Past Brown Bag Lunch Schedules: Difference between revisions
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The following are the past Brown Bag schedules. | The following are the past Brown Bag schedules. | ||
== Fall 2015 == | |||
{| class="wikitable" border="1" | |||
|- | |||
! Date | |||
! width="150px" | Leader | |||
! Topic | |||
|- | |||
| 09/03/2015 | |||
| '''All new students!''' <br> | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
New student introductions! | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
<br> Much like last year, this BBL is for new students to introduce themselves, talk briefly about their projects and interests and bounce their ideas off the HCIL members. The purpose of these informal and participatory talks is to help connect new students with professors and other students sharing the same interests. We'll also cover useful resources for students (e.g., this very wiki!) | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 09/10/2015 <br> | |||
<small>STARTING<br> | |||
AT NOON<br> | |||
exceptionally</small> | |||
| '''Jean-Daniel Fekete''' <br> Senior Research Scientist at INRIA ([http://www.aviz.fr/~fekete/pmwiki/pmwiki.php link]) | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
ProgressiVis: a New Workflow Model for Scalability in Information Visualization | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
<br> | |||
'''Abstract:''' Information Visualization (infovis) has, for years, been limited to | |||
small data: a typical infovis application will work well with up-to 1000 | |||
items/records, a few can scale to 100,000 items, and very few, including | |||
the leading commercial products such as Tableau and Spotfire, have been | |||
able to deal with millions of items. Billions are seldom mentioned in | |||
the infovis literature. In contrast, the research fields of machine | |||
learning and databases are routinely dealing with datasets of several | |||
billions of items, and the numbers are growing. | |||
There are legitimate reasons why it takes time for infovis to start | |||
catching-up with these large numbers, and some work such as Lins et al. | |||
Nanocubes (http://www.nanocubes.net/) and Liu et al. imMens | |||
(http://idl.cs.washington.edu/papers/immens), have started to show | |||
possible routes to scalability. However, they both rely on either | |||
pre-computed aggregations that need hours to compute for large datasets, | |||
or on a highly parallel infrastructure performing aggregations on the | |||
fly. In my talk, I will explain why we need more flexible solutions and | |||
present a new workflow architecture called ProgressiVis, to achieve | |||
progressive computations and visualization over massive datasets. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio:''' Jean-Daniel Fekete is Senior Research Scientist (DR1) at INRIA, the French National Research Institute in Computer Science. He received his PhD in Computer Science in 1996 from Université Paris-Sud. From 1997 to 2001, he joined the Graphic Design group at the Ecole des Mines de Nantes that he led from 2000 to 2001. He was then invited to join the Human-Computer Interaction Laboratory at the University of Maryland in the USA for one year. He was recruited by INRIA in 2002 as a confirmed researcher and became Senior Research Scientist in 2006. He is the Scientific Leader of the INRIA Project Team AVIZ (see www.aviz.fr) that he founded in 2007 and that is well known worldwide in the domains of visualization and human-computer interaction. His main research areas are Visual Analytics, Information Visualization and Human Computer Interaction. Jean-Daniel Fekete was the General Chair of the IEEE VIS Conference in 2014, the first time it was held outside of the USA in Paris. He is an Associate Editor of the IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics (TVCG), Member of the IEEE Information Visualization Conference Steering Committee and of the EG EuroVis Steering Committee. During 2015, he is on Sabbatical at NYU and Harvard. | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 09/17/2015 | |||
| '''Liese Zahabi''' <br> Assistant Professor of Graphic Design at the University of Maryland, College Park ([http://zahabidesign.com/portfolio/ link]) | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
Exploring Information-Triage: Speculative interface tools to help college students conduct online research | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
<br> | |||
'''Abstract:''' In many ways, the promise of the Internet has been overshadowed by a sense of overload and anxiety for many users. The production and publication of online material has become increasingly accessible and affordable, creating a confusing glut of information users must sift through to locate exactly what they want or need. Even a fundamental Google search can often prove paralyzing.The concept of information-triage may help mitigate this issue. Information-triage is the process of sorting, grouping, categorizing, prioritizing, storing and retrieving information in order to make sense and use of it. This work examines the role of design in the online search process, connects it to the nature of human attention and the limitations of working memory, and suggests ways to support users with an information-triage system. This talk will focus on a set of three speculative online search interfaces and user-testing sessions conducted with college students to explore the possibilities for information-triage and future interface prototypes and testing. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio:''' Liese Zahabi is a graphic/interaction designer and Assistant Professor of Graphic/Interaction Design at the University of Maryland in College Park. She received her Master of Graphic Design from North Carolina State University, and her Bachelor of Fine Arts from Eastern Michigan University. She has been working as a designer for thirteen years, and teaches courses in interaction design, motion design, typography and advanced graphic design. Liese’s academic research focuses on search as a cognitive and cultural process and artifact, and how the design of metaphoric interfaces can change the experience of search tasks. Her creative design work is also metaphorical, and explores how the nature of search manifests itself in visual patterns and sense-making, and how language and image intersect within the context of the Internet. | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 09/24/2015 | |||
| '''HCIL Student Presentations''' | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
