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IM: Making the UK Smarter
PROFESSOR TOM JACKSONDIRECTOR OF THE CENTRE FOR INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
Overview
• Growth of information and the digital age challenge
• The creation of CIM and why the end of the Library?
• Creating the IM workforce
Growth of Information and
Challenges ahead
Speed of Change ~2012
43 Years Old
Speed of Change – late 2013
Speed of Change – July 2014
Social Media Command Centre
The Information Footprint
Rapid Change - Digital Footprint
• 20/11/2014 – IDC - http://www.emc.com/leadership/programs/digital-universe.htm
• What does your digital footprint look like?• Examples, web, email, Facebook, surveillance cameras,
twitter, on-line banking, digital photographs, etc.
• 1918’s paper footprint – max of 2mb a year and now the digital one….
The Complex Digital Age?
• Complexities of managing ‘soft’ and ‘hard’ data, information and knowledge
Employee Knowledge
Unstructured data
Internet – finding the information
Processes and Systems
How many bytes of information does my brain hold?
• Tricky trying to put a value on it!• What would you guess?
• Based on number of junctions between neurons• Brain contains 100 billion neurons• Each has ~ 20,000 shared synaptic junctions• Assumption each holds equivalent of a binary ‘bit’• Storage capacity between 100 and 1000 terabytes
How many Bytes of Information does my Brain hold?
Your brain is the size of forest!
• 1 TB = 50,000 trees made into paper and printed
• So our brains are the equivalent of 50,000,000 trees!
• 400 Billion trees in the Amazon Rain Forest (1 b = thousand million)
Information Landscape
...between 100 and 1000 terabytes per employee
Internet 500bn gigabytes
54TB of unstructured data
The Complex Digital Age?
• Barrier Overcome: Data storage capacity
• Challenges: • Providing meaning to terse seemingly unconnected
data
• Realising the value of the data and information
• Structuring systems and processes
• Visualising and manipulating data and information streams
• Intelligent systems
Creation of CIM – why the end of the Library?
From Information Science to the CIM
What is Information Science?
What do we do?Do students know what information science is?Do students know what information
management is?What should the brand be?
How do we market IM?
The CIM Team
• Expertise located within School of Business and Economics
• Expertise located across campus
• The CIM Vision – Transforming the Digital World by conducting research that matters.
- Evidence the significance and value of information
- Challenge thinking and practice around information management
- Improve performance through analysis, interpretation and judgement of information
- Research areas: Organisation, People, and System
Mapping the Mood of the Nation – EMOTIVE
• Extracting the Meaning Of Terse Information in a Geo-Visualisation of Emotion
• Analyses tweets and categorises them into cross cultural emotions
• Best f-measure for fine-grained emotions in the world
• Used to monitor and potentially change real-time events through intervention
Ann O’Brien, Martin Sykora, Tom Jackson
MAIPLE - Managing Access to the Internet in Public Libraries
• Two-year project funded by the AHRC
• To identify and quantify measures being taken in public libraries to regulate and manage access to the Internet
• Not all wifi access is filtered
• Over-blocking of content is the most frequent cause of complaint with regard to filters (88.5%)
• Digital divide – some important information is being blocked (e.g. sexual health information)
Louise Cooke, Claire Creaser, Adrienne Muir, Rachel Spacey
Email Knowledge Extraction
• Discover who knows what • Cut time searching
• Reduce duplication of information
• Identify potential training needs by analysing gaps in knowledge profiles
• Profile employees to help with recruitment when staff leave
• Provides social network analysis• Who are the key information brokers
• Potential a reward scheme for sharing knowledge
Sus-IT – New Dynamics of Ageing
• Sus-IT - to promote autonomy and independence
• Substantial research over many years
• 10 million people in the UK over 65 years old
• 10.5 million over 65 in 2030
• 19 million by 2050.
• Finding – changing technology will cause long term issues with people over 65
Leela Damodaran, Wendy Olphert
Systems Thinking – PEArL
• The PEArL Framework (Participants; Engagement; Authority; relationships; Learning)
• Example use: Supported implementation of new Automotive Functional Safety Standard ISO 26262
• Dr Champion invited onto Steering Group overseeing Systems Engineering processes
• Applied to support Key Workers and Residents in Homeless Shelters; the British Association of Chemical Specialists; Belron ( Autoglass) to assist with a new European wide integration initiative.
Donna Champion
Police Mobile Data Terminals
• Mobile technology devices could save the average police force £800,000 a year. Full set-up costs are just £440,000
• Leicestershire Constabulary now has 730 police officers and 293 sergeants using the MDTs
• A 15.2 per cent increase in officer visibility; reduced vehicle mileage and service costs and an increase of 600 per cent in agreed appointments
• The time it takes to make a crime report available to another officer has reduced from three days to just 11 minutesLouise Cooke, Rachael Lindsay, Tom Jackson
Benefits Realisation Management • Key Idea: Benefits are primarily
derived from doing things differently [organisational change], and IT is simply the enabler of new ways of working.
• Benefits should be actively reviewed and realised throughout the working life of a new technology, not just at the point of implementation.
• Prof Doherty and Dr Coombs are actively investigating a variety of tools and approaches to help organisations leverage real value from their IT investments, in a variety of business contexts.
‘Benefits realisation – it’s a journey, not a destination’
Embedded Intelligence
•
Increasing sources of data- insurance premiums- recalling faulty cars- determining emotional state of driver whilst
driving?- imagine personalised advertising boards – driven
by emotion
So how do we Market ourselves?
• Semantic web based on library science• Taxonomy and Ontologies
• Broad range of skills not just IM• Data Analytics
• Information Management
• Records Management
• Knowledge Management - Employee Knowledge – 100 to 1000 terabytes (1920’s)
• We are managing the ‘Information Age’!
Creating the IM Workforce
Skillset
• Managing and enabling • data, information and knowledge quality (consistent format, avoiding
errors, setting up systems to enable good data input and automated checking;
• information quality: relevance, authority, scope etc.;
• ‘good’ knowledge: who’s voice);
• Managing and enabling • the organisation of data e.g. databanks such as with census data, client
records etc.;
• information e.g. through metadata such as taxonomies and ontologies and
• knowledge e.g. mapping knowledge in an organisation;
Mark Hepworth
Skillset• Managing and enabling
• effective storage of data, information and knowledge through various technologies e.g. databases, information e.g. libraries, electronic information systems and apprenticeship, audio diaries etc..
• Managing and enabling • access to data, information and knowledge and the issues
surrounding sharing and security;
• enabling exploitation of data (data mining, ‘big data’ analytics),
• information and knowledge extraction via information retrieval and processing algorithms and interaction, dashboards, visualisation, representation and the facilitation of informed decision making.
Mark Hepworth
University Courses
• Loughborough University have changed the BSc and MSc• The content is there
• Improved presentation and selling of the programmes• Strong global Chartered Institute required
• Must be focused on the Information Age
• Even stronger as an alliance
• CI needs strong presence in organisations
• Failure to change• Global need will see new global institutes to take the challenge
forward
Summary
• Urgently rebranding required• Let’s take control of the domain
• Lead the way
• Example – iSchools in academia
• Without a strong unified institute • Ownership of our domain will be conquered by others
• Leading to a weaker dispersed domain and presence