City Research Online

Items where Author is "Lloyd, D."

Up a level
Group by: Type | No Grouping
Number of items: 7.

Day, T. G., Budd, S., Tan, J. , Matthew, J., Skelton, E. ORCID: 0000-0003-0132-7948, Jowett, V., Lloyd, D., Gomez, A., Hajnal, J. V., Razavi, R., Kainz, B. & Simpson, J. M. (2023). Prenatal diagnosis of hypoplastic left heart syndrome on ultrasound using artificial intelligence: How does performance compare to a current screening programme?. Prenatal Diagnosis, doi: 10.1002/pd.6445

Yarrow, K. & Obhi, S. S. (2014). Temporal perception in the context of action. In: Arstila, V. & Lloyd, D. (Eds.), Subjective Time; The Philosophy, Psychology, and Neuroscience of Temporality. (pp. 455-476). The MIT Press.

Lloyd, D. & Dykes, J. (2011). Human-Centered Approaches in Geovisualization Design: Investigating Multiple Methods Through a Long-Term Case Study. Transactions in Visualization and Computer Graphics, 17(12), pp. 2498-2507. doi: 10.1109/tvcg.2011.209

Dykes, J., Lloyd, D. & Radburn, R. (2009). Using the Analytic Hierarchy Process to prioritise candidate improvements to a geovisualization application. Paper presented at the GIS Research UK 17th Annual Conference (GISRUK 2009), 1 - 3 Apr 2009, University of Durham, Durham, UK.

Lloyd, D., Dykes, J. & Radburn, R. (2008). Mediating geovisualization to potential users and prototyping a geovisualization application. Paper presented at the GIS Research UK 16th Annual Conference GISRUK 2008, 2 - 4 Aug 2008, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK.

Dykes, J., Lloyd, D. & Radburn, R. (2007). Understanding geovisualization users and their requirements: a user-centred approach. Paper presented at the GIS Research UK 15th Annual Conference (GISRUK 2007), Maynooth, Ireland.

Lloyd, D. & Dykes, J. (2006). Investigating Catchment Area Anomalies for a North England Store. Paper presented at the GIS Research UK 14th Annual Conference (GISRUK 2006), 5 - 7 Apr 2006, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.

This list was generated on Thu Mar 28 05:54:08 2024 UTC.