Graduate students will give short presentations about their past, present, and/or future work. If you are interested in participating, please email the BBL student co-coordinators '''Austin Beck (austinbb@umd.edu)''' or '''Leyla Norooz (leylan@umd.edu)''' | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
<br> | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 10/01/2015 | |||
| '''Celine Latulipe''' <br> Associate Professor at The University of North Carolina at Charlotte ([http://hci.uncc.edu/~clatulip/clwp/ link]) | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
Borrowing from HCI: Teamwork, Design and Sketching for Intro Programming Classes | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
<br> | |||
'''Abstract''': In this talk, I will present recent efforts to reinvent introductory programming classes by borrowing teaching methodologies from HCI and design classes. A main component is the introduction of the concept of "Lightweight Teams", which has shown to increase student engagement in introductory programming. We also make use of Guzdial and Ericson's Media Computation approach, gamification and more recently formal use of sketchbooks. I will show the results we have so far, which were the subject of a best paper award at ACM SIGCSE earlier this year, and discuss how we continue to build on this work. We believe that bringing an HCI sensibility to introductory programming classes has the potential to increase retention in the classes and in CS majors, and is especially likely to help women and under-represented minorities feel more welcome in the classroom. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio''': | |||
Dr. Celine Latulipe is an Associate Professor in the Department of Software and Information Systems in the College of Computing and Informatics at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Her research involves developing and evaluating novel interaction techniques, creativity and collaboration support tools and technologies to support the arts, and developing innovation computer science curriculum design patterns. Dr. Latulipe examines issues of how to support exploration in complex interfaces and how interaction affordances impact satisficing behavior. She also conducts research into how to make computer science education a more social experience, both as a way of more deeply engaging students and as an approach to broadening participation in a field that lacks gender and racial diversity. | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 10/08/2015 | |||
| '''Adil Yalçın''' <br> PhD Student, Department of Computer Science ([http://www.adilyalcin.me link]) | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
AggreSet: Rich and Scalable Set Exploration using Visualizations of Element Aggregations (InfoVis practice talk) | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
<br> ([http://www.keshif.me/AggreSet AggreSet]) Datasets commonly include multi-value (set-typed) attributes that describe set memberships over elements, such as genres per movie or courses taken per student. Set-typed attributes describe rich relations across elements, sets, and the set intersections. Increasing the number of sets results in a combinatorial growth of relations and creates scalability challenges. Exploratory tasks (e.g. selection, comparison) have commonly been designed in separation for set-typed attributes, which reduces interface consistency. To improve on scalability and to support rich, contextual exploration of set-typed data, we present AggreSet. AggreSet creates aggregations for each data dimension: sets, set-degrees, set-pair intersections, and other attributes. It visualizes the element count per aggregate using a matrix plot for set-pair intersections, and histograms for set lists, set-degrees and other attributes. Its non-overlapping visual design is scalable to numerous and large sets. AggreSet supports selection, filtering, and comparison as core exploratory tasks. It allows analysis of set relations including subsets, disjoint sets and set intersection strength, and also features perceptual set ordering for detecting patterns in set matrices. Its interaction is designed for rich and rapid data exploration. We demonstrate results on a wide range of datasets from different domains with varying characteristics, and report on expert reviews and a case study using student enrollment and degree data with assistant deans at a major public university. | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 10/15/2015 | |||
| <!-- '''Name''' --> <br> <!-- Designation --> <!-- ([URL link])--> | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
<!-- Title --> | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
<br> <!-- Abstract --> | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 10/22/2015 | |||
| '''Heather Bradbury''' <br> Director, Masters of Professional Studies Programs at Maryland Institute College of Art ([http://www.mica.edu/Programs_of_Study/School_for_Professional_and_Continuing_Studies/Meet_the_SPCS_Team.html link]) | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
Tipping the Balance | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
<br> | |||
'''Abstract''': When the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) began the Masters of Professional Studies in Information Visualization [http://www.mica.edu/infovis www.mica.edu/infovis], there was a document and a goal to take MICA in a new academic direction by integrating design education with course work in visual communication, data analysis, and statistical applications. The audience for this new program was wide ranging in professional skills, expertise, and industry, from designers to research professionals, statisticians, and analysts, coming from private and public industries. This talk will tell the story of how the program moved from an idea to launch, to its fourth year of students, and how design, data, and analysis work together to tip the balance to develop graduates who are more fluid and knowledgeable in the process of creating beautiful, informative, accurate, and persuasive visualizations. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio''': | |||
Heather Bradbury, Director of MICA’s Masters of Professional Studies programs in Information Visualization and the Business of Art and Design, comes to MICA with over 15 years of experience in the fields of creative and educational project development and strategic communication. Heather’s background and broad professional experience, including Communications Specialist at the Maryland State Department of Education, Office of the State Superintendent; IDEAS Grants Manager and Education Specialist at the Space Telescope Science Institute (Home of Hubble Space Telescope); and co-owner of Balance-the Salon, an award-winning hair salon and photo gallery, provides her with a unique perspective in program operations and management as well as communication through various mediums to tell stories. Heather has additional experience working in the fields of architecture/interior design, engineering, events and catering, and production pottery. | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 10/29/2015 | |||
