Brown Bag Lunch Schedule: Difference between revisions
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The HCIL has an open, semi-organized weekly "Guest Speaker & Pizza Series" every <span style='color:green; font-weight:800'>Thursday from 12:30-1:30pm in HCIL (2119 Hornbake, South Wing)</span>. The topics range from someone's work, current interests in the HCIL, software demos/reviews, study design, proposed research topics, introductions to new people, etc. The BBL is the one hour a week where we all come together--thus, it’s a unique time for HCIL members with unique opportunities to help build collaborations, increase awareness of each other’s activities, and generally just have a bit of fun together. There is no RSVP; simply show up! | = THIS PAGE IS NOT UPDATED ANYMORE= | ||
'''Instead see this new page about the [https://hcil.umd.edu/bbl-speaker-series/ BBL Lecture series]''' | |||
OLD TEXT: The HCIL has an open, semi-organized weekly "Guest Speaker & Pizza Series" every <span style='color:green; font-weight:800'>Thursday from 12:30-1:30pm in HCIL (2119 Hornbake, South Wing)</span>. The topics range from someone's work, current interests in the HCIL, software demos/reviews, study design, proposed research topics, introductions to new people, etc. The BBL is the one hour a week where we all come together--thus, it’s a unique time for HCIL members with unique opportunities to help build collaborations, increase awareness of each other’s activities, and generally just have a bit of fun together. There is no RSVP; simply show up! | |||
If you would like to give or suggest a talk, presentation, workshop, etc., send an email to BBL student co-coordinators '''Teja Maddali (hmaddali@umd.edu)''' or '''Aravind JR (aravind@umd.edu)'''. In the email, briefly describe the topic and preferred dates. | If you would like to give or suggest a talk, presentation, workshop, etc., send an email to BBL student co-coordinators '''Teja Maddali (hmaddali@umd.edu)''' or '''Aravind JR (aravind@umd.edu)'''. In the email, briefly describe the topic and preferred dates. | ||
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<b>B Prabhakaran</b> | <b>B Prabhakaran</b> University of Texas, Dallas | ||
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<b> | <b>Quantifying Human Performance and the Quality of Immersive Experiences</b> | ||
<br> | <br> | ||
Psychometric evaluations are generally used to understand the Quality of Experience (QoE) of immersive environments produced using augmented/mixed/virtual reality. Typically, these subjective evaluations are done from an end-user point-of-view, but these are limited by the subjective observations due to a number of factors. The objective approach consists of measuring the QoE by monitoring the network technical parameters or the network Quality of Service (QoS), such as throughput, delay, and packet loss. Most of the research on objective approaches for QoS-QoE mapping have focused on video streaming. Such objective QoS-QoE mapping strategies cannot be directly applied for immersive environments. | |||
Hence, in this talk, we address two related questions: (1) Can we identify metrics that can objectively quantify the performance of an immersive environment? (2) Can we use the above objective performance metrics to understand the possible user QoE without the need for subjective user study or with minimal user study? We start with different examples of immersive environments such as haptic-enabled applications, mirror therapy, and games. We discuss what metrics are influenced by different system parameters such as processing power, and network QoS. Then, we present some of our preliminary work on understanding users’ QoE through these metrics. | |||
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<b> | <b>Dr. Joel Chan</b> University of Maryland | ||
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<b> | <b>What does a successful process for an HCI researcher look like? Part 2</b> | ||
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TBA | TBA | ||
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Latest revision as of 20:51, 1 February 2021
THIS PAGE IS NOT UPDATED ANYMORE
Instead see this new page about the BBL Lecture series
OLD TEXT: The HCIL has an open, semi-organized weekly "Guest Speaker & Pizza Series" every Thursday from 12:30-1:30pm in HCIL (2119 Hornbake, South Wing). The topics range from someone's work, current interests in the HCIL, software demos/reviews, study design, proposed research topics, introductions to new people, etc. The BBL is the one hour a week where we all come together--thus, it’s a unique time for HCIL members with unique opportunities to help build collaborations, increase awareness of each other’s activities, and generally just have a bit of fun together. There is no RSVP; simply show up!
