In this episode of ACM ByteCast, Rashmi Mohan hosts ACM Grace Murray Hopper Award recipient Jeffrey Heer. Heer is the co-founder of Trifacta, a provider of interactive tools for scalable data transformation, and the Jerre D. Noe Endowed Professor of Computer Science & Engineering at the University of Washington, where he directs the Interactive Data Lab and conducts research on data visualization, human-computer interaction, and social computing. The visualization tools developed by Heer and his collaborators – Vega(-Lite), D3.js, Protovis, Prefuse – are used by researchers, companies, and data enthusiasts around the world.
In the interview, Heer explains how his longstanding interest in psychology and cognitive science led him to focus on human-computer interaction as a student in computing. He describes the deep satisfaction (and fun) of interdisciplinary research drawing on computer science, statistics, psychology, and design, as well as his passion for building open-source tools that people in the real world can use. He also covers some of the challenges particular to building visualizations in the age of big data, starting a company to commercialize academic research, and his current efforts to promote more comprehensive, robust, and transparent analysis results.
Matei Zaharia - Episode 32
Yaw Anokwa - Episode 31
Steve Nouri - Episode 30
Nuria Oliver - Episode 29
Michelle Zhou - Episode 28
Charu Thomas - Episode 27
Shyam Gollakota - Episode 26
Margo Seltzer - Episode 25
Wendy Chapman - Episode 24
David Heinemeier Hansson - Episode 23
Amanda Randles - Episode 22
Jelani Nelson - Episode 21
Luiz André Barroso - Episode 20
Ayanna Howard - Episode 19
Mounia Lalmas - Episode 18
Bryan Cantrill - Episode 17
Leslie Lamport - Episode 16 (Special Episode in Partnership with the Hanselminutes Podcast)
Suchi Saria - Episode 15
Luis von Ahn - Episode 14
Ramesh Raskar - Episode 13
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
DNA Today: A Genetics Podcast
Museum of the Missing
Strange by Nature Podcast
Sasquatch Chronicles
Hidden Brain