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Nigel Shadbolt

Researcher at University of Oxford

Publications -  589
Citations -  21792

Nigel Shadbolt is an academic researcher from University of Oxford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Semantic Web & Ontology (information science). The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 564 publications receiving 20635 citations. Previous affiliations of Nigel Shadbolt include Open University & University of Edinburgh.

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Developing a robot visual system using a biologically inspired model of neuronal development

TL;DR: This work instantiate a previously studied model of such neuronal development on a robotic platform to establish whether "developmental robotics" can equip a robot with a nervous system tuned to the robot’s individual morphology and that allows recovery from damage.
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Protection or punishment? relating the design space of parental control apps and perceptions about them to support parenting for online safety

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conducted an analysis of 58 top Android parental control apps designed for the purpose of promoting children's online safety, finding three major axes of variation in how key restriction and monitoring features were realized: granularity, feedback/transparency, and parent-child communications support.
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An extended study of content and crowdsourcing-related performance factors in named entity annotation

TL;DR: These findings show that crowd workers correctly annotate shorter tweets with fewer entities, while they skip (or wrongly annotate) longer tweets with more entities, and detailed guidelines do not necessarily lead to improved annotation quality.
Posted Content

What privacy concerns do parents have about children's mobile apps‚ and how can they stay SHARP?

TL;DR: Findings from an online survey of 220 parents with children aged 6-10, mainly from the U.K. and other western countries, regarding their privacy concerns and expectations of their children's use of mobile apps are presented.

Modelling the Dynamics of Team Sensemaking: A Constraint Satisfaction Approach

TL;DR: An approach to the modelling of team sensemaking that relies on the use of multiple agents integrated into larger communication network structures is presented, and it is suggested that the future use of constraint satisfaction network models could have value in terms of improving the understanding of socially-distributed cognition in military coalition environments.