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. | ||
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== Fall 2016== | |||
{| class="wikitable" border="1" | |||
|- | |||
! Date | |||
! width="150px" | Leader | |||
! Topic | |||
|- | |||
| 09/01/2016 | |||
| <br> | |||
Kickoff to a new Semester! | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
Come network, make introductions, and share what each of us is working on | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
Please come to our first BBL of the fall 2016-2017 academic year 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. | |||
<br> | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 09/08/2016 <br> | |||
| TBD | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
'''CHI Papers Clinic Lunch''' | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
'''Abstract:''' TBD | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio:''' TBD | |||
<br> | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 09/15/2016 | |||
| '''Karen Holtzblatt'''<br>InContext Design / University of Maryland, College Park | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
'''Contextual Design, Cool Concepts, and Women in Tech Project''' | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
'''Abstract:''' Karen has recently joined University of Maryland as a Research Scientist and will provide a brief overview of her work in user-centered design techniques and innovation as well as her new work understanding and creating intervention methods to help technology companies retain women. | |||
Karen will share the new techniques described in her upcoming book Contextual Design V2: Design for life. Because of the revolution in how technology is now integrated into life with smartphones and tablets, designers and researchers must consider new ways of collecting and using user data. [http://www.incontextdesign.com/cool/ The Cool Project] helped define the key aspects we must now consider; these led to changes in the [http://www.incontextdesign.com/womenintech/ Contextual Design Method]. | |||
Karen will also share the focus of her research on women in technology at the iSchool . Currently through collaborating with many in the industry [http://www.incontextdesign.com/womenintech/ The Women in Tech Project] presents a framework for what keeps women satisfied and successful. They have also developed a measure which is being honed. More research will be occurring as well as the creation of intervention games and techniques. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio:''' Karen Holtzblatt is the inventor of Contextual Inquiry and co-founder of [http://www.incontextdesign.com/ InContext Design], which began in 1992 to use Contextual Design techniques to work with product teams to deliver market data and design solutions to clients across multiple industries. Her books, [http://www.incontextdesign.com/books/contextual-design-defining-customer-centered-systems/ Contextual Design: Defining Customer Centered Systems], and [http://www.incontextdesign.com/books/rapid-contextual-design/ Rapid Contextual Design], are used by companies and universities all over the world. | |||
Karen is a member of the CHI Academy (awarded to significant contributors in the Computer Human Interaction Association) and in 2010 received CHI’s first Life Time Award for Practice for her impact on the field. She holds a doctorate in applied psychology from the University of Toronto. | |||
<br> | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 09/22/2016 | |||
| '''Elissa Redmiles''' <br>HCIL, University of Maryland, College Park | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
'''How I Learned to be Secure: a Census-Representative Survey of Security Advice Sources and Behavior''' | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
'''Abstract:''' Few users have a single, authoritative, source from whom they can request digital-security advice. Rather, digital- security skills are often learned haphazardly, as users filter through an overwhelming quantity of security advice. By understanding the factors that contribute to users' advice sources, beliefs, and security behaviors, we can help to pare down the quantity and improve the quality of advice provided to users, streamlining the process of learning key behaviors. In this work we rigorously investigated how users' security beliefs, knowledge, and demographics correlate with their sources of security advice, and how all these factors influence security behaviors. Using a carefully pre-tested, U.S.-census-representative survey of 526 users, we present an overview of the prevalence of respondents' advice sources, reasons for accepting and rejecting advice from those sources, and the impact of these sources and demographic factors on security behavior. We find evidence of a "digital divide" in security: the advice sources of users with higher skill levels and socioeconomic status dier from those with fewer resources. This digital security divide may add to the vulnerability of already disadvantaged users. We conclude with recommendations for combating the digital divide and improving the efficacy of digital-security advice. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio:''' Elissa Redmiles is a Ph.D. student in Computer Science at the University of Maryland. Her research focuses on usable security - the intersection between Cyber-security and Human Computer Interaction. Elissa was a 2015 Eric and Wendy Schmidt Data Science for Social Good Fellow at the University of Chicago. Prior to pursuing her Ph.D., she held Marketing Management and Software Engineering roles at IBM and completed her B.S. in Computer Science, cum laude, at the University of Maryland. | |||