If you would like to give or suggest a talk, presentation, workshop, etc., send an email to BBL student co-coordinators Teja Maddali (hmaddali@umd.edu) or Aravind JR (aravind@umd.edu). In the email, briefly describe the topic and preferred dates.
To be notified about upcoming events, please subscribe to one of these mailing lists.
Spring 2020 Guest Speaker Series Schedule
Date | Leader | Topic |
---|---|---|
02/06/2020 |
Dr. Joel Chan, Dr. Amanda Lazar and Dr. Catherine Plaisant University of Maryland |
Panel discussion "What does a successful process for an HCI researcher look like?
|
02/13/2020 |
Christian Vogler, Gallaudet University |
The User Experience of Viewing Captioned Content
|
02/20/2020 |
Wei Ai University of Maryland |
Promoting Pro-social Behavior with End-to-End Data Science
|
02/27/2019 |
B Prabhakaran University of Texas, Dallas |
Quantifying Human Performance and the Quality of Immersive Experiences
|
03/05/2020 |
Dr. Joel Chan University of Maryland |
What does a successful process for an HCI researcher look like? Part 2
|
Fall 2019 HCIL Guest Speaker Series Schedule
Date | Leader | Topic |
---|---|---|
08/29/2019 |
Hack-a-thon |
|
09/05/2019 |
Prof. Jun-Dong Cho Sungkyunkwan University, South Korea |
Celestial: Color Patterns for improving Color Perception for blind people.
Recently, we developed "Blind-touch" to aid the visually impaired to appreciate greater painter’s work of art. This work is a reproduction of an existing masterpiece by means of a 3D printer and haptic electronics. It recognizes the pattern by touching the object in the artwork with a fingertip, and voice explanation and sound effect are provided through the voice user interface. Color is an equaling lens through which we experience the natural and digital realities. Now, we are exploring the tactile-color association based on semiotics to represent colors with fingertip tactile sensation. In this way, audio and touch contribute information to the non-visual perception of color in an complementary manner. In this talk, we review the related works and introduce a so-called “Celestial color tactile pattern” built based on the concept of both pictogram and ideogram and its variants. |
09/12/2019 |
Prof. Niklas Elmqvist, Prof. Amanda Lazar, and Prof. Joel Chan University of Maryland |
A panel discussion on approaches to reviewing research papers.
|
09/19/2019 |
Ben Shneiderman University of Maryland |
Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence: Designing Next Generation User Experiences
|
09/26/2019 |
Tom Ball Microsoft Research |
MakeCode and CODAL: intuitive and efficient embedded systems programming for education
|
10/3/2019 |
Naeemul Hassan University of Maryland |
Towards Automated Fact Discovery and Ranking
|
10/10/2019 |
John Dickerson University of Maryland |
|
10/17/2019 |
Prof. Caro Williams-Pierce University of Maryland |
Designing for Mathematical Play: Failure and Feedback
|
10/24/2019 |
Karen Holtzblatt Incontext Design |
What is Valuing vs “Jerk” Behavior? How behavior impacts a positive working experience
|
10/31/2019 |
Rachael Bradley Montgomery |
Designing to Support People with Cognitive and Learning Disabilities
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11/7/2019 |
Dr. Gregg Vanderheiden |
Underestimating the challenge of cognitive disabilities (and digital literacy). Directions to explore in short, medium and long term.
