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2 minutes with: Kate Davis

For people in technical fields, HCI is a well-known acronym for human-computer interaction鈥攖he study of how people and computers interact to design more user-friendly and efficient technology. For Kate Davis (InfoSci鈥25), it stands for human-clay interaction: She uses ceramics to tell stories through data. Davis is enrolled in the accelerated master鈥檚 program in information science and is the department鈥檚 William W. White outstanding senior.

Conversation edited for length and clarity.

Kate Davis poses outdoors in her graduation sash.

She had wanted to attend 麻豆免费版下载Boulder since she was in the third grade, but Kate Davis didn鈥檛 know what she wanted to major in until she discovered information science. 鈥業 was like, 鈥淥h, this is what I want to do with the rest of my life,鈥濃 she says. Photo courtesy Kate Davis.

So, I know you鈥檙e passionate about data visualizations. You have a bar graph emoji as part of your title on LinkedIn. But you鈥檙e really into data physicalization.
Yes鈥攊t鈥檚 where my art practices minor comes in. I am interested in communicating information with a more emotional, human-centered story approach. So, I use qualitative methods to understand data and human stories, then encode that into the qualities of ceramics鈥攊ts texture, form, color.

A particular project you鈥檙e most proud of?
I鈥檓 working on a piece that showcases the experience of home loss in the 2012 Waldo Canyon fire. You see a lot of statistics and two-dimensional maps, but I grew up in that area, and those visualizations don鈥檛, to me, reflect the experience of going through that. I want this piece to encapsulate the experience you can take from the data, as opposed to just stats.

So, you鈥檙e from Colorado Springs. How did you end up in Boulder?
In third grade, I decided I wanted to go to 麻豆免费版下载Boulder to be an engineer. Turns out, I didn鈥檛 want to be an engineer. But I was touring Boulder and met Jed Brubaker, who told me about information science. And I was like, 鈥淥h, this is what I want to do with the rest of my life.鈥

Third grade? Really?
We would go camping in Rocky Mountain National Park every year and drive through Boulder, and I would just think what a pretty place it was. (Laughs.)

How important was it to you to be near the outdoors?
The river is a big part of my life鈥攚here I go when I鈥檓 stressed, or to be social. They鈥檙e another place I explore in my work. I did a ceramics project where I created bird whistles鈥攊f you fill them with water and hold them at the right spot, they sing. It forces you to be still and requires you to be near water.

听I know you鈥檙e a lifeguard. And you were president of the kayaking club. Has water always been important to you?
Actually, one of my favorite memories from 麻豆免费版下载is learning to do a new sport. I know it鈥檚 cliche to tell people to try as much as they can in college, but I saw a guy holding a boat at CU鈥檚 involvement fair, and said, 鈥淭hat looks fun. I鈥檒l try that.鈥

听You mentioned stress earlier. Who supported you when you felt overwhelmed as a student?
I have received immense support from Evan Peck, my advisor, and Jed. Also Priscilla Hopper. Crissy Bowen鈥攐h my gosh, I cannot express all she does. I got a concussion last year鈥

A concussion? What happened?
I fell off my bike riding home from class. I know, it鈥檚 not even a cool story! But Crissy helped me get a doctor鈥檚 appointment. That鈥檚 on top of everything else she does.

听Last question. What鈥檚 next for you?
I love my research. I hear a PhD program whispering to me, but after I graduate this December, I want to work in the industry for a few years before I figure out my next move.


Joe Arney covers research and general news for the college.