<br> | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 09/29/2016 | |||
| '''Gregg Vanderheiden''' <br>Director, Trace R&D Center, University of Maryland, College Park | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
'''UMD’s New Trace Center; Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow''' | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
'''Abstract:''' The Trace R&D Center just landed on campus in the iSchool. Founded at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1971, it has for 45 years been a leader in Technology and Disability research, development, and policy. Trace Center developments are found in every modern operating system, US Automated Postal Stations, Amtrak Kiosks, DHS Airport kiosks, and ICT of all types. Trace guidelines and work were used as the foundation for IBM, Microsoft, Apple and other companies' access guidelines as well as key parts of the W3C's WCAG 1 and 2, and US Access Board’s 508/255 guidelines. A brief history of the Trace Center will be provided followed by an overview of the current programs, partners, and potential future directions. Opportunities to get involved will also be explored. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio:''' Dr. Vanderheiden has been active in the area of Technology and Disability for over 45 years. His early work was in Augmentative Communication, a term taken from his writings in the late 70’s. Starting in 1979, his focus shifted to personal computers and he worked inside Apple, Microsoft and IBM on increasing the accessibility and usability of their products. Apple included features in Apple IIe, gs, and MacOS and iOS. IBM and Microsoft licensed 9 features from Dr. Vanderheiden’s group for inclusion in DOS, OS/2, and Windows. Dr. Vanderheiden co-chaired and co-authored the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG 1.0 and 2.0), worked with the Access Board on 255 and 508, and lead the effort to develop the EZ-Access package of cross-disability access features that are now built into Amtrak ticket machines, Automated Postal Stations, Homeland Security Passport Kiosks, and many other ITMs across the country. His current focus is on the development of a Global Public Inclusive Infrastructure (GPII). | |||
<br> | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 10/06/2016 | |||
|'''John Wilbanks''',<br>Sage Bionetworks <br> | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
'''Using Human Centered Design to Make Informed Consent Actually Inform''' | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
'''Abstract:''' Mobile technologies have the potential to revolutionize both the way in which individuals monitor their health as well as the way researchers are able to collect frequent, yet sparse data on participants in clinical studies. In order for data from these devices to have maximal impact in a research setting however, the development of systems to collect, manage, and broadly share these data is essential. Possibly more important are the social constructs on which these systems need to be built to allow maximal utility to come from these data while minimizing adverse impact on individual participants. More specifically, the union of these systems and constructs must be an ecosystem build upon trust. We will present one such ecosystem focused on putting the participant at the center of the data collection: specifically by acknowledging possible risks to both individual participants as well as sub-populations of participants, providing opt-in settings for broad data sharing, and the development of an open research ecosystem built upon a social contract between researchers and research participants. A case study of one such mHealth study, leveraging Apple’s ResearchKit framework, will be presented and discussed. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio:''' John Wilbanks is the Chief Commons Officer at Sage Bionetworks. Previously, Wilbanks worked as a legislative aide to Congressman Fortney “Pete” Stark, served as the first assistant director at Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society, founded and led to acquisition the bioinformatics company Incellico, Inc., and was executive director of the Science Commons project at Creative Commons. In February 2013, in response to a We the People petition that was spearheaded by Wilbanks and signed by 65,000 people, the U.S. government announced a plan to open up taxpayer-funded research data and make it available for free. Wilbanks holds a B.A. in philosophy from Tulane University and also studied modern letters at the Sorbonne. | |||
<br> | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 10/13/2016 | |||
| '''Fan Du'''<br>HCIL, University of Maryland, College Park | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