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11/14/2019 |
Adam Aviv George Washington University |
Human Factors in Mobile Authentication
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11/21/2019 |
Whitney Quesenbery Co-Director, Center for Civic Design |
Storytelling makes research data come to life
|
11/28/2019 |
Happy Thanksgiving Day |
No BBL. Time to catch up with families and friends :)
|
12/05/2019 |
TBA |
TBA
|
Spring 2019 Schedule
Date | Leader | Topic |
---|---|---|
01/31/2019 |
Faculty Only BBL |
Regular BBLs will start from 7th Feb, 2019. |
02/07/2019 |
Faez Ahmed, University of Maryland |
Design Democratization in the Age of Machine Learning.
|
02/14/2019 |
Huaishu Peng, University of Maryland |
Interactive Fabrication and Fabrication for Interaction.
|
02/21/2019 |
Niklas Elmqvist University of Maryland |
Everyone a Data Scientist: Empowering Casual Users to Understand Complex Data.
In this work-in-progress talk, I will discuss our efforts for shrinking or outright eliminating this new digital data divide through interactive visualization, explainable machine learning, and collaborative technologies. More specifically, I will talk about several past, current, or planned projects on this topic, including (1) the use of mixed-initiative interaction, which combines both human and computational efforts in the analytical process; (2) the use of attention for computational steering; (3) recommender systems for automatically suggesting the next analytical step in a workflow; (4) direct manipulation methods for interacting with machine learning models; and (5) "team-first" collaborative mechanisms that reduce the barrier to synchronizing and sharing work to facilitate emergent collaboration. This is ongoing research, so your feedback on these efforts is welcome. |
02/28/2019 |
Townhall |
Research Speed Dating
Faculty members, Ph.D. students, Masters students, and Bachelors students, we strongly encourage you to share your work so that everyone is aware of what’s happening inside HCIL. |
03/07/2019 | HCIL Spring Cleaning Join and help spruce up the HCIL and be a part of a larger conversation of what the lab space should look like. We start at noon (12 pm) and there is free food for anyone who joins! | |
03/14/2019 |
Stories from the HCIL |
Come and tell your favorite stories about the HCIL and the iSchool in this new format that we're trying for the BBL. It's like a casual fireside chat where you get to learn about the rich history of the HCIL from the people who know it best! And there is pizza, of course. |
03/21/2019 | No Brown Bag, Spring Break. | |
03/28/2019 | HCIL Symposium Practice Talks All speakers are invited to come rehearse their talk. Please shoot an email to the BBL coordinators and add your name to the schedule: HERE. | |
04/04/2019 | HCIL Symposium In Session No BBL, instead we encourage you to join us at the HCIL Symposium. | |
04/11/2019 |
Wayne Lutters, University of Maryland |
Supporting service work in information infrastructure
|
04/18/2019 |
Zheng Yao, Carnegie Mellon University |
Join, Stay or Go? Members’ Life Cycles in Online Health Communities
|
04/25/2019 |
TBA |
Aravind will run a workshop on how to make PDF documents accessible |
05/02/2019 |
Yue Jiang, University of Maryland, College Park |
ORC Layout: Adaptive GUI Layout with OR-Constraints We propose a novel approach for constraint-based graphical user interface (GUI) layout based on OR-constraints (ORC) in standard soft/hard linear constraint systems. ORC layout unifies grid layout and flow layout, supporting both their features as well as cases where grid and flow layouts individually fail. We describe ORC design patterns that enable designers to safely create flexible layouts that work across different screen sizes and orientations. We also present the ORC Editor, a GUI editor that enables designers to apply ORC in a safe and effective manner, mixing grid, flow and new ORC layout features as appropriate. We demonstrate that our prototype can adapt layouts to screens with different aspect ratios with only a single layout specification, easing the burden of GUI maintenance. Finally, we show that ORC specifications can be modified interactively and solved efficiently at runtime. |
05/09/2019 |
TBA |
TBA
|
05/16/2019 |
Adil Yalcin, Founder and CEO at Keshif |
It's all about creating new possibilities for people: A journey from the lab to a startup One of the most valuable parts of the DNA of HCIL is its focus on "human", and how our mentors guide us to connect our work with people (users). As a student of this school of thought, I had found my purpose to help the 95% by identifying, questioning, and removing barriers (creating opportunities) in visual analytics. Two years ago, with results baked in lab, and the same driving purpose, I stepped into a world unknown to me: creating, running, and growing a business, one customer at a time. I am back to share some of the surprises, new perspectives, and validations from this journey so far. What I missed can help you realize the opportunities you already have. What I wish I knew may reveal some gaps. And, what remained constant may hint that research in university and what comes after may not be so different after all. I also will touch on the subtle and dynamic balance between your elevator pitch, your audience, the value you provide, and crossing the finish line. |
05/23/2019 |
TBA |
TBA
|
Fall 2018 Schedule
Date | Leader | Topic |
---|---|---|
08/30/2018 |
Student Townhall |
Instead of the regular BBL, there will be an internal HCIL-students-only townhall meeting instead. .