| '''Kurt Luther''' <br> Assistant Professor of Computer Science in HCI/CSCW at Virginia Tech ([https://www.kurtluther.com/ link]) | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
Combining Crowds and Computation to Make Discoveries and Solve Mysteries | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
<br> | |||
'''Abstract''': We are living in the era of big data, and making sense of this data to improve the human condition is a major challenge. Automated techniques in machine learning, natural language processing, computer vision, and other areas have made significant headway, but many types of complex data analysis still require human intervention. Crowdsourcing and human computation raise exciting possibilities for enhancing computational data analysis techniques with scalable human intelligence and creativity, allowing us to solve harder problems and generate deeper insights than humans or computers working alone. In this talk, I will describe several of my recent projects exploring the potential of crowdsourced data analysis. These include Crowdlines, a system that crowdsources a comprehensive overview of a knowledge domain using existing material gathered from the web; Incite, a system that engages non-expert crowds in helping professional scholars make discoveries in large collections of historical documents; and Context Slices, a system that combines crowdsourcing and visual analytics techniques to help experts solve mysteries, such as identifying the subject matter in historical photos or uncovering a terrorist plot in a body of textual evidence. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio''': | |||
Kurt Luther is Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Virginia Tech, where he is also Co-Director of Social Informatics for the Center for Human-Computer Interaction. He builds and studies social technologies that support creativity and discovery, often with applications to the creation and analysis of visual media, such as animation, graphic design, and photography. He also explores how social technologies can engage the public in historical research, preservation, and education. His work is currently funded by the National Science Foundation, the National Archives, and Google. Previously, he was a postdoc in the HCI Institute at Carnegie Mellon University, and he holds a Ph.D. in Human-Centered Computing from Georgia Tech. | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 11/05/2015 | |||
| '''C. Scott Dempwolf''' <br> Research Assistant Professor and Director, UMD - Morgan State Joint Center for Economic Development ([http://www.terpconnect.umd.edu/~dempy/ link]) | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
Visualizing Innovation Ecosystems: Networks, Events and the Challenges of Policy and Practice | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
<br> | |||
'''Abstract''': For the past five years Scott Dempwolf has collaborated with faculty and students in HCIL to develop new visualizations of innovation using NodeXL and, more recently, EventFlow. This talk presents some of the fruits of those collaborations and discusses some remaining challenges where new visualizations could help shape policy and practice related to innovation and economic development. Scott’s innovation network models use large administrative datasets including patents and research grants in new ways to create novel visualizations of innovation and entrepreneurial ecosystems using NodeXL software. These models are being used by policymakers and economic developers to help accelerate the commercialization of research by identifying specific opportunities between university research and industry. Examples include the Illinois Science & Technology Roadmap; the Great Lakes Manufacturing megaregion; the emergence of innovation clusters in Pennsylvania; and local applications in Howard and St. Mary’s counties in Maryland. More recently, working with co-PI Ben Shneiderman and the EventFlow team in HCIL, Scott’s research uses EventFlow (and CoCo) software to analyze sequences of innovation activities. Funded by the National Science Foundation, the goals of this research are to develop new innovation metrics and new insights into the complex sequences of activities that comprise innovation processes. EventFlow’s novel visualizations and analytic capabilities are central to achieving these goals. This talk will present examples of Scott’s work using both NodeXL and EventFlow, focusing specifically on how the visualizations were created and used. The emphasis will be on the use of visualizations as tools for exploring and understanding data and for generating hypotheses. Some ongoing challenges, especially those pertaining to the use of visualizations to shape understanding and public policy will also be discussed. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio''': C. Scott Dempwolf is Assistant Research Professor in the Urban Studies and Planning Program at the University of Maryland, College Park, and Director of the UMD – Morgan State Center for Economic Development. He is also affiliated with the National Center for Smart Growth Education and Research. His research focuses on understanding, modeling, visualizing and measuring innovation processes; their relationships to economic growth; and the implications for public policy, business strategy and economic development practice. Along with partners from BioHealth Innovation, Scott recently founded Tertius Analytics, LLC. The startup is focused on commercializing applications of his research. Prior to his “second career” in academia, Scott practiced community and economic development at the neighborhood, city, county and regional levels for over 20 years. He teaches an economic development planning studio and other planning courses. He earned his PhD in Urban and Regional Planning at UMD; a Masters in Community and Regional Planning at Temple University; and a Bachelor’s from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 11/12/2015 | |||
| '''Matt Mauriello<sup>1</sup>, Zahra Ashktorab<sup>2</sup>, Uran Oh<sup>1</sup>, Brenna McNally<sup>2</sup>''' <br> [1] UMD CS PhD Student <br> [2] UMD iSchool PhD Student <!-- ([URL link])--> | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