'''EventAction: Visual Analytics for Temporal Event Sequence Recommendation''' | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
'''Abstract:''' Recommender systems are being widely used to assist people in making decisions, for example, recommending films to watch or books to buy. Despite its ubiquity, the problem of presenting the recommendations of temporal event sequences has not been studied. We propose EventAction, which to our knowledge, is the first attempt at a prescriptive analytics interface designed to present and explain recommendations of temporal event sequences. EventAction provides a visual analytics approach to (1) identify similar records, (2) explore potential outcomes, (3) review recommended temporal event sequences that might help achieve the users' goals, and (4) interactively assist users as they define a personalized action plan associated with a probability of success. Following the design study framework, we designed and deployed EventAction in the context of student advising and reported on the evaluation with a student review manager and three graduate students. http://hcil.umd.edu/eventaction | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio:''' Fan Du is a computer science Ph.D. student at the University of Maryland, College Park. He works as a research assistant with Prof. Ben Shneiderman and Dr. Catherine Plaisant. His research focuses on data visualization and human-computer interaction, especially on analyzing healthcare data and user activity logs. http://frankdu.org | |||
<br> | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 10/20/2016 | |||
| '''Grant McKenzie''',<br>University of Maryland, College Park | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
'''Exploring dimensions of 'place' ''' | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
'''Abstract:''' Place is one of the foundational concepts on which the field of Geographical Sciences has been built. Traditionally, geographic information science research into place has been approached from a spatial perspective. While space is an integral feature of place, it represents only a single dimension (or a combination of three dimensions to be exact), in the complex, multidimensional concept that is place. With the increased availability of large, user-generated datasets, it has becoming increasingly apparent that the value of 'big data' lies not necessarily in its size, but in its heterogeneity. In my research, I exploit this heterogeneity to build computational, data-driven models of human behavior, taking a multi-dimensional approach to investigating place and the activities people carry out at those places. In this talk I introduce the concept of Semantic Signatures built from spatial, temporal and thematic dimensions extracted from user-contributed, and authoritative datasets. I show how these signatures can enhance existing geolocation methods, form the foundation of place-similarity models and contribute to visualizing the platial pulse of a city. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio:''' Grant McKenzie is an assistant professor in the Department of Geographical Sciences at the University of Maryland, College Park, affiliate of the Center for Geospatial Information Science and director of the Place Time Analysis Lab. He holds a Ph.D. in Geography from the University of California, Santa Barbara (2015) and a Master of Applied Science degree from the University of Melbourne (2008). Grant's research interests lie in spatio-temporal data analysis, geovisualization, place-based data analytics and the intersection of information technologies and society. More information on D. Grant McKenzie and his research can be found at http://grantmckenzie.com and http://ptal.io. | |||
<br> | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 10/27/2016 | |||
| '''Greg Walsh''',<br> University of Baltimore | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
'''Life in the Big City: A reflection of four years of HCI Education and Research in Baltimore''' | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
'''Abstract:''' For the last four years, I have been an assistant professor at the University of Baltimore. In those four years, I’ve developed 11 different courses, started a research lab and co-design team (KidsteamUB), and integrated community engagement into our graduate UX classes. In this talk, I will discuss how my research has morphed to be accommodating to the urban university experience, and how life in the HCIL prepared me for these challenges as well as some lessons learned that I can share. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio:''' Greg Walsh earned his PhD from the UMD iSchool in 2012 and has been an assistant professor at the University of Baltimore ever since. He is the graduate program director for the MS in Interaction Design and Information Architecture as well as the UX Design program. He is ruggedly handsome and a recipient of a Google 2015 Faculty Research Award. | |||
<br> | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 11/03/2016 | |||
| '''John Dickerson''', Computer Science, University of Maryland, College Park | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
'''Better Matching Markets via Optimization''' | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