|
09/06/2018 |
BBL Student Co-coordinators |
Come, network, make introductions, and share what you are working on. |
09/13/2018 |
Joel Chan, Tammy Clegg |
TBA .
|
09/20/2018 |
Joel Zhang |
Research proposal centered around pain tracking and sharing. .
|
03/22/2017 | No Brown Bag, Cancelled. | |
10/4/2018 |
Brian Ondov, Sriram Karthik Badam |
Brian’s paper talks about Evaluating Visual Comparison and seeks to understand how different encodings of data can drastically affect how we perceive quantities. More information about this project is available at http://hcil.umd.edu/visualcomparison/.
.
|
10/11/2018 |
Polly Lee O'Rourke |
Improving language learning using brain simulation. .
|
10/18/2018 |
Andrea Batch |
Information Olfactation: Harnessing Scent to Convey Data .
|
10/25/2018 |
Student Townhall |
Research speed-dating .
|
11/01/2018 |
Joohee Choi |
Will Too Many Editors Spoil The Tag? Conflicts and Alignment in Q&A Categorization (CSCW Practice Talk) .
|
11/08/2018 |
Alina Striner |
Learning in the Holodeck: the Role of Multisensory Cues on Pattern Recognition in VR .
|
11/15/2018 |
Student Townhall |
Research speed dating. .
|
03/22/2017 | No Brown Bag, Thanksgiving Break. | |
11/29/2018 |
Lelani Battle |
A Characterization Study of Exploratory Analysis Behaviors in Tableau In this talk, I will present our recent work on characterizing the EVA process. We contribute a consistent definition of EVA through review of the relevant literature, and an empirical evaluation of existing assumptions regarding how analysts perform EVA. We present the results of a study where 27 Tableau users answered various analysis questions across 3 datasets. We measure task performance, identify recurring patterns across participants’ analyses, and assess variance from task specificity and dataset. We find striking differences between existing assumptions and the collected data. Participants successfully completed a variety of tasks, with over 80% accuracy across focused tasks with measurably correct answers. The observed cadence of analyses is surprisingly slow compared to popular assumptions from the database community. We find significant overlap in analyses across participants, showing that EVA behaviors can be predictable. Furthermore, we find few structural differences between open-ended and more focused analysis tasks. Finally, I will discuss the implications of our findings for the design of effective data analytics systems, and highlight several promising directions for future study. .
|
12/06/2018 |
Student Townhall |
TBA .
|
12/13/2018 |
Cookie Exchange |
We encourage you to make/buy cookies (or some related treat) and create individual bags (about six cookies in each bag, and about 4-6 bags). Then bring them in labeled on 12/13 and you can pick bags from other people to take home or eat on the spot. However, you do not need to make cookies to attend! All are welcome to come and hang out. .
