School of Engineering and Information Sciences
The School offers a lively and stimulating environment in which to undertake your postgraduate research studies. We focus on applied problems and their associated theoretical underpinnings, with a strong social and cultural awareness. As a student, you would be joining one of our active research centres or groups where you will interact with staff and fellow students currently working in your chosen area of activity. For more information, view
www.mdx.ac.uk/cs/research
Our main research themes are human computer interaction; artificial intelligence; information systems engineering; health informatics; vision and image processing; software practice; project management; theory of computation; computer simulation; computer networks; computer security; computers and society; communications; business IT; digital systems and digital creativity.
Research areas Interaction Design
This is a long-standing area of strength at Middlesex that attracts significant external funding. There are two key areas of focus, the role that technology plays in issues
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such as shared information spaces and collaborative decision making; and the need for inclusive design of the human-computer interface to make the information society a reality. Our Interaction Design Centre is the focus for this work and is recognised as an international leader in this field.
In the area of shared information spaces and collaborative working, we focus on such issues as the visualisation of complex data and safety critical applications, eg command and control systems such as emergency dispatch, air traffic control and nuclear power plant control systems. Recent projects involve work on multi-modal ways of presenting n-dimensional data and the analysis of human error behaviours. An important feature of this work is the need to consider both the ways that individuals interact with systems, and also the cultural and environmental issues that impact on the design and use of the system.
In the inclusive design, or ‘Design for All’, area we are working with diverse user populations that include children, the elderly and those with a wide range of abilities. One important
feature of this work is the need to consider suitable research methodologies, and associated ethical consideration for working with these users. This work also involves a considerable political dimension, with the need to develop national and international policy, and researchers at Middlesex are contributing to this debate in significant ways. The School is the UK National Contact Centre for The European Design for All e-Accessibility Network. Our Collaborative International Research Centre for Universal Access brings together a number of international researchers in this field and acts as a focus for much of this work.
Informatics
Research in this area focuses on the properties and production of algorithms and programmes. Work currently spans the spectrum from properties of programming languages and logic through to cultural influences on the ways in which information systems are developed. There is a strong emphasis on signal analysis, (especially in the bio-informatics area), artificial intelligence and systems modelling.
Recent funded projects have
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