Where Oh Where Have My Grad Students Gone?: An Internship Panel | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
<br> This panel will feature HCIL graduate students in the iSchool and Department of Computer Science who have completed summer internships at Microsoft Research and Google. Panelists will discuss a variety of topics including their experiences in their respective positions, the hiring process, tips to succeeding during the internship, and differences and similarities between their positions across and within companies. Questions will also be welcomed from the audience. | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 11/19/2015 | |||
| '''Jen Golbeck''' <br> Associate Professor at UMD's iSchool ([http://www.cs.umd.edu/~golbeck/ link]) | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
What I Did On My Sabbatical | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
<br> | |||
'''Abstract''': Last year I was on sabbatical and it was the best thing ever! My plan was to do a little work and mostly sit around and read novels. Instead, I did a TON of work on many cool new things. I'll talk about my book, my projects, my new ventures into public intellectual land, and my winter in Miami. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio''': Jen Golbeck is the previous director of the HCIL and is an associate professor in the iSchool. She is a computer scientist and studies social media, AI, and privacy/security. | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- style="background-color: darkgray;" | | |||
| 11/26/2014 | |||
| colspan="2" | No Brown Bag for Thanksgiving break. | |||
|- | |||
| 12/03/2015 | |||
| '''Ben Shneiderman''' <br> Professor of Computer Science ([http://www.cs.umd.edu/~ben]) | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
Editing Wikipedia Tutorial/Workshop | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
<br> <!-- Abstract --> We'll share knowledge about Wikipedia editing, using the HCIL Wikipedia page as an example (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Maryland_Human_%E2%80%93_Computer_Interaction_Lab). We'll exchange knowledge about how Wikipedia works, the policies such as NPOV (Neutral Point of View) and requirements for Notability. | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 12/10/2015 | |||
| '''Larry Lee''' <br> Chief System Engineer at Elucid Solutions ([http://elucidsolutions.com link]) | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
The Lucidity Project: Bringing Privacy Back to the Web | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
<br> | |||
'''Abstract''': Many of us have given up the hope of maintaining privacy on the web, willingly handing over our private lives for the opportunity to connect with those we care about. But imagine for a moment an Internet in which our personal information is secure, one in which corporations can't read our posts, scan our photos, or parse our private email. Lucidity is an open source content management system that places privacy at its core. Unlike Drupal and WordPress, Lucidity has been designed to protect our data from those to whom we entrust it while providing both ease of use and sophistication. Using Lucidity, developers can create sites that guarantee their users privacy – not just protection from theft – but also an assurance that those who steward their data can not exploit, sell, or manipulate it. The Lucidity project is backed by a small team at Elucid Solutions. We want to build a large coalition of developers, designers, and end users among the open source community, and to bring privacy back to the web! This talk will present Lucidity, describe its evolution, and paint a vision for its future. We invite you to join us in this exciting collaboration. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio''': Larry Lee has over half a decade of experience developing websites and mobile applications for NGOs and public health initiatives through the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. He is currently the chief systems engineer at Elucid Solutions and the technical lead for Lucidity - an open source content management system. He is committed to developing open source technologies that protect privacy and promote democratic freedom on the web.Larry Lee has over half a decade of experience developing websites and mobile applications for NGOs and public health initiatives through the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. He is currently the chief systems engineer at Elucid Solutions and the technical lead for Lucidity - an open source content management system. He is committed to developing open source technologies that protect privacy and promote democratic freedom on the web. | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 12/17/2015 | |||
| '''HCIL''' <br> <!-- Designation --> <!-- ([URL link])--> | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
Seasonal Cookie Exchange | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
<br> Cookie exchanges involve people making a certain number of cookies (e.g., 6 bags of 6 cookies each) and bringing them in with a card describing the cookies. They all get lined up and then each person can take six bags of whichever types of cookies they want. | |||
</div></div> | |||
|} | |||
<p></p><br/> | |||
== Spring 2015 == | == Spring 2015 == |
Revision as of 15:18, 11 January 2016
The following are the past Brown Bag schedules.
Fall 2015
Date | Leader | Topic |
---|---|---|
09/03/2015 | All new students! |
New student introductions!
|
09/10/2015 STARTING |
Jean-Daniel Fekete Senior Research Scientist at INRIA (link) |
ProgressiVis: a New Workflow Model for Scalability in Information Visualization
There are legitimate reasons why it takes time for infovis to start
catching-up with these large numbers, and some work such as Lins et al.
Nanocubes (http://www.nanocubes.net/) and Liu et al. imMens
(http://idl.cs.washington.edu/papers/immens), have started to show
possible routes to scalability. However, they both rely on either
pre-computed aggregations that need hours to compute for large datasets,
or on a highly parallel infrastructure performing aggregations on the
fly. In my talk, I will explain why we need more flexible solutions and
present a new workflow architecture called ProgressiVis, to achieve
progressive computations and visualization over massive datasets.
|
09/17/2015 | Liese Zahabi Assistant Professor of Graphic Design at the University of Maryland, College Park (link) |