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Spring 2018 Schedule
Date | Leader | Topic |
---|---|---|
01/25/2018 |
Kickoff to a new Semester! |
Come, network, make introductions, and share what you are working on Please come to our first BBL of the Spring 2018 semester to introduce yourself and share what you're working on in the coming semester. The first BBL will be for us to network with each other and kickoff a great new semester.
|
02/01/2018 |
Bahador Saket
|
Visualization by Demonstration Abstract: A commonly used interaction paradigm in most visualization tools is manual view specification. Tools implementing manual view specification often require users to manually specify visual properties through GUI operations on collections of visual properties and data attributes that are presented visually on control panels. To interact with tools implementing manual view specification users need to understand the potentially complex system parameters being controlled. Additionally, in such tools, users need to constantly shift their attention from the visual features of interest when interacting. In this talk, I present an alternative interaction paradigm for visualization construction and data exploration called visualization by demonstration. This paradigm advocates for a different process of visualization construction. I will also discuss the trade-offs between these interaction paradigms based on the data collected from an empirical study. I will then discuss applications of the "by demonstration’" paradigm in other areas in data visualization.
|
02/08/2018 |
Elissa Redmiles
|
Dancing Pigs or Security? Measuring the Rationality of End-User Security Behavior Abstract: Accurately modeling human decision-making in security is critical to think about when, why, and how to recommend that users adopt certain secure behaviors. We used behavioral economics experiments to model the rationality of end-user security decision-making in a realistic online experimental system simulating a bank account. We ask participants to make a financially impactful security choice, in the face of transparent risks of account compromise and benefits offered by an optional security behavior (two-factor authentication). We find that more than 50% of our participants made rational (e.g., utility optimal) decisions, and we find that participants are more likely to behave rationally in the face of higher risk. Additionally, we confirm that users are boundedly rational: they make decisions based on some risks and context, but not others, and we can model their behavior well as a function of these factors. Finally, we show that a “one-size-fits-all” emphasis on security can lead to market losses, but that adoption by a subset of users with higher risks or lower costs can lead to market gains.
|
02/15/2018 |
Erin Peters-Burton
|
Building Student Self-Awareness of Learning to Enhance Diversity in the Sciences Abstract: Many students are being left out of pursuing further studies in science because the current system of science education values students who learn via completion in an isolated, rather than collaborative way (Tobias, 1990). The stereotype of students who excel in science tend to be the ones who can conform to the institutional structure where the teacher is the sole source of knowledge (Friere, 2000). Through the idea of “Education as the Practice of Freedom” (hooks, 1994), the presentation will explain investigations that explore tangible ways to break down that stereotype. This research begins with the assumption that if teachers taught the ways science operates as a discipline, then students gain more power to construct their own scientific knowledge because they understand the “rules” of knowledge validation (Duschl, 1990). Learning how scientific knowledge is constructed and being self-aware of one’s own learning in science can help level the playing field so that students can do inquiry well (NRC, 1996; AAAS, 1993) and the science classroom will be a more inclusive, positive environment rather than relying on isolated competition for teaching. In this presentation, I will present an overview of research I have done over the past 10 years that focuses on helping students to become self-aware of their learning in science and how scientific knowledge is constructed. The work involves 8th grade students, undergraduates, graduate students, and professionals. The studies include constructs such as self-efficacy, motivation, metacognition, self-regulated learning, and visualization. Findings of the studies are synthesized into self-awareness priorities and how those constructs will ultimately impact social justice by providing more opportunities to see alternative perspectives and learn the “rules” of knowledge validation in science. As a result, students develop a sense of agency and an identity where anything is possible because they can learn independently in any situation.
|
02/22/2018 |
Norman Su
|
The Problem of Designing for Subcultures Abstract: Members of subcultures speak about and act with pervasive technologies in service to their distinct traditions. I will describe how outwardly subcultures maintain a unified front, yet inwardly are rich sites for compromise and confrontation over technology. I will highlight findings from work we have done with subcultures and, in particular, my own fieldwork with Irish traditional musicians. I will close by describing new design opportunities for technologies that acknowledge the remarkable solidarity and discord of subcultures.
|
03/01/2018 |
Ya-Wei Li
|
Using Data and Technology to Save Endangered Species. Abstract: We will discuss how Defenders of Wildlife, a nonprofit wildlife conservation organization, is expanding its use of technology and data analytics to conserve endangered species. We will summarize our projects involving remote-sensing data to monitor wildlife habitat and compliance with conservation agreements; data mining of federal government decisions to build the largest public repository of text-searchable documents on the U.S. Endangered Species Act; natural language processing of those documents to improve public understanding of how our government conserves endangered species; use of data visualization tools to reveal patterns in large datasets; and other initiatives. We invite the audience to actively engage with us about how we can improve our work and offer ideas for future projects and potential collaborations.
