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BCS-HCI  December 2007

BCS-HCI December 2007

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Subject:

job: Human-Agent Collaboration for Distributed Sensemaking and Action (Open U/NASA Ames)

From:

British HCI News <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

British HCI News <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Wed, 12 Dec 2007 12:04:58 -0000

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~~~~~~~ BRITISH HCI GROUP NEWS SERVICE ~~~~~~~~~~~
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~~ All news to: [log in to unmask]  ~~
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~~ NOTE: Please reply to article's originator,  ~~
~~ not the News Service                         ~~
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 3 year PhD studentship to start as soon as possible

http://kmi.open.ac.uk/studentships/studentship7.cfm <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/studentships/studentship7.cfm> 

Human-Agent Collaboration for Distributed Sensemaking and Action

This exciting PhD project is a collaboration between the Hypermedia Discourse <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/projects/hyperdiscourse/>  research programme at the Knowledge Media Institute <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/> , Open University UK, and the Brahms <http://www.agentisolutions.com/>  agent-based Work Systems Simulation <http://is.arc.nasa.gov/HCC/tasks/Brahms.html>  activity in Human-Centered Computing at NASA Ames Research Center. The successful candidate will join a team with an international reputation and established collaboration track record, based at the Knowledge Media Institute, receiving world class doctoral training, and working closely with NASA using e-PhD collaboration tools including funding for NASA placements. 

In many fields, cross-disciplinary teams must collectively making sense of complex, changing, potentially ambiguous information, often under time pressure (e.g. in scenario analysis, collaborative learning, space exploration, science teams, emergency response, strategic planning, intelligence analysis). As we tackle problems of an unprecedented scale and complexity, new tools are needed to bring stakeholders together for effective dialogue, analysis and coordinated action. 

This project will integrate and extend two productive streams of work.

*	Mapping dialogue and argumentation. Joint work between KMi, NASA and other partners has developed a methodology and visual knowledge management software tool called Compendium <http://www.compendiuminstitute.org/> . Compendium supports the creation of many kinds of conceptual map, both informal and formal. Conversational Modelling <http://jodi.tamu.edu/Articles/v01/i04/Selvin/>  is an approach to capture, structure and index the deliberations and multimedia documents in meetings, from informal brainstorming, to opportunistic and intentional dialogue, to structured modelling of a problem. Compendium has built up a global user community who apply it in diverse fields, and has been used at NASA in field trials simulating Earth/Mars-based science teams (see papers below), collaborative workflow modelling of Shuttle launch procedures, and knowledge capture from an expert workshop. Applications at the Open University <http://compendium.open.ac.uk/>  include scenario planning, concept and argument mapping in e-learning, and the design of multimedia learning activities. Web tools for collaborative inquiry extend these capabilities for 'open sensemaking communities <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/projects/osc/> ' who work over time and space to map the connections between ideas and arguments as they address wicked problems. KMi has developed proof of concept demonstrators such as ClaiMaker <http://claimaker.open.ac.uk/>  for internet science publishing and argumentation, and will shortly release its follow-on, Cohere <http://cohereweb.net/> . 
*	Agent-based modelling of work activities. The Brahms <http://www.agentisolutions.com/>  agent-based Work Systems Simulation <http://is.arc.nasa.gov/HCC/tasks/Brahms.html>  activity in Human-Centered Computing at NASA Ames Research Center has developed an approach to modelling work processes, and an architecture for integrating technologies in their support. This was demonstrated at scale in the Mobile Agents project (see papers below) in collaboration with KMi. For more information about Brahms and for a free download of Brahms for research purpose, please go to http://www.agentisolutions.com <http://www.agentisolutions.com/> . 

The project leaders and supervision team are Simon Buckingham Shum <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/people/sbs/>  (KMi) and Maarten Sierhuis <http://homepage.mac.com/msierhuis/Menu8.html>  (NASA). 

The Challenge 

What will scientific publishing, collaborative modelling, or internet argumentation look like when ideas might be agents, arguments can be monitored, and agents can provide active support to analysts working over time and space? What are the human and computing challenges, how would you investigate them, and how would you validate your work? 

We invite candidates to read the linked resources, and write a research proposal following the guidelines <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/studentships/proposal.cfm> . 

You are... 

...passionate about developing tools for mapping human knowledge, and inventing and understanding new kinds of user experience with software agents. You will have a keen interest in human-centred computing, bringing Java and/or Web programming skills, and a relevant background in one or more of: multi-agent systems, conceptual modelling, argumentation, knowledge engineering, collaboration tools, user interface design, usability evaluation. You will be a team player, capable of working collaboratively at a distance and across timezones, but able to initiate new ideas, and work to agreed objectives. 

Background reading 

Buckingham Shum, S. (2007). Cohere: Towards Web 2.0 Argumentation <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/projects/hyperdiscourse/docs/Cohere.COMMA2008.pdf> . Submitted to COMMA'08: 2nd Int. Conf. Computational Modelling in Argument, Toulouse 

Buckingham Shum, S., et al. (2006). Hypermedia Support for Argumentation-Based Rationale: 15 Years on from gIBIS and QOC <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/publications/pdf/KMI-05-18.pdf> . In: Rationale Management in Software Engineering, Allen H. Dutoit, Raymond McCall, Ivan Mistrik, and Barbara , Paech, Eds.: Springer-Verlag, 2006, pp. 111-132. 