'''Abstract:''' The exchange of indivisible goods without money addresses a variety of constrained economic settings where a medium of exchange—such as money—is considered inappropriate. Participants are either matched directly with another participant or, in more complex domains, in barter cycles and chains with other participants before exchanging their endowed goods. We show that techniques from computer science and operations research, combined with the recent availability of massive data and inexpensive computing, can guide the design of such matching markets and enable the markets by running them in the real world. | |||
A key application domain for our work is kidney exchange, an organized market where patients with end-stage renal failure swap willing but incompatible donors. We present new models that address three fundamental dimensions of kidney exchange: (i) uncertainty over the existence of possible trades, (ii) balancing efficiency and fairness, and (iii) inherent dynamism. For each dimension, we design scalable branch-and-price-based integer programming market clearing methods. Next, we combine these dimensions, along with high-level human-provided guidance, into a unified framework for learning to match in a general dynamic setting. This framework, which we coin FutureMatch, takes as input a high-level objective (e.g., “maximize graft survival of transplants over time”) decided on by experts, then automatically learns based on data how to make this objective concrete and learns the “means” to accomplish this goal—a task that, in our experience, humans handle poorly. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio:''' John Dickerson is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Maryland, College Park. I'm the lead developer of the US nationwide kidney exchange program, and lead developer of a better way to deal with TV advertisements (currently in the pilot phase with two of the nation's largest MSOs). He holds a PhD in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University, and has been supported by a Facebook Fellowship, Siebel Scholarship, and an NDSEG Fellowship. | |||
<br> | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 11/10/2016 | |||
| '''Bill Kules''', iSchool, University of Maryland, College Park | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
'''Teaching JavaScript as Social Justice: Interrogating Culture, Bias and Equity in an Introductory Programming Course''' | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
'''Abstract:''' When learning skills like computer programming, students need to develop an understanding of issues of culture, bias and equity at the same time that they learn the technical elements. As information professionals they will need to understand and navigate these issues. This presentation describes a course that integrates both social justice and technical elements, instead of separating them into different courses as is typical practice. I will describe the approach and structure and reflect on the experience and student feedback. I will invite all of us to discuss the creative tension in teaching both technical and ethical skills, and how we can embed these across the curriculum. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio:''' Dr. Bill Kules is Visiting Associate Professor at the iSchool. Prior to joining the iSchool, he was Chair of the Department of Library and Information Science (LIS) at The Catholic University of America. Dr. Kules seeks to improve educational practice and outcomes in LIS education through teaching, research and advocacy, with a particular interest in helping students understand how information technology is situated in and reflects broader social structures, constructs and issues such as race, class and gender. He has experience in blended curriculum development, faculty development and mentoring, and continuous program improvement through systematic planning and outcomes assessment. | |||
Before joining academia, Dr. Kules spent 20 years designing and implementing information systems for a variety of applications, including wireless telephony, customer service, banking, and a multimedia web sites. He earned his Ph.D. in Computer Science at the University of Maryland in 2006. | |||
<br> | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 11/17/2016 | |||
|'''Mohammed AlGhamdi''',<br>McGill University | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
'''Usability of Three-dimensional Virtual Learning Environments: An Exploratory Study of the Think Aloud Approach''' | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
'''Abstract:''' A recent review examining 10 years of research between 1999 and 2009 and focusing on the application of virtual reality technology for educational purposes, has found that the majority of interest from the research community has centered on the learning outcomes of such applications (Mikropoulos & Natsis, 2011). Out of the 53 studies reviewed by Mikropoulos & Natsis, 50 have examined the learning outcomes of such environments. While the findings of this review have revealed that learning outcomes were overwhelmingly positive for such environments, the review has also identified other topics of great interest and importance to such applications that have received very little attention from the research community. One specific topic that has not received adequate attention from researchers examining 3D virtual learning environments is usability. This is of great concern as usability has been shown to influence the learning experiences of users of 3D virtual learning environments, which in turn affects their learning outcomes (Dede, Salzman, Loftin, & Sprague, 1999; Lee, Wong, & Fung, 2010; Merchant et al., 2012). | |||
