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Nigel Davies
Researcher at Lancaster University
Publications - 300
Citations - 21183
Nigel Davies is an academic researcher from Lancaster University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mobile computing & Ubiquitous computing. The author has an hindex of 59, co-authored 289 publications receiving 20229 citations. Previous affiliations of Nigel Davies include University of Arizona & University of Cambridge.
Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
Non-Fungible Tokens as a Mechanism for Representing Patient Consent
James A. Cunningham,Nigel Davies,Sarah Devaney,Søren Holm,Michael B. Harding,Victoria Sophia Neumann,John Ainsworth +6 more
TL;DR: The features offered by NFTs, unique-ness, immutability, transferability, and verifiability, are directly applicable to the design of health informatics systems and are explored in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI
The missing dimension : The relevance of people's conception of time
TL;DR: The “map” proposed by Bentley et al. would benefit from strengthening through the inclusion of a non–clock-time perspective, and there could be new hypotheses developed which could be applied and tested relevant to more diverse societies, cultures, and individuals.
Journal ArticleDOI
Scheduling Content in Pervasive Display Systems
TL;DR: This paper presents the first comprehensive architectural model for scheduling in current and anticipated pervasive display systems, and separates out the process of high level goal setting from content filtering and selection in a three-stage model.
Journal ArticleDOI
New Challenges in Display-Saturated Environments
TL;DR: This paper uses as motivation a state-of-the-art display deployment in which mobile users navigating the space are simultaneously exposed to many hundreds of displays within their field of view and highlights a number of new research challenges.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Tacita: A Privacy Preserving Public Display Personalisation Service
TL;DR: This demonstration presents a full implementation of Tacita, a display personalisation system designed to address viewer privacy concerns whilst still capable of providing relevant content to viewers and therefore increasing the value of displays.