Martin Frické
Education
- PhD, London School of Economics, UK
- MS, London School of Economics, UK
- BS, University of Otago, NZ, Computer Science
- BA, Exeter, UK, Philosophy
Biography
Associate Professor Martin Frické leads a team of colleagues
seeking to understand reliable indicators of accuracy for information
on the Internet. He, and his team, have looked at indicators of
accuracy for answers to ready reference questions (JASIST, 2004) and
for consumer health information (AJM, 2005, JELIS and JAMIA, the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association)
on the Internet. As Associate Director of SIRLS for Virtual Learning,
Martin is creating resources for both faculty and students to improve
virtual learning. Recently, he is turning his attention to general
theories of networks and information science. Martin teaches
networking, human-computer interaction, and web design, as well as the
courses in research methods and ethics.
Teaching Areas
- Automation of Information Storage, Access, and Delivery
- Computer Science
- Human Computer Interface
- Information Ethics
- Intelligent Systems
- Logic
- Networks
- Systems Theory
- Theory and Transfer of Information
Research Areas
- Computer/Information Networks
- Human-Computer Interaction
- Health Informatics
Selected Publications
- (with
Don Fallis, Marci Jones, and Gianna Luszko) ‘Consumer Health
Information on the Internet about Carpal Tunnel Sydrome’, American Journal of Medicine. 118:03 Feb. 2005.
- (with Don Fallis) ‘Indicators of Accuracy for Answers to Ready Reference Questions on the Internet’, Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 2004, 55 pp. 238-245.
- (with Don Fallis) 'Verifiable Health Information on the Internet.' Journal of Education for Library and
Information Science, 2002, 43(4) pp. 246-253
- (with Kay Mathiesen and Don Fallis) 'The Ethical
Presuppositions behind the Library Bill of Rights', Library
Quarterly, 2000, October
- 'Measuring Recall', Journal of Information Science, 1998, 24(6), pp.37-45
Notable Projects & Activities
- 2003-2005 Principal Investigator for a grant application to NIH which aims
to investigate the quality of health information on the Internet.
- Occasional referee for Cambridge University Press, IMIA Yearbook of Medical Informatics, Journal of the American Association for Information Science and Technology, Journal of Postgraduate Medicine, and Library Quarterly.