in AI Matters 5(1): 25-31 (2019)
- Published
- 2019
30. Mastodon over Mammon: towards publicly owned scholarly knowledge
- Author
-
Björn Brembs, Adrian Lenardic, Peter Murray-Rust, Leslie Chan, and Dasapta Erwin Irawan
- Subjects
Mastodon ,Mammon ,scholarly ,knowledge ,Twitter ,Fediverse ,Science - Abstract
Twitter is in turmoil and the scholarly community on the platform is once again starting to migrate. As with the early internet, scholarly organizations are at the forefront of developing and implementing a decentralized alternative to Twitter, Mastodon. Both historically and conceptually, this is not a new situation for the scholarly community. Historically, scholars were forced to leave social media platform FriendFeed after it was bought by Facebook in 2006. Conceptually, the problems associated with public scholarly discourse subjected to the whims of corporate owners are not unlike those of scholarly journals owned by monopolistic corporations: in both cases the perils associated with a public good in private hands are palpable. For both short form (Twitter/Mastodon) and longer form (journals) scholarly discourse, decentralized solutions exist, some of which are already enjoying some institutional support. Here we argue that scholarly organizations, in particular learned societies, are now facing a golden opportunity to rethink their hesitations towards such alternatives and support the migration of the scholarly community from Twitter to Mastodon by hosting Mastodon instances. Demonstrating that the scholarly community is capable of creating a truly public square for scholarly discourse, impervious to private takeover, might renew confidence and inspire the community to focus on analogous solutions for the remaining scholarly record—encompassing text, data and code—to safeguard all publicly owned scholarly knowledge.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Argumentation theory for mathematical argument
- Author
-
Corneli, Joseph, Martin, Ursula, Murray-Rust, Dave, Nesin, Gabriela Rino, and Pease, Alison
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,G.m ,J.7 ,I.2.4 - Abstract
To adequately model mathematical arguments the analyst must be able to represent the mathematical objects under discussion and the relationships between them, as well as inferences drawn about these objects and relationships as the discourse unfolds. We introduce a framework with these properties, which has been used to analyse mathematical dialogues and expository texts. The framework can recover salient elements of discourse at, and within, the sentence level, as well as the way mathematical content connects to form larger argumentative structures. We show how the framework might be used to support computational reasoning, and argue that it provides a more natural way to examine the process of proving theorems than do Lamport's structured proofs., Comment: 44 pages; to appear in Argumentation
- Published
- 2018
32. Extracting data from vector figures in scholarly articles
- Author
-
Hartgerink, Chris and Murray-Rust, Peter
- Subjects
Computer Science - Digital Libraries ,Computer Science - Information Retrieval - Abstract
It is common for authors to communicate their results in graphical figures, but those data are frequently unavailable for reanalysis. Reconstructing data points from a figure manually requires the author to measure the coordinates either on printed pages using a ruler, or from the display screen using a cursor. This is time-consuming (often hours) and error-prone, and limited by the precision of the display or ruler. What is often not realised is that the data themselves are held in the PDF document to much higher precision (usually 0.0-0.01 pixels), if the figure is stored in vector format. We developed alpha software to automatically reconstruct data from vector figures and tested it on funnel plots in the meta-analysis literature. Our results indicate that reconstructing data from vector based figures is promising, where we correctly extracted data for 12 out of 24 funnel plots with extracted data (50%). However, we observed that vector based figures are relatively sparse (15 out of 136 papers with funnel plots) and strongly insist publishers to provide more vector based data figures in the near future for the benefit of the scholarly community., Comment: 4 figures, 1 table
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The Declaratron, semantic specification for scientific computation using MathML
- Author
-
Murray-Rust, Dave and Murray-Rust, Peter
- Subjects
Computer Science - Mathematical Software - Abstract
We introduce the Declaratron, a system which takes a declarative approach to specifying mathematically based scientific computation. This uses displayable mathematical notation (Content MathML) and is both executable and semantically well defined. We combine domain specific representations of physical science (e.g. CML, Chemical Markup Language), MathML formulae and computational specifications (DeXML) to create executable documents which include scientific data and mathematical formulae. These documents preserve the provenance of the data used, and build tight semantic links between components of mathematical formulae and domain objects---in effect grounding the mathematical semantics in the scientific domain. The Declaratron takes these specifications and i) carries out entity resolution and decoration to prepare for computation ii) uses a MathML execution engine to run calculations over the revised tree iii) outputs domain objects and the complete document to give both results and an encapsulated history of the computation. A short description of a case study is given to illustrate how the system can be used. Many scientific problems require frequent change of the mathematical functional form and the Declaratron provides this without requiring changes to code. Additionally, it supports reproducible science, machine indexing and semantic search of computations, makes implicit assumptions visible, and separates domain knowledge from computational techniques. We believe that the Declaratron could replace much conventional procedural code in science., Comment: Conference on Intelligent Computer Mathematics WiP
- Published
- 2013
34. Argumentation Theory for Mathematical Argument
- Author
-
Corneli, Joseph, Martin, Ursula, Murray-Rust, Dave, Rino Nesin, Gabriela, and Pease, Alison
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Changing computational research. The challenges ahead.
- Author
-
Neylon, Cameron, Aerts, Jan, Brown, C, Coles, Simon J, Hatton, Les, Lemire, Daniel, Millman, K, Murray-Rust, Peter, Perez, Fernando, Saunders, Neil, Shah, Nigam, Smith, Arfon, Varoquaux, Gaël, and Willighagen, Egon
- Abstract
AbstractNo abstract - Editorial
- Published
- 2012
36. Sketching sustainable land use in Europe by 2040: a multi-stakeholder participatory approach to elicit cross-sectoral visions
- Author
-
Pérez-Soba, Marta, Paterson, James, Metzger, Marc J., Gramberger, Marc, Houtkamp, Joske, Jensen, Anne, Murray-Rust, Dave, and Verkerk, Pieter J.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. How do Europeans want to live in 2040? Citizen visions and their consequences for European land use
- Author
-
Metzger, Marc J., Murray-Rust, Dave, Houtkamp, Joske, Jensen, Anne, La Riviere, Inge, Paterson, James S., Pérez-Soba, Marta, and Valluri-Nitsch, Christiane
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Data-Enhanced Design: Engaging Designers in Exploratory Sensemaking with Multimodal Data.
- Author
-
Gorkovenko, Katerina, Jenkins, Adam, Vaniea, Kami, and Murray-Rust, Dave
- Abstract
The article focuses on exploring ways for designers, without strong data skills, to engage with multimodal data and develop contextual understanding of product use, using telemetry data captured by a GoPro camera attached to a bicycle. Topics include a lightweight version of data-enhanced design research, the integration of video data and rider conversations for exploratory sensemaking, and the potential for designers to utilize data for ideation.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A simple global food system model
- Author
-
Li JIANG, Xuefeng CUI, Xia XU, Yuan JIANG, Mark ROUNSEVELL, Dave MURRAY-RUST, and Yinghui LIU
- Subjects
food model ,consumption and production ,food trade ,Agriculture - Abstract
In this study, we develop a simple dimension model to construct the food system in response to the population growth, the land use change and various socio-economic developments. The model simulates the consumption and production of agricultural goods in the individual countries, and maintains the global balance of food through the international trade flows between countries. Although there are some biases in the model results at the country levels, we suggest that such a simple model is feasible for simulating the global food supply system and assessing the uncertainties coming from various environmental and socio-economic factors.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Standards-based curation of a decade-old digital repository dataset of molecular information
- Author
-
Harvey, Matthew J, Mason, Nicholas J, McLean, Andrew, Murray-Rust, Peter, Rzepa, Henry S, and Stewart, James J P
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Analysing uncertainties in climate change impact assessment across sectors and scenarios
- Author
-
Brown, Calum, Brown, Evan, Murray-Rust, Dave, Cojocaru, George, Savin, Cristina, and Rounsevell, Mark
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The PIMMS Project and Natural Language Processing for Climate Science
- Author
-
Pascoe, C.L., primary, Barjat, H., additional, Lawrence, B.N., additional, Tourte, G.J.L., additional, Murray-Rust, P., additional, and Hawizy, L., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Responsible Content Mining
- Author
-
Molloy, J., primary, Haeussler, M., additional, Murray-Rust, P., additional, and Oppenheim, C., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Contributors
- Author
-
Alex, B., primary, Ananiadou, S., additional, Barjat, H., additional, Black, W.J., additional, Bontcheva, K., additional, Bretz, H., additional, Charlesworth, A., additional, Bueno-de-la-Fuente, G., additional, Derczynski, L., additional, Greenberg, J., additional, Grover, C., additional, Hachey, B., additional, Haeussler, M., additional, Hawizy, L., additional, Klein, E., additional, Lawrence, B.N., additional, Llewellyn, C., additional, McNaught, J., additional, Miwa, M., additional, Molloy, J., additional, Murray-Rust, P., additional, Oppenheim, C., additional, Pascoe, C.L., additional, Rodríguez Mateos, D., additional, Rowley, A., additional, Schilder, F., additional, Singh, S., additional, Thomas, M., additional, Tobin, R., additional, Tonkin, E.L., additional, Tourte, G. J.L., additional, Vacek, T., additional, and Zampieri, M., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Understanding global climate change scenarios through bioclimate stratification
- Author
-
A D Soteriades, D Murray-Rust, A Trabucco, and M J Metzger
- Subjects
climate change ,RCP ,stratification ,climate analogue ,climate service ,climate change scenario ,Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering ,TD1-1066 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Science ,Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
Despite progress in impact modelling, communicating and understanding the implications of climatic change projections is challenging due to inherent complexity and a cascade of uncertainty. In this letter, we present an alternative representation of global climate change projections based on shifts in 125 multivariate strata characterized by relatively homogeneous climate. These strata form climate analogues that help in the interpretation of climate change impacts. A Random Forests classifier was calculated and applied to 63 Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 climate scenarios at 5 arcmin resolution. Results demonstrate how shifting bioclimate strata can summarize future environmental changes and form a middle ground, conveniently integrating current knowledge of climate change impact with the interpretation advantages of categorical data but with a level of detail that resembles a continuous surface at global and regional scales. Both the agreement in major change and differences between climate change projections are visually combined, facilitating the interpretation of complex uncertainty. By making the data and the classifier available we provide a climate service that helps facilitate communication and provide new insight into the consequences of climate change.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Protein Engineering and Design
- Author
-
Blundell, T. L., Elliott, G., Gardner, S. P., Hubbard, T., Islam, S., Johnson, M., Mantafounis, D., Murray-Rust, P., Overington, J., Pitts, J. E., Sali, A., Sibanda, B. L., Singh, J., Sternberg, M. J. E., Sutcliffe, M. J., Thornton, J. M., and Travers, P.
- Published
- 1989
47. Linking science and arts: Intimate science, shared spaces and living experiments
- Author
-
Perelló, J., Murray-Rust, D., Nowak, A., and Bishop, S. R.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Data and models for exploring sustainability of human well-being in global environmental change
- Author
-
Deffuant, G., Alvarez, I., Barreteau, O., de Vries, B., Edmonds, B., Gilbert, N., Gotts, N., Jabot, F., Janssen, S., Hilden, M., Kolditz, O., Murray-Rust, D., Rougé, C., and Smits, P.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. A tale of two 'opens': intersections between Free and Open Source Software and Open Scholarship
- Author
-
Tennant J., Agarwal R., Bazdaric K., Brassard D., Crick T., Dunleavy D., Evans T., Gardner N., Gonzalez-Marquez M., Graziotin D., Greshake-Tzovaras B., Gunnarsson D., Havemann J., Hosseini M., Katz D., Knöchelmann M., Madan C., Manghi P., Marocchino A., Masuzzo P., Murray-Rust P., Narayanaswamy S., Nilsonne G., Pacheco-Mendoza J., Penders B., Pourret O., Rera M., Samuel J., Steiner T., Stojanovski J., Uribe-Tirado A., Vos R., Worthington S., and Yarkoni T.
- Subjects
Freedom ,Open Source ,FOSS ,Scholarly Publishing ,Open Research ,Sharing ,FLOSS ,Open Scholarship ,Collaboration ,Reproducibility ,Open Research Practices ,Scholarly Communication ,communities ,Open Access ,Open Science ,Open Data ,Replicability ,Free Software - Abstract
There is no clear-cut boundary between Free and Open Source Software and Open Scholarship, and the histories, practices, and fundamental principles between the two remain complex. In this study, we critically appraise the intersections and differences between the two movements. Based on our thematic comparison here, we conclude several key things. First, there is substantial scope for new communities of practice to form within scholarly communities that place sharing and collaboration/open participation at their focus. Second, Both the principles and practices of FOSS can be more deeply ingrained within scholarship, asserting a balance between pragmatism and social ideology. Third, at the present, Open Scholarship risks being subverted and compromised by commercial players. Fourth, the shift and acceleration towards a system of Open Scholarship will be greatly enhanced by a concurrent shift in recognising a broader range of practices and outputs beyond traditional peer review and research articles. In order to achieve this, we propose the formulation of a new type of institutional mandate. We believe that there is substantial need for research funders to invest in sustainable open scholarly infrastructure, and the communities that support them, to avoid the capture and enclosure of key research services that would prevent optimal researcher behaviours. Such a shift could ultimately lead to a healthier scientific culture, and a system where competition is replaced by collaboration, resources (including time and people) are shared and acknowledged more efficiently, and the research becomes inherently more rigorous, verified, and reproducible.
- Published
- 2020
50. A global resource for computational chemistry
- Author
-
Murray-Rust, Peter, Rzepa, Henry S., Stewart, James J. P., and Zhang, Yong
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.