You wouldn’t change up your entire production process based on sales from just a couple of locations, and you wouldn’t lower auto insurance premiums across the board because collision rates went down ...
When I started classes for my master’s degree in information management at the University of Maryland 16 years ago, one of the first things I learned was the difference between data and information.
Data form the backbone of the scientific method, but it can be impenetrable. In the penultimate episode of this six-part Working Scientist podcast series about art-science collaborations, Julie Gould ...
What if you could transform vast amounts of unstructured text into a living, breathing map of knowledge—one that not only organizes information but reveals hidden connections you never knew existed?