
Dr Mark Hall
Senior Lecturer In Computing & Communications
School of Computing & Communications
Biography
Professional biography
Dr Mark Hall joined the Open University in January 2020 and is a Lecturer in Computing & Communications. He completed his undergraduate studies in Computer Science at the Alps-Adriatic University Klagenfurt, Austria and his PhD in Computer Science at Cardiff University, UK. He also holds a Postgraduate Certificate in Teaching in Higher Education from Edge Hill University, UK and is a fellow of the Higher Education Academy.
He has previously worked as a postdoctoral researcher at Sheffield University, UK, as a Senior Lecturer in Web Development at Edge Hill University, UK, as the Junior Professor for eHumanities at the Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg, Germany, and as a Lecturer in Human Computer Interaction at Cardiff University, UK.
Research interests
Mark's research interests focus on the intersection between computation and the human user. He is particularly interested in helping users explore large data-sets that they are unfamiliar with or where the users lack the expertise to know what they could find and how to find it. As part of this he is also undertaking research into how to evaluate interfaces that support such open-ended exploration. Recently he has also developed an interest in improving methodological clarity and biases in the Digital Humanities.
Current research projects include:
- Under the Surface - The Digital Humanities suffer from a strong focus on the canon in their research. The Under the Surface project aims to highlight past authors who for various reasons (gender, religion, culture, ...) have dropped under the surface and enable Digital Humanities research into a wider range of authors.
- Gutzkow Digital Edition - A digital edition of the works of the 19th century German writer Karl Gutzkow. The project focuses on providing both the academic data and tools for creating digital editions, but also on interface elements that enable interested readers in consuming the digital edition's content.
- User Study Exchange Format - Aims to provide a data-exchange format that can represent the majority of online user studies (surveys, questionnaires, ...). By providing a common exchange format, the project aims to increase the amount of research re-use in this area and also improve replicability of such studies.
- Museum Map - An online museum containing approximately 2000 objects from the Liverpool Museum - World Museum's Egyptology collection. The system allows free exploration of the collection using a fully-automatically curated museum structure
Teaching interests
Mark's teaching interests focus on the area of Web Development, covering the complete spectrum from design to implementation and evaluation. At the Open University he is contributing to the teaching of
- TM352 - Web, mobile and cloud technologies
He also has a strong interest in effective uses of technology in teaching. In the past he has developed his own web-based teaching platform for web-development and tools to automate the assessment and feedback process. From this he has developed approaches for integrating modern software development techniques and tools into the teaching and assessment process.
External collaborations
Mark maintains collaborative links with a number of Digital Cultural Heritage institutions including Europeana, the V&A London, and Liverpool Museums.
International links
Mark is part of the Building towards Interactive Information Retrieval Research Reuse project, which aims to improve the amount of research in Interactive Information Retrieval and involves collaborators from Denmark, Germany, the UK, Norway, and Canada.
He is also involved in the Gutzkow Digital Edition project with colleagues in Germany, Switzerland, Italy, the UK, and the Republic of Ireland.