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03/08/2018 |
Deok Gun Park
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Thinking, Autism and AGI
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03/15/2018 |
Clemens Klokmose
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Shareable Dynamic Media: A revisit of the fundamentals of interactive computing Abstract: Developing interactive systems that support collaboration between people, distribution across heterogeneous devices and user appropriation is notoriously difficult. Today’s software rests on a foundation built for personal computing, and to properly support the aforementioned qualities we need to revisit this foundation. In this talk, I will present you with a vision called Shareable Dynamic Media, inspired by Alan Kay’s seminal vision of Personal Dynamic Media. I will present a prototype implementation of the vision called Webstrates, and demonstrate how it enables the development of software where distribution across devices, collaboration between people, and malleability and reprogrammability are the norm rather than the exception. I will show our latest project, Codestrates, that combines Webstrates with the literate computing approach of interactive notebooks.
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03/22/2017 | No Brown Bag, Spring Break. | |
03/29/2018 |
Wei Bai
|
Understanding User Tradeoffs for Search in Encrypted Communication
Abstract: End-to-end message encryption is the only way to achieve absolute message privacy. However, searching over
end-to-end encrypted messages is complicated. Several popular instant messaging tools (e.g., WhatsApp, iMessage) circumvent this inconvenience by storing the search index locally on the devices. Another approach, called searchable encryption, allows users to search encrypted messages without storing the search index locally. These approaches have inherent tradeoffs between usability and security properties, yet little is known about how general users value these tradeoffs, especially in the context of email rather than instant messaging. In this paper, we systematize these tradeoffs in order to identify key feature differences. We use these differences as the basis for a choice-based conjoint analysis experiment focused on email (n=160), in which participants make a series of choices between email services with competing features. The results allow us to quantify the relative importance of each feature. We find that users indicate high relative importance for increasing privacy and minimizing local storage requirements. While privacy is more important overall, local storage is more important than adding additional marginal privacy after an initial improvement. These results suggest that local indexing, which provides more privacy, may often be appropriate for encrypted email, but that searchable encryption, which limits local storage, may also hold promise for some users.
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04/05/2018 |
Eun-Kyoung Choe
|
Designing A Flexible Personal Data Tracking Tool
Abstract: We now see an increasing number of self-tracking apps and wearable devices. Despite the vast number of available tools, however, it is still challenging for self-trackers to find apps that suit their unique tracking needs, preferences, and commitments. In this talk, I will present OmniTrack, a mobile self-tracking system, which enables self-trackers to construct their own trackers and customize tracking items to meet their individual tracking needs. OmniTrack leverages a semi-automated tracking approach that combines manual and automated tracking methods. From a deployment study, we showed how participants used OmniTrack to create, revise, and appropriate trackers—ranging from a simple mood tracker to a sophisticated daily activity tracker. I will discuss how to further improve OmniTrack by incorporating multimodal interactions, providing more appropriate visualizations on a mobile device, and supporting researchers' unique data collection needs.
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04/12/2018 |
CHI practice talks |
Combining smartwatches with large displays for visual data exploration by Karthik Badam and Tom Horak TBD
|
04/19/2018 |
Hernisa Kacorri
|
Accessibility and Assistive Technologies at the Intersection of Users and Data
Abstract: Advances in artificial intelligence enable us to address key social issues. However, to see the benefit of this technology in many real-world applications, an integrative approach is necessary; effective solutions consist of a pipeline of processes or tasks involving both humans and machines. My research has integrated human computer interaction (HCI) techniques and data-driven methods applied to human data to steer technological innovations for people with visual impairments and for people who are deaf or hard-of-hearing. In this talk, I will provide an overview of my research program, and I will demonstrate the effectiveness of integrating machine learning and HCI methodologies with two concrete examples: i) teachable object recognizers trained by blind users, and ii) facial expression synthesis in sign language animations.