Exploring Information-Triage: Speculative interface tools to help college students conduct online research
|
09/24/2015 | HCIL Student Presentations | Graduate students will give short presentations about their past, present, and/or future work. If you are interested in participating, please email the BBL student co-coordinators Austin Beck (austinbb@umd.edu) or Leyla Norooz (leylan@umd.edu)
|
10/01/2015 | Celine Latulipe Associate Professor at The University of North Carolina at Charlotte (link) |
Borrowing from HCI: Teamwork, Design and Sketching for Intro Programming Classes
|
10/08/2015 | Adil Yalçın PhD Student, Department of Computer Science (link) |
AggreSet: Rich and Scalable Set Exploration using Visualizations of Element Aggregations (InfoVis practice talk)
|
10/15/2015 |
| |
10/22/2015 | Heather Bradbury Director, Masters of Professional Studies Programs at Maryland Institute College of Art (link) |
Tipping the Balance
|
10/29/2015 | Kurt Luther Assistant Professor of Computer Science in HCI/CSCW at Virginia Tech (link) |
Combining Crowds and Computation to Make Discoveries and Solve Mysteries
|
11/05/2015 | C. Scott Dempwolf Research Assistant Professor and Director, UMD - Morgan State Joint Center for Economic Development (link) |
Visualizing Innovation Ecosystems: Networks, Events and the Challenges of Policy and Practice
|
11/12/2015 | Matt Mauriello1, Zahra Ashktorab2, Uran Oh1, Brenna McNally2 [1] UMD CS PhD Student [2] UMD iSchool PhD Student |
Where Oh Where Have My Grad Students Gone?: An Internship Panel
|
11/19/2015 | Jen Golbeck Associate Professor at UMD's iSchool (link) |
What I Did On My Sabbatical
|
11/26/2014 | No Brown Bag for Thanksgiving break. | |
12/03/2015 | Ben Shneiderman Professor of Computer Science ([1]) |
Editing Wikipedia Tutorial/Workshop
|
12/10/2015 | Larry Lee Chief System Engineer at Elucid Solutions (link) |
The Lucidity Project: Bringing Privacy Back to the Web
|
12/17/2015 | HCIL |
Seasonal Cookie Exchange
|
Spring 2015
Date | Leader | Topic |
---|---|---|
01/29/2015 | Catherine Plaisant Associate Director of Research HCIL (link) |
HCIL's work and its influence
|
02/05/2015 | Karthik Badam PhD Student, Department of Computer Science |
Cross-Device Frameworks for Collaborative Visualization
|
02/12/2015 | Jack Kustanowitz Principal at MountainPass Technology (link) |
BusWhere - Never Miss the School Bus Again
|
02/19/2015 | Jeff Rick Developer and Researcher, ScienceKit project (link) |
Two kids, one iPad
|
02/26/2015 | Wei Bai PhD student, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (link) |
BrowserCrypt: A Research on Encryption Usability
|
(Cancelled due to snow) |
Kurt Luther Center for Human-Computer Interaction, Virginia Tech (link) |
Designing Social Technologies for Creativity and Discovery
|
03/12/2015 | Michele Williams PhD student, Department of Information Systems, University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC) (link) |
SWARM: Sensing Whether Affect Requires Mediation
|
03/19/2015 Spring Break (no food) |
Sana Malik UMD CS PhD Candidate (link) |
IUI '15 Practice Talk
|
03/26/2015 | Hyojoon Kim PhD Student, Georgia Institute of Technology (link) |
uCap: An Internet Data Management Tool for the Home
|
04/02/2015 | Matthew Mauriello PhD Student, Department of Computer Science (link) |
CHI Practice Talk: Understanding the role of thermography in energy auditing: current practices and the potential for automated solutions
|
Meethu Malu PhD Student, Department of Computer Science (link) |
CHI Practice Talk: Personalized, Wearable Control of a Head-mounted Display for Users with Upper Body Motor Impairments
| |
04/09/2015 | Fan Du PhD Student, Department of Computer Science (link) |
CHI Practice Talk: Trajectory Bundling for Animated Transitions
|
Leyla Norooz PhD Student, iSchool (link) |
CHI Practice Talk: BodyVis: A New Approach to Body Learning Through Wearable Sensing and Visualization
| |
04/16/2015 | Yla Tausczik Assistant Professor, iSchool (link) |
Open Government Data and Civic Applications: What would successful collaboration look like?
|
(Cancelled) |
Heather Bradbury Maryland Institute College of Art |
Building a Plane in Mid-air
|
04/30/2015 | Andrea Forte Associate Professor of College of Computing & Informatics at Drexel University (link) |
Social Information Spaces: Designing for Smart(er) Societies
|
05/07/2015 | Peter Teuben Astronomy dept (link) |
Interface design for the Analysis and Data Mining of the large data coming out of the ALMA telescope
|
05/14/2015 | CHI-tacular |
Come talk (and listen) about the HCIL's time at CHI 2015! |
Fall 2014
Date | Leader | Topic |
---|---|---|
09/04/2014 | Niklas Elmqvist New iSchool Professor in Infovis (link) |
Ubiquitous Analytics: Interacting with Big Data Anywhere, Anytime
|
09/11/2014 | All new students! |
New student introductions!
The students presenting are: Chris Musialek, Deok Gun Park, Seokbin Kang, Jonggi Hong, Sriram Karthik Badam and Majeed Kazemitabaar. |
09/18/2014 | Moving the cubes! |
Resisting the cookies is futile. |
09/25/2014 | Kotaro Hara CS PhD Student: (link) |
UIST2014 Practice Talk: Tohme: Detecting Curb Ramps in Google Street View Using Crowdsourcing, Computer Vision, and Machine Learning
|
10/02/2014 | Michelle Mazurek Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Science (link) |
Measuring Password Guessability for an Entire University
We fill this gap by studying the single-sign-on passwords used by over 25,000 faculty, staff, and students at a research university with a complex password policy. Key aspects of our contributions rest on our (indirect) access to plaintext passwords. We describe our data collection methodology, particularly the many precautions we took to minimize risks to users. We then analyze how guessable the collected passwords would be during an offline attack by subjecting them to a state-of-the-art password cracking algorithm. We discover significant correlations between a number of demographic and behavioral factors and password strength. We also compare the guessability and other characteristics of the passwords we analyzed to sets previously collected in controlled experiments or leaked from low-value accounts. We find more consistent similarities between the university passwords and passwords collected for research studies under similar composition policies than we do between the university passwords and subsets of passwords leaked from low-value accounts that happen to comply with the same policies. |
10/09/2014 (room 2119) |
m.c. schraefel Professor, University of Southampton (link) |
Exploring the role of HCI as an agent of cultural change: from health as a medical condition to health as shared, social aspiration.
