Ian Spence (psychologist)

Ian Spence (born 1944) is a Scottish-Canadian psychologist, and Emeritus Professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Toronto, known for his work on graphical perception,[1] psychometric methods[2] and the history of statistical graphics, specifically on the life and work of William Playfair.[3][4][5][6][7]

Life and work

Born in Scotland, Spence received his Bsc in mathematics, physics, and psychology at the University of Glasgow, and his PhD in 1970 from the University of Toronto with the thesis, entitled "Multidimensional scaling; an empirical and theoretical investigation."

Spence started his academic career as Assistant Professor at the University of Western Ontario. Later on he moved to University of Toronto, where he became Professor in the Department of Psychology.

Spence's research interests are in the fields of "engineering psychology, graphical perception, psychophysics, psychometric methods with an emphasis on measurement and scaling, and statistics."[8] His research projects in the new millennium included "the effective use of colour in scientific visualization, the role of colour in visual memory, individual differences in spatial cognition, and the navigation of dynamic information displays such as web sites."[8]

Selected publications

  • William Playfair, Howard Wainer and Ian Spence. Playfair's Commercial and Political Atlas and Statistical Breviary. Cambridge University Press, 2005

Articles, a selection:

gollark: I do, in fact, have somewhat important things on my computer.
gollark: I want hardware and software which is less likely to randomly leak information or have security flaws. It's *really* bad for cloud providers.
gollark: And more bizarre artificial segmentation with overclocking and RAM speeds.
gollark: Well, obviously no security is perfect, but it's also obviously better to not have flaws in your very CPU.
gollark: You just *don't care* about unpatchable hardware security flaws?!

References

  1. Boot, W. R., Kramer, A. F., Simons, D. J., Fabiani, M., & Gratton, G. (2008). "The effects of video game playing on attention, memory, and executive control." Acta psychologica, 129(3), 387-398.
  2. Wilkinson, L., Wills, D., Rope, D., Norton, A., & Dubbs, R. (2006). The grammar of graphics. Springer.
  3. Spence, Ian, and Howard Wainer. "Who was Playfair Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine." Chance 10.1 (1997): 35-37.
  4. Spence, Ian, and Howard Wainer. "William Playfair: A daring worthless fellow." Chance 10.1 (1997): 31-34.
  5. Spence, Ian, and Howard Wainer. "William Playfair." Statisticians of the Centuries. Springer New York, 2001. 105-110.
  6. Spence, Ian. "William Playfair and the psychology of graphs." 2006 JSM proceedings, American Statistical Association, Alexandria (2006): 2426-2436.
  7. Crampton, Jeremy W. The political mapping of cyberspace. University of Chicago Press, 2003.
  8. Ian Spence at psych.utoronto.ca. Accessed 11.2014.
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