<br><br> | |||
The few studies that have examined the usability of 3D virtual learning environments have predominately focused on the collection of users’ likes and dislikes through the utilization of inquiry-based usability evaluation approaches such as questionnaires, interviews, and focus groups (Dede et al., 1996; Di Blas et al., 2005; Lu, 2008; McArdle et al., 2010; Monahan et al., 2008; Perera et al., 2009; Roussos et al., 1999; Virvou & Katsionis, 2008). While this type of data is of value, it fails to provide usability information based on actual system use; rather, it provides subjective feelings reported by end users regarding system use. | |||
<br><br> | |||
In an effort to examine how other usability evalaution approaches can be utilized to provide valuable data stemming from actual system use, my PhD research focused on exploring the use of the think aloud approach for the usability evalaution of a three-dimensional virtual learning environment by end users. In this talk, I will present the research I conducted to explore the impact of the think aloud approach on the validity of various usability metrics collected during the usability evaluation of a specific three-dimensional virtual learning environment by early-teens between the ages of 14-15 years. | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''Bio:''' Mohammed J. Alghamdi is a faculty member at the School of Information Sciences at Umm Al-Qura University in Makkah Saudi Arabia. He is currently a PhD student in the School of Information Studies in McGill University. He has recently submitted his PhD thesis dissertation titled “Usability of Three-dimensional Virtual Learning Environments: An Exploratory Study of the Think Aloud Approach” and is awaiting to defend it in December of 2016. Throughout his time at the School of Information Studies, he has been involved in research studies focusing on the information seeking process of early-teens engaged in inquiry-based learning as well as research focusing on intergenerational design teams. He has also conducted information literacy seminars for middle school students in the Montreal, Quebec area. | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- style="background-color: darkgray;" | | |||
| 11/24/2016 | |||
| colspan="2" | No Brown Bag, Thanksgiving Break. | |||
|- | |||
| 12/01/2016 | |||
| '''HCIL''' | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
'''Discussion: Diversity in Tech''' | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
'''Abstract:''' Join us for a conversation about diversity in tech. We'll explore disparities in the field, consider the causes of this issue, and discuss what we as HCI educators, researchers, and professionals can do to close this gap. Before joining us on Thursday, please take a some time to read Vauhini Vara's ''Bloomberg Businessweek'' article [https://www.dropbox.com/s/4o1tqy005i7yb0l/Why%20Doesn't%20Silicon%20Valley%20Hire%20Black%20Coders%3F.pdf?.pdf%3Fdl=0&dl=0 Why Doesn't Silicon Valley Hire Black Coders?] and look over some statistics from the [http://www.informationisbeautiful.net/visualizations/diversity-in-tech/ Information is Beautiful] and the ''[http://graphics.wsj.com/diversity-in-tech-companies/ Wall Street Journal]'' on this topic. We'll use these resources as a starting point for our conversation.<br><br> | |||
<br> | |||
</div></div> | |||
|- | |||
| 12/08/2016 | |||
| '''HCIL''' | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
'''HCIL Seasonal Cookie Exchange''' | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
'''Abstract:''' To celebrate the end-of-year holidays, the HCIL will have a cookie exchange/get-together in the lab during the last HCIL brown bag of the semester. Cookie exchanges work by individuals bringing in small bags of cookies (e.g., five bags of chocolate chip cookies) and then selecting that number of other types of cookies (e.g., a bag of sugar cookies, oatmeal raisin, peanut blossoms, etc.) We encourage people to bring cookies in bags (5-6 bags of 5-6 cookies). However, even if you can’t bring in cookies, please still join us for this festive event! | |||
<br>Sign up for the cookie exchange here: https://goo.gl/forms/ov68tWvHyzpfbmuA2 | |||
</div></div> | |||
|} | |||
<p></p><br/> | |||
== Spring 2016== | == Spring 2016== | ||
{| class="wikitable" border="1" | {| class="wikitable" border="1" |
Revision as of 16:44, 4 January 2017
The following are the past Brown Bag schedules.
Fall 2016
Date | Leader | Topic |
---|---|---|
09/01/2016 | Kickoff to a new Semester! |
Expand
Come network, make introductions, and share what each of us is working on |
09/08/2016 |
TBD | Expand
CHI Papers Clinic Lunch |
09/15/2016 | Karen Holtzblatt InContext Design / University of Maryland, College Park |
Expand
Contextual Design, Cool Concepts, and Women in Tech Project |