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10/16/2014 | Uran Oh CS PhD Student |
ASSETS 2014 Practice Talk: Design of and Subjective Response to On-body Input for People With Visual Impairments For users with visual impairments, who do not necessarily need the visual display of a mobile device, non-visual on-body interaction (e.g., Imaginary Interfaces) could provide accessible input in a mobile context. Such interaction provides the potential advantages of an always-available input surface, and increased tactile and proprioceptive feedback compared to a smooth touchscreen. To investigate preferences for and design of accessible on-body interaction, we conducted a study with 12 visually impaired participants. Participants evaluated five locations for on-body input and compared on-phone to on-hand interaction with one versus two hands. Our findings show that the least preferred areas were the face/neck and the forearm, while locations on the hands were considered to be more discreet and natural. The findings also suggest that participants may prioritize social acceptability over ease of use and physical comfort when assessing the feasibility of input at different locations of the body. Finally, tradeoffs were seen in preferences for touchscreen versus on-body input, with on-body input considered useful for contexts where one hand is busy (e.g., holding a cane or dog leash). We provide implications for the design of accessible on-body input. |
10/23/2014 | Andrea Wiggins Assistant Professor, iSchool (link) |
Citizen Science at Scale: Human Computation for Science, Education, and Sustainability
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10/30/2014 | Nicholas Diakopoulos Assistant Professor, UMD College of Journalism (link) |
Computational Journalism: From Tools to Algorithmic Accountability
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11/06/2014 | Susan Winter Assistant Program Director, MIM |
Top-Down and Bottom-Up: Building Information Science for an Active Middle
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11/13/2014 | Alina Goldman iSchool PhD Student |
Audience Performer Collaboration
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11/20/2014 | Beverly Harrison Principal Scientist & Director Mobile Research, Yahoo! |
Yahoo Labs – Mobile Research Group
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11/27/2014 | No Brown Bag for Thanksgiving break. | |
12/04/2014 | Georgia Bullen New America (link) |
Balancing Expertise and Public Audiences: Usability in Internet Research and Policy |
12/11/2014 | Holiday Cookie Exchange | Details Cookie exchanges involve people making a certain number of cookies (e.g., 6 bags of 6 cookies each) and bringing them in with a card describing the cookies. They all get lined up and then each person can take six bags of whichever types of cookies they want. |
Spring 2014
Date | Leader | Topic |
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Jan 30 | Helena Mentis New UMBC HCI faculty member bio |
Tracking the Body in Healthcare
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Feb 6 | Catherine Plaisant and Michael Gubbels | Reviewing CHI '13 best videos |
Feb 13 | Beverly Harrison Yahoo Research |
Research at Yahoo Labs
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Feb 20 | Karyn Moffatt HCI Professor at McGill Univ. bio |
Accessible Social Technology
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Feb 27 | Romain Vuillemot | |
March 6 | Megan Monroe PhD Student homepage |
The Talk Talk
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March 13 | cancelled | |
March 20 | No Brown Bag. Spring Break. | |
March 27 | Jessica Vitak Assistant Professor in iSchool HCIL faculty member bio |
Privacy Management in the Digital Age While regularly used for interpersonal communication, relationship maintenance, and information sharing, newer communication technologies such as Facebook and Twitter have also created significant tension between individuals’ desire to maintain privacy and to be engaged participants in online communities. Problems arise due to the increasing diversity of users on these sites, a lack of privacy management knowledge and/or skills, and the often-changing privacy standards of the sites themselves. Rather than proactively engaging this complexity, many users employ reactive privacy management strategies—until something bad happens to me, I won’t worry about the information I’m sharing. Understanding how people conceptualize privacy and how that conceptualization influences behavior is increasingly important in today’s networked world, as individuals—and information—are now connected in more ways than ever before. The affordances of social media distinguish them from other communication channels, both on- and offline, with content being easier to search and archive, while people and content are more highly linked within systems. Thus, the consequences of employing more reactive strategies are far-reaching, with potential impacts on personal relationships, financials, work, and beyond. In this talk, I’ll highlight some of my recent findings on this topic as well as overview my expected research trajectory for the next few years in this very active space. |
April 3 | Chris Imbriano CS Ph.D. Student Inclusive Design Lab |
Talk and discussion about GitHub and why the HCIL may want to adopt it. In this talk, Chris (and others) will lead a talk and discussion about GitHub. Generally, Chris will give an overview of GitHub and facilitate a discussion about why the HCIL might want to adopt GitHub in some way, perhaps by making an "Organization" entity under which projects can be created and students, faculty, and others in the HCIL can check in their code. |
April 10 | Vanessa Frias-Martinez Assistant Professor in iSchool bio |
From Digital Footprints to Social Insights The pervasiveness of cell phones, mobile applications and social media is generating vast amounts of information that can reveal a wide range of human behavior. From mobility patterns to social connections, these signals expose insights about how humans behave and interact with their environment. While a lot of work has focused on analyzing behaviors, relatively little effort has been dedicated to understanding ways in which such findings could be useful to decision makers in areas like smart cities or public health. In this talk I will discuss two projects: (1) AlertImpact, an agent-based framework that uses geo-referenced cell phone data to model the impact of the preventive actions implemented by the Mexican government during the H1N1 flu outbreak and (2) TweetLand, a method to automatically identify urban land uses and landmarks (point of interest) using tweeting patterns. |
April 17 | Alex Pompe Senior Technical Advisor at IREX |
Bridging ICT4D lessons from the NGO sector towards academia (Slides) Abstract: ICT4D professionals in both the academic and NGO areas stand to benefit from greater collaboration, awareness, and transparency of experiences. However, often at conferences both groups are frustrated due to a lack of common understanding and misconceptions. This talk will present a number of case studies from IREX's ICT work in a variety of regions focused on providing open discussion and discourse so that lessons from all development practitioners can be lent towards improving processes on both sides of the table. The talk will also include discussion of internships and job skills in the ICT4D sector from an NGO employer's perspective.