Publications
Book
Book Chapter
Exploring digital cultural heritage through browsing (2022)
Clustering and Classifying Users from the National Museums Liverpool Website (2021)
Building The Old Joke Archive (2020)
Opportunities and Risks in Digital Humanities Research (2020)
Analysis of Transaction Logs from National Museums Liverpool (2019)
Stable Word-Clouds for Visualising Text-Changes Over Time (2019)
Supporting exploration and use of digital cultural heritage materials: the PATHS perspective (2015)
Supporting Information Access and Sensemaking in Digital Cultural Heritage Environments (2014)
Journal Article
A Standardised Format for Exchanging User Study Instruments (2020)
Characterising online museum users: a study of the National Museums Liverpool museum website (2020)
Report on the Workshop on Barriers to Interactive IR Resources Re-use (BIIRRR 2018) (2018)
Geographic Information Retrieval: Progress and Challenges in Spatial Search of Text (2018)
Evaluating hierarchical organisation structures for exploring digital libraries (2014)
Interpreting Spatial Language in Image Captions (2011)
Linking archival data to location A case study at the UK National Archives (2011)
Presentation / Conference
The Impact of CHIIR: A Study of Eight Years of CHIIR Publications (2024)
μEdition – Niedrigschwellige Digitale Editionen (2024)
How we Work, Share, and Re-use at CHIIR (2023)
Collaboration Patterns and Impact of Sharing at CHIIR (2023)
A Manifesto on Resource Re-Use in Interactive Information Retrieval (2021)
DH is the study of dead Dudes (2019)
To re-use is to re-write: experiences with re-using IIR experiment software (2019)
A Humorous View into the Past: The Old Jokes Archive (2019)
User Engagement with Generous Interfaces for Digital Cultural Heritage (2018)
An IoT Approach to Personalised Remote Monitoring and Management of Epilepsy (2017)
Evaluating Retrieval over Sessions: The TREC Session Track 2011-2014 (2016)
Analyzing the influence of Language Proficiency on Interactive Book Search Behavior (2016)
The Role of Language Skills in Interactive Social Book Search Sessions (2016)
Individual Differences and Task Behaviour (2016)
Overview of the SBS 2016 Interactive Track (2016)
Overview of the CLEF 2016 Social Book Search Lab (2016)
Edge Hill Computing @ Interactive Social Book Search 2015 (2015)
Overview of the SBS 2015 Interactive Track (2015)
Overview of the CLEF 2015 Social Book Search Lab (2015)
First workshop on supporting complex search tasks (2015)
Spatial Natural Language Generation for Location Description in Photo Captions (2015)
Explore the Stacks: A System for Exploration in Large Digital Libraries (2014)
From Searching to Using: Making Sense of Digital Cultural Heritage Collections (2014)
PATHS in Context: User Characteristics and the Construction of Cultural Heritage Narratives (2014)
The PATHS System for Exploring Digital Cultural Heritage (2014)
The CHiC Interactive Task (CHiCi) at CLEF2013 (2013)
Building a Common Framework for IIR Evaluation (2013)
Sheffield Submission to the CHiC Ineractive Task: Exploring Digital Cultural Heritage (2013)
Regional Effects on Query Reformulation Patterns (2013)
Exploring Large Digital Library Collections Using a Map-Based Visualisation (2013)
PATHS: Tools for exploring digital cultural heritage spaces (2013)
Generating Paths through Cultural Heritage Collections (2013)
PATHS: A System for Accessing Cultural Heritage Collections (2013)
Information seeking in digital cultural heritage with PATHS (2013)
Comparing taxonomies for organising collections of documents (2012)
PATHS - Exploring Digital Cultural Heritage Spaces (2012)
User-Centred Design to Support Exploration and Path Creation in Cultural Heritage Collections (2012)
Cultural and Language Influences on the Interpretation of Spatial Prepositions (2012)
Enabling the Discovery of Digital Cultural Heritage Objects through Wikipedia (2012)
Overview of the TREC 2011 Session Track (2012)
Evaluating the Use of Clustering for Automatically Organising Digital Library Collections (2012)
PATHS: personalising access to cultural heritage spaces (2012)
Initialising and Terminating Active Contours for Vague Field Crisping (2009)
Improving the Quality of GPS-based Personal Gazetteers (2009)
Evaluating Field Crisping Methods for Representing Spatial Prepositions (2008)
Quantifying Spatial Prepositions: an Experimental Study (2008)
A Field Based Representation for Vague Areas Defined by Spatial Prepositions (2008)
Automatisierte semantische Harmonisierung von Landnutzungsdaten (2006)
HarmonISA - ein Geoinformationswerkzeug zum Studium grenzüberschreitender Landnutzung (2006)