09/22/2016 | Elissa Redmiles HCIL, University of Maryland, College Park |
Expand
How I Learned to be Secure: a Census-Representative Survey of Security Advice Sources and Behavior |
09/29/2016 | Gregg Vanderheiden Director, Trace R&D Center, University of Maryland, College Park |
Expand
UMD’s New Trace Center; Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow |
10/06/2016 | John Wilbanks, Sage Bionetworks |
Expand
Using Human Centered Design to Make Informed Consent Actually Inform |
10/13/2016 | Fan Du HCIL, University of Maryland, College Park |
Expand
EventAction: Visual Analytics for Temporal Event Sequence Recommendation |
10/20/2016 | Grant McKenzie, University of Maryland, College Park |
Expand
Exploring dimensions of 'place' |
10/27/2016 | Greg Walsh, University of Baltimore |
|
11/03/2016 | John Dickerson, Computer Science, University of Maryland, College Park | Expand
Better Matching Markets via Optimization |
11/10/2016 | Bill Kules, iSchool, University of Maryland, College Park | Expand
Teaching JavaScript as Social Justice: Interrogating Culture, Bias and Equity in an Introductory Programming Course
|
11/17/2016 | Mohammed AlGhamdi, McGill University |
Expand
Usability of Three-dimensional Virtual Learning Environments: An Exploratory Study of the Think Aloud Approach |
11/24/2016 | No Brown Bag, Thanksgiving Break. | |
12/01/2016 | HCIL | Expand
Discussion: Diversity in Tech |
12/08/2016 | HCIL | Expand
HCIL Seasonal Cookie Exchange |
Spring 2016
Date | Leader | Topic |
---|---|---|
01/28/2016 | Kickoff to a new Semester! |
Expand
Come network, make introductions, share what each of us is working on, and learn about the new HCIL website |
02/04/2016 |
Tom Yeh Assistant Professor, University of Colorado CS (link). Host: Jon Froehlich |
Expand
Printing Pictures in 3D |
02/11/2016 | Cliff Lampe Associate Professor, University of Michigan iSchool (link) Host: Jessica Vitak |
Expand
Citizen Interaction Design and its Implications for HCI |
02/18/2016 | Thomas Haigh Associate Professor of Information Studies, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (link) Host: ??? |
Expand
Working on ENIAC: The Lost Labors of the Information Age |
02/25/2016 | Adil Yalcin PhD Candidate in Computer Science at UMD (link) |
Expand
Keshif: Data Exploration using Aggregate Summaries and Multi-Mode Linked Selections |
03/03/2016 | Eytan Adar. Assoc Prof, School of Information, Univ. of Michigan (link). Host: Ben Shneiderman |
Expand
All the Data Fit to Print: Newsroom Tools for Generating Personalized, Contextually-Relevant Visualizations (Campus Visualizations Partnership lecture) |
03/10/2016 | Alina Goldman PhD Student in Information Studies at UMD's iSchool |
Expand
StreamBED: Teaching Citizen Scientists to Judge Stream Quality with Embodied Virtual Reality Training |
03/17/2016 | No Brown Bag for Spring Break. | |
03/24/2016 | Daniel Robbins (link) |
Expand
Visualize getting a job (Campus Visualizations Partnership lecture) |
03/31/2016 | TBD |
Expand
TBD |
04/07/2016 | Andrea Wiggins Assistant Professor, University of Maryland iSchool (link) |
Expand
Community-based Data Validation in Citizen Science |
04/14/2016 | CHI Practice Talks Kotaro Hara & Elissa Redmiles |
Expand
Kotaro: The Design of Assistive Location-based Technologies for People with Ambulatory Disabilities: A Formative Study
|
04/21/2016 | Sir Timothy O'Shea (link) & Eileen Scanlon (link) Principal and Vice-Chancellor of Edinburgh University, & Regius Professor of Open Education, The Open University, UK (respectively) |
Expand
How New Technologies Can Enhance Learner Autonomy |
04/28/2016 | Tamara Clegg Assistant Professor, University of Maryland iSchool & Education (link) |
Expand
Scientizing Daily Life with New Social, Mobile, & Ubiquitous Technologies |
05/05/2016 | Chris Preist Reader in Sustainability and Computer Systems at Bristol University (link) Host: Jon Froehlich |
Expand
On the role of gamification in citizen engagement: What is it good for, and what not? |
Fall 2015
Date | Leader | Topic |
---|---|---|
09/03/2015 | All new students! |
Expand
New student introductions! |
09/10/2015 STARTING |
Jean-Daniel Fekete Senior Research Scientist at INRIA (link) |
Expand
ProgressiVis: a New Workflow Model for Scalability in Information Visualization |
09/17/2015 | Liese Zahabi Assistant Professor of Graphic Design at the University of Maryland, College Park (link) |
Expand
Exploring Information-Triage: Speculative interface tools to help college students conduct online research |
09/24/2015 | HCIL Student Presentations | Expand
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) |
Expand
Borrowing from HCI: Teamwork, Design and Sketching for Intro Programming Classes |
10/08/2015 | Adil Yalçın PhD Student, Department of Computer Science (link) |
Expand
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) |
Expand
Tipping the Balance |
10/29/2015 | Kurt Luther Assistant Professor of Computer Science in HCI/CSCW at Virginia Tech (link) |
Expand
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) |
Expand
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 |
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Where Oh Where Have My Grad Students Gone?: An Internship Panel |