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April 24 | Matt Mauriello HCI CS Grad Student |
CHI2014 Practice Talk: Social Fabric Fitness |
May 1 | No Brown Bag. CHI 2014 from April 26 to May 1. | |
May 8 | Michael Gubbels, Human-Computer Interaction Master's Student Jon Gluck, Computer Science Ph.D. Student Kent Wills, Computer Science Master's Student |
Introduction to 3D Printing in the HCIL (Slides) Graduate students will lead an interactive discussion of 3D printing and a tutorial on how to use the printers in the Human-Computer Interaction Lab. |
Spring 2013
Date | Leader | Topic |
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Jan 24 | ||
Jan 31 | John Gomez | |
Feb 7 | Ben Bederson | Tools for synchronous crowdsourcing |
Feb 14 | ||
Feb 21 | ||
Feb 28 | Lisa Anthony (Host: Leah Findlater) | Gestural Interaction for Children |
March 7 | Awalin Sopan | Wrong Patient Selection Problem |
March 14 | Michael Smith-Welch? (Host Jon Froehlich) | Kids, Programming, and Makerspaces |
March 21 | Spring Break (No BBL) | |
March 28 | ||
April 4 | Ben Bederson, Jon Froehlich, Leah Findlater | HCIL Discussion: Activities, BBL, email lists, etc. |
April 11 | Urah Oh, Anne Bowser | CHI Practice Talks: (1) Urah Oh (full paper) and (2) Anne Bowser (full paper) |
April 18 | Megan Monroe, Kotaro Hara | CHI Practice Talks: (1) Megan Monroe (full paper) and (2) Kotaro Hara (full paper) |
April 25 | ||
May 2 | CHI 2013 (No BBL) | |
May 9 |
Fall 2013
Who | Type | Topic | |
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Th, Sept 5 | No Brown Bag. Rosh Hashanah. | ||
Th, Sept 12 | Jon Froehlich Assistant Professor in CS and HCIL faculty member http://www.cs.umd.edu/~jonf/ |
Talk/Discussion | HCIL Hackerspace |
Th, Sept 19 | HCIL/HCI Graduate Students facilitated by Michael Gubbels and Tak Yeon Lee | Talk/Discussion |
The goal of this session is to provide several students at various points in their academic programs , but especially new students, with a chance to talk about (1) their interests, (2) the projects to which they've contributed, and (3) those they'd like to do. Our hope is that this will allow new students to introduce themselves and convey their interests in a way that helps them find others with shared interests and form working relationships on projects with professors and other students. Students will have 5–8 minutes to introduce themselves and their interests, their previous and current projects, skills and expertise, and their future interests in HCI and the HCIL. Hopefully, this will help new students connect with professors and other students with whom they share interests and can work together on research projects. Following talks will be about 10 minutes for discussion with the presenting students (perhaps for asking them to join a project team). |
Wed, Sept 25 | Jonathan Donner | External Speaker |
Everybody’s internet? :Designing for mobile-centric internet users in the developing world Within 5 years, wireless broadband services will cover 85% of the world’s population, and data-enabled mobile (cellular) devices will outnumber personal computers and tablets. This talk, taken from a book in preparation, details the growing importance of ‘mobile-centric internet use’ in the developing world, raising questions and challenges for design. A breathlessly optimistic narrative has proclaimed the mobile phone the device which will finally close the ‘digital divide’, but the digital world does not run exclusively on mobile handsets. To guide policy and technical investments in socioeconomic development— I argue that it is better to reframe and view the mobile handset as one piece of a person’s digital repertoire, which also might include PCs, telecentres, TVs, tablets, and other devices. In the talk and in the book I revisit some of my previous studies in three domains of socioeconomic development: microenterprises and livelihoods, citizen journalism, and secondary education. Across each, I celebrate the transformational potential of the mobile phone. Yet, in each case, I use the “digital repertoires” lens to raise concerns, identifying how the capacity to generate, produce, and curate information may remain concentrated among those with better resources to secure digital tools, and the skills and incentives to use them. The person with $30 basic data-enabled phone and the person with a smartphone and a state-of-the-art $1000 desktop computer both can connect to the internet; however, it is not the same internet. Yet these persistent digital stratifications can be reduced if technologists, researchers, practitioners, and policymakers work to ensure that constrained digital repertoires enable not only coordination and consumption (which phones already do well), but also contribution (which they do less well). From natural user interfaces to language support to bandwidth pricing, there are concrete ways in which more empathetic design and policy can help a greater proportion of the world’s inhabitants be more productive with their ICTs. Jonathan Donner - Researcher, Technology for Emerging Markets, Microsoft Research Jonathan Donner is a researcher in the Technology for Emerging Markets Group (TEM) at Microsoft Research. For the last decade, Jonathan has published research on the remarkable growth in mobile telephony in the developing world, focusing on its implications for socioeconomic development and inclusion in the informational society, as well as its uses in everyday life. His projects at TEM include Microenterprise Development, Mobile Banking, Citizen Journalism, Mobile Health, and Youth and New Media. His research provides rare perspective on design and mobile HCI issues for those who want to build applications for the fastest growing group of internet users in the world: “mobile centric” internet users. Prior to Joining Microsoft Research, he was a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at the Earth Institute at Columbia University, and worked with Monitor Company and the OTF