Author: Alasdair Gray

In September 2013 I became a Lecturer in Computer Science at Heriot-Watt University where I have joined the Intelligent Systems research group. Between 2009 and 2013 I held a postdoc research position in the Information Management Group at the University of Manchester. Prior to that I was in the Information Retrieval group at the University of Glasgow. I obtained my PhD on integrating streams of data in 2007 from Heriot-Watt University where I worked in the Database, Information and Knowledge-base Systems group.

Smartphone App to support students transition to campus life

  • Funder: QAA/HWU
  • Value: £3,250.00

Starting university, either as an undergraduate or postgraduate student, is a major transition step. As an undergraduate it is likely to be the first time that you are expected to fend for yourself. As a postgraduate, many of our students are from overseas and so are trying to fit into a new culture. In both cases, a new student needs to be able to find their way around one of our campuses, attend lectures and labs, and meet and socialise with other students.

The proposed project is to develop a smartphone app that will support students starting at Heriot-Watt University. Once registered with the app a personal timetable can be generated with the times and locations of lectures and labs. The locations of these would be integrated with the map feature on the phone to support finding their way around and potentially integrating with services like Google Now to provide alerts to prompt the student to make their way to a lecture/lab. Search functionality will be included in the app to support the student in finding unfamiliar locations, e.g. a specific lecture room (EM1.58), or a member of staff. Further enhancements could include integrating the with external services, e.g. Lothian bus travel data in Edinburgh, to enable students to plan their journeys on and off campus, as well as a social interaction element, or listing of social events.

Administrative Data Research Centre for Scotland

The Administrative Data Research Centre for Scotland is led by the University of Edinburgh, and brings together major Scottish research centres, including:

  • the Scottish Longitudinal Study
  • Administrative Data Liaison Service
  • Applied Quantitative Methods Network
  • the Farr Institute @ Scotland
  • the national digital data centre
  • Centre for Research on Environment Society and Health
  • the Centre for Cognitive Ageing & Cognitive Epidemiology

The centre involves world leading experts in the theory, methods and policy of linking records for secondary uses, including:

  • public engagement, ethics, information governance and law
  • linking and analysing large datasets
  • geocoding, natural language processing and machine learning
  • crime and criminal justice, education and social services