11/19/2015 | Jen Golbeck Associate Professor at UMD's iSchool (link) |
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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]) |
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Editing Wikipedia Tutorial/Workshop |
12/10/2015 | Larry Lee Chief System Engineer at Elucid Solutions (link) |
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The Lucidity Project: Bringing Privacy Back to the Web |
12/17/2015 | HCIL |
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Seasonal Cookie Exchange |
Spring 2015
Date | Leader | Topic |
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01/29/2015 | Catherine Plaisant Associate Director of Research HCIL (link) |
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HCIL's work and its influence |
02/05/2015 | Karthik Badam PhD Student, Department of Computer Science |
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Cross-Device Frameworks for Collaborative Visualization |
02/12/2015 | Jack Kustanowitz Principal at MountainPass Technology (link) |
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BusWhere - Never Miss the School Bus Again |
02/19/2015 | Jeff Rick Developer and Researcher, ScienceKit project (link) |
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Two kids, one iPad |
02/26/2015 | Wei Bai PhD student, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (link) |
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BrowserCrypt: A Research on Encryption Usability |
(Cancelled due to snow) |
Kurt Luther Center for Human-Computer Interaction, Virginia Tech (link) |
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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) |
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SWARM: Sensing Whether Affect Requires Mediation |
03/19/2015 Spring Break (no food) |
Sana Malik UMD CS PhD Candidate (link) |
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IUI '15 Practice Talk |
03/26/2015 | Hyojoon Kim PhD Student, Georgia Institute of Technology (link) |
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uCap: An Internet Data Management Tool for the Home |
04/02/2015 | Matthew Mauriello PhD Student, Department of Computer Science (link) |
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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) |
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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) |
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CHI Practice Talk: Trajectory Bundling for Animated Transitions |
Leyla Norooz PhD Student, iSchool (link) |
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CHI Practice Talk: BodyVis: A New Approach to Body Learning Through Wearable Sensing and Visualization | |
04/16/2015 | Yla Tausczik Assistant Professor, iSchool (link) |
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Open Government Data and Civic Applications: What would successful collaboration look like? |
(Cancelled) |
Heather Bradbury Maryland Institute College of Art |
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Building a Plane in Mid-air |
04/30/2015 | Andrea Forte Associate Professor of College of Computing & Informatics at Drexel University (link) |
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Social Information Spaces: Designing for Smart(er) Societies |
05/07/2015 | Peter Teuben Astronomy dept (link) |
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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 |
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09/04/2014 | Niklas Elmqvist New iSchool Professor in Infovis (link) |
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Ubiquitous Analytics: Interacting with Big Data Anywhere, Anytime |
09/11/2014 | All new students! |
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New student introductions! |
09/18/2014 | Moving the cubes! |
Resisting the cookies is futile. |
09/25/2014 | Kotaro Hara CS PhD Student: (link) |
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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) |
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Measuring Password Guessability for an Entire University |
10/09/2014 (room 2119) |
m.c. schraefel Professor, University of Southampton (link) |
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Exploring the role of HCI as an agent of cultural change: from health as a medical condition to health as shared, social aspiration. |
10/16/2014 | Uran Oh CS PhD Student |
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ASSETS 2014 Practice Talk: Design of and Subjective Response to On-body Input for People With Visual Impairments |
10/23/2014 | Andrea Wiggins Assistant Professor, iSchool (link) |
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Citizen Science at Scale: Human Computation for Science, Education, and Sustainability |
10/30/2014 | Nicholas Diakopoulos Assistant Professor, UMD College of Journalism (link) |
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Computational Journalism: From Tools to Algorithmic Accountability |
11/06/2014 | Susan Winter Assistant Program Director, MIM |
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Top-Down and Bottom-Up: Building Information Science for an Active Middle |
11/13