Group, consultancies in Boston, MA. He is the author, with Richard Ling, of Mobile Communication (Polity, 2009), and co-editor, with Patricia Mechael, of mHealth in Practice: Mobile Technology for Health Promotion in the Developing world (Bloomsbury Academic, 2012). His research also appears in the Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, The Information Society, Information Technologies and International Development, The Journal of International Development, and Innovations: Technology, Governance, Globalization. His Ph.D. is from Stanford University in Communication Research. Jonathan is based in South Africa and is a visiting academic at the University of Cape Town’s Centre in ICT4D. He is currently working on a new book, provisionally titled After Access: Mobile Internet in the Developing World. Further details on Jonathan’s research are at www.jonathandonner.com and via twitter as @jcdonner |
Th, Oct 3 | Ed Cutrell | External Speaker |
Technology for Emerging Markets (TEM) group at Microsoft Research
The Technology for Emerging Markets (TEM) group at Microsoft Research India seeks to address the needs and aspirations of people in the world's developing communities. Our research targets people who are just beginning to use computing technologies and services as well as those for whom access to computing still remains largely out of reach. Most of our work falls under the rubric of the relatively young field of Information and Communication Technology for Development (ICTD or ICT4D). By combining a variety of backgrounds and training, we are able to engage deeply with some of the complex problems associated with poverty and scarce resources. Our goal is to study, design, build, and evaluate technologies and systems that are useful for people living in underserved rural and urban communities around the world. In this talk, I will give an overview of some of the recent work in the group, focusing on projects that explore modalities and interactions specifically designed for the unique contexts and users we’re working with: |
Th, Oct 10 | Marshini Chetty Assistant Professor in iSchool and HCIL faculty member http://marshini.net |
Talk |
HCI and Networking - Taming the Internet One Bit at a Time
Abstract:
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Th, Oct 17 | Kotaro Hara CS PhD Student http://kotarohara.com/ Uran Oh CS PhD Student |
ASSETS'13 Practice Talks | Talk 1: Improving Public Transit Accessibility for Blind Riders by Crowdsourcing Bus Stop Landmark Locations With Google Street View Talk 2: Follow That Sound: Using Sonification and Corrective Verbal Feedback to Teach Touchscreen Gestures |
Th, Oct 24 | Makeability Lab Jon Froehlich's research group in the HCIL |
Discussion | Reflective discussion of experience exhibiting projects at Silver Spring Mini-Maker Faire. |
Th, Oct 31 | Jen Golbeck Associate Professor in the College of Information Studies, Affiliate Associate Professor in the Computer Science Department, Affiliate in the Center for the Advanced Study of Language, and HCIL Director http://www.cs.umd.edu/~golbeck/ |
Work In Progress Discussion | HCI and Cybersecurity |
Th, Nov 7 | Bryan Sivak Chief Technology Officer at U.S. Department of Health & Human Services |
External Speaker | Bryan Sivak's bio
Bryan Sivak joined HHS as the Chief Technology Officer in July 2011. In this role, he is responsible for helping HHS leadership harness the power of data, technology, and innovation to improve the health and welfare of the nation. Previously, Bryan served as the Chief Innovation Officer to Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley, where he has led Maryland’s efforts to embed concepts of innovation into the DNA of state government. He has distinguished himself in this role as someone who can work creatively across a large government organization to identify and implement the best opportunities for improving the way the government works. Prior to his time with Governor O’Malley, Bryan served as Chief Technology Officer for the District of Columbia, where he created a technology infrastructure that enhanced communication between the District’s residents and their government, and implemented organizational reforms that improved efficiency, program controls, and customer service. Bryan previously worked in the private sector, co-founding InQuira, Inc., a multi-national software company, in 2002, and Electric Knowledge LLC, which provided one of the world's first Natural Language Search engines available on the web in 1998.
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Th, Nov 14 | Erica Estrada Lecturer, Academy for Innovation and Entrepreneurship (Tammy Clegg, contact) |
External Speaker/Design Charette | Design Thinking |
Th, Nov 21 | June Ahn Assistant Professor in the College of Information Studies and College of Education (joint appointment), and HCIL faculty member http://www.ahnjune.com/ |
Work In Progress Discussion | Video Games, Blended Learning, and Large-scale Education Reform |
Th, Nov 28 | No Brown Bag. Happy Thanksgiving and Hanukkah. | ||
Th, Dec 5 | Shannon Collis Assistant Professor of Art at the University of Maryland http://shannoncollis.ca/ |
Talk/Discussion |
Discussion of creative work in digital media and computational arts.
Shannon Collis is a Canadian artist currently residing in Baltimore, MD. A graduate of the Master of Fine Arts program at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Collis is also completing research at Concordia University in Montreal in the area of Digital Media and Computation Arts (Fall 2013). Currently, she is an Assistant Professor of Art at the University of Maryland, where she teaches Digital Foundations and Print Media. Her studio practice focuses on creating installations and interactive environments that explore various ways in which digital technologies can transform our perception of audio and visual stimuli. Her work has been exhibited across North America as well as in Europe, Asia and Australia. |
Th, Dec 12 |