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04/26/2018 |
Chi-Young Oh
|
Small Worlds in a Distant Land: International Newcomer Students' Local Information Behavior in Unfamiliar Environments
Abstract: International students are a rapidly growing sub-population of students, and the United States, as a top destination, has hosted students from 218 different countries. However, as with other international newcomers, these students face various types of challenges in a new country. Studies have reported the challenges this population faces in regard to cultures, academic systems, and general adjustments, but research is less clear about the challenges they face in terms of information behaviors during adjustment to a new country. This study addresses the information behaviors of international newcomer students in the context of adjustment to new local environments; that is, their local information behavior (LIB). Specifically, drawing on prior work and theories, this research conceptualizes the idea of "socio-national context," the degree to which there are individuals from the same country available in one's local environment, as a factor influencing international newcomer students’ information behavior. Through the findings from this longitudinal mixed-method study of international and U.S. graduate students in different socio-national contexts, it is argued that information behavior theories and models need to account for people's socio-national contexts if they are to inform research involving international newcomer students and provide insights on designing systems and services for all international newcomer students, especially those from countries that tend to be less well-represented among international students in a host country.
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05/03/2018 |
Amanda Lazar
|
Rethinking technology for dementia Abstract: As the population ages, research is increasingly focused on conditions associated with growing older, such as cognitive and physical impairment. Technology is often presented as a solution for managing or treating these changes. This framing can position health conditions as problems to address through design and can neglect the complexity and positive aspects of older adulthood. In this talk, I draw on critical perspectives from Human-Computer Interaction and Gerontology. I describe ways in which technology can help us understand and challenge stereotypes around aging as well as cognitive impairment, and my ongoing and future work in this area. I will argue for a view of aging that takes into account the ways that technologies position older individuals and, in turn, the way that this view can inform the design of new technologies to enrich the experience of growing older.
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05/10/2018 |
Joel Chan
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Back to the Future: How people construct new creative ideas from old knowledge, and how technology can help Abstract: Where do good ideas come from? One answer is that they come from prior knowledge: for example, Thomas Edison leveraged his knowledge of phonographs to “do for the eye what the phonograph does for the ear”. Yet, much research on human creativity demonstrates that prior knowledge often constrains creativity. How do people construct new creative ideas from old knowledge? And (how) can technology help? In the first part of my talk, I will summarize empirical work I have done that advances theories of the conditions under which people successfully construct new creative ideas from prior knowledge. This empirical work shows that prior knowledge can inspire creativity when it is analogically related to the current problem. This insight informs the ongoing work I will discuss in the second part of my talk: developing information technologies that combine human and machine intelligence to more effectively support analogical reasoning over prior knowledge.
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05/17/2018 |
Rachel Kramer
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WILDLABS.NET: the conservation technology network Abstract: WILDLABS.NET: the conservation technology network is a collaboration across organizations that provides online infrastructure to connect wildlife conservationists directly to technologists to support the informed integration of technology tools in conservation practice. Since 2015, WILDLABS has evolved into a thriving online community of over 2,300 experts around the globe who crowd-source ideas and information, share case studies and co-develop solutions to pressing conservation and research challenges. WILDLABS community members range from academics to tech sector professionals, NGO staff, field-based practitioners and makers. On our platform, ideas are shared in over 25 technology and conservation challenge-specific groups with over 450 active discussion threads. The community is also a hub for posting grant and job opportunities to enhance the uptake of technical expertise into wildlife conservation initiatives. In this talk, we’ll explore the latest happenings on WILDLABS and empower those with engineering and related expertise to share their abilities to help save species.
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Past Brown Bags
View the Past Brown Bag Lunch Schedules to learn more about prior talks.