Clancey, W.J., et al. (2005). Automating CapCom Using Mobile Agents and Robotic Assistants <http://eprints.aktors.org/375/> . In Proceedings 1st Space Exploration Conference, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 31 Jan - 1 Feb, 2005, Orlando, FL. Available from: AIAA Meeting Papers on Disc [CD-ROM]: Reston, VA, and as AKT-IRC ePrint 375 

Clancey, W. J, P. Sachs, M. Sierhuis, and R. van Hoof. (1998). Brahms: Simulating practice for work systems design <http://homepage.mac.com/msierhuis/Papers/Brahms%20IJHCS%20final%20paper.PDF> , International Journal on Human-Computer Studies, vol. 49, pp. 831-865. 

CoAKTinG/Mobile Agents website: http://kmi.open.ac.uk/projects/coakting/nasa <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/projects/coakting/nasa>  

Sierhuis, M. and Buckingham Shum, S. (in press). Human-Agent Knowledge Cartography for e-Science: NASA Field Trials at the Mars Desert Research Station <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/projects/coakting/nasa/KC4e-Science_Draft.pdf> . Draft chapter to appear in: Knowledge Cartography: Software Tools and Mapping Techniques. Eds. Okada, A., Buckingham Shum, S. and Sherborne, T. (Springer, 2008, in press) 

Sierhuis, M., W. J. Clancey, R. van Hoof (2007). Brahms: A multiagent modeling environment for simulating work processes and practices <http://homepage.mac.com/msierhuis/Papers/Brahms_IJSPM_Final_rev10.pdf> . International Journal of Simulation and Process Modelling, Inderscience Publishers, 3 (3), 134-152. 

Sierhuis, M. (2007). It's not just goals all the way down - It's activities all the way down <http://homepage.mac.com/msierhuis/Papers/ESAW2006_mxs_lncs_submitted.pdf> . In G. M. P. O'Hare & A. Ricci & M. J. O'Grady & O. Dikenelli (Eds.), Engineering Societies in the Agents World VII, 7th International, Workshop, ESAW 2006, Dublin, Ireland, September 6-8, 2006, Revised Selected and Invited Papers (Vol. LNCS 4457/2007, pp. 1-24). Dublin, Ireland: Springer.



Additional Information: 

The Knowledge Media Institute (http://kmi.open.ac.uk <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/> ) is home to internationally recognised researchers in semantic web, artificial intelligence, cognitive science, human-computer interaction, information retrieval and multimedia processing. KMi offers students an intellectually challenging environment with exceptional research and computer facilities. You will be joining a dynamic PhD programme with about 15 other students in KMi, plus peers in the Computing department and Institute of Educational Technology who together make up the OU's Centre for Research in Computing (http://crc.open.ac.uk/ <http://crc.open.ac.uk/> ).  

KMi sees PhD students as critical to its mission, and awards Studentships (£12,600/year tax free for 2007/08), with no additional fees, compulsory examinations or teaching required. Participation is required in CRC PhD events and thesis milestones, as specified in the KMI Research Degrees policy (http://kmi.open.ac.uk/studentships/policy.cfm <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/studentships/policy.cfm> ). Additional training courses to develop your generic research skills are run across the OU, attendance at which is agreed with your supervisor.

The Open University (http://www.open.ac.uk <http://www.open.ac.uk/> ) is UK's only distance learning university with a dedicated mission for excellence in teaching and research. PhD programmes are residential, however, and the student would carry out their research at the KMi in the Open University's central Milton Keynes campus.

Milton Keynes (http://www.mkweb.co.uk/ <http://www.mkweb.co.uk/> ), located in the triangle Cambridge, Oxford and London, is an exciting and vibrant place to be. It is one of the fastest growing cities in the country with fantastic shopping facilities, Xscape Snow slope, new skydiving centre and much more. Milton Keynes is also home to some major employers with Abbey National, Argos and The Open University having headquarters in the city. With more businesses continuing to locate here, unemployment levels are among the lowest in the country. Milton Keynes has excellent transport links with the M1 motorway and A5 running alongside the city and a fast train link into London Euston (35 minutes).

 

Applications

Feel free to approach us informally about your ideas. 
Applications should comprise an Application Form <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/studentships/application_form/application-form-06.doc> , Research Proposal <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/studentships/proposal.cfm>  and your CV, submitted by hardcopy to:

Research School
The Open University
Walton Hall
Milton Keynes
MK7 6AA
UK 

and by email to reach Simon Buckingham Shum <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/people/sbs/contact.html>  by: 
1700 GMT Monday 7th January 2008. 

Interviews will be held at the Open University, with video link to NASA, in mid-Jan, with the goal of starting as soon as possible. 

Information about the Doctoral Programme <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/studentships/>  is on the KMi website


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