The DMB Interactive Literature Website is based on the paper, "From Anecdotal Evidence to Quantitative Evaluation Methods: A Systematic Review on Evaluating Explainable AI" which was a collaboration between the Data Management & Biometrics department of the University of Twente and University of Duisberg-Essen, which was led by Meike Nauta. Miss Nauta requested a website to be created for her research in order to allow greater accessibility and visualization options as well as enable researchers to contribute to the website by adding new papers. Our development team has tried to materialize her vision as part of the Design Project module of the Technical Computer Science course.
The CS Design Project module is one of the two final modules of the Bachelor. In the design component of this module, students show that they master the entire design trajectory, from the first informal specification of requirements by a client to the delivery and presentation of a well-documented working product. Projects are submitted by clients from either inside or outside the University. Students perform the project in groups of 3-5 students under the supervision of a teacher from the Department of Computer Science. The supervisor is also the one who assesses the process and products of the group. Project deliverables include a project proposal, a design report, a presentation and a poster.
Test out our project
Check out the GitHub repository
View the full design report for this project.
The DMB Interactive Literature Website is based on the paper, "From Anecdotal Evidence to Quantitative Evaluation Methods: A Systematic Review on Evaluating Explainable AI" which was a collaboration between the Data Management & Biometrics department of the University of Twente and University of Duisberg-Essen, which was led by Meike Nauta. Miss Nauta requested a website to be created for her research in order to allow greater accessibility and visualization options as well as enable researchers to contribute to the website by adding new papers. Our development team has tried to materialize her vision as part of the Design Project module of the Technical Computer Science course.
The CS Design Project module is one of the two final modules of the Bachelor. In the design component of this module, students show that they master the entire design trajectory, from the first informal specification of requirements by a client to the delivery and presentation of a well-documented working product. Projects are submitted by clients from either inside or outside the University. Students perform the project in groups of 3-5 students under the supervision of a teacher from the Department of Computer Science. The supervisor is also the one who assesses the process and products of the group. Project deliverables include a project proposal, a design report, a presentation and a poster.
Test out our project
Check out the GitHub repository
View the full design report for this project.