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Data science has been playing a vital role in almost all major
fields. Many researchers are interested in the development of IT
applications, which are user-driven with a focus on issues. This
can be addressed using data science. User-driven research and data
science have gained much attention from many private, public, and
government organizations and research institutions. The Handbook of
Research on Designing User Interfaces With a Data Science Approach
promotes the inclusion of more diversified users for user-centered
designs of applications across domains and analyzes user data with
a data science approach for effective and user-friendly user
interface designs. It introduces the foundations of advanced topics
of human-computer interaction, particularly with user-centered
designs and techniques. Covering topics such as artificial neural
networks, natural dialog systems, and machine learning, this book
is an essential resource for faculty, research scholars, industry
professionals, students of higher education, mathematicians, data
scientists, interaction designers, visual designers, software
engineers, user experience researchers, accessibility engineers,
cognitive system engineers, academicians, and libraries.
Reciprocity has been critical in the philosophy and social sciences
of the 20th century. Over the last seven decades, several countries
settled by European powers have become autonomous, and returning
has become a challenge. Consequently, writing on reciprocity as a
central theme requires time and implies a deep dedication to the
community. There is a need to explore the factors and policies
behind the study agendas and secret philosophies before and after
European involvement. Reciprocity and Its Practice in Social
Research aims to open the controlled consciousness of self as a
human being and then as a scholar to the community via the
methodological lens. It analyzes reciprocity from the Greek
tradition to Medeabale Arab to the early colonial or pre-colonial
period. It specifically addresses the benefit of social research on
the community and seeks ways to revolutionize and improve current
research and academic processes. Covering topics such as the
philosophy of science, indigenous science, and Western metaphysics,
this book is an essential resource for anthropologists,
philosophers, sociologists, university faculty and administration,
students of higher education, librarians, researchers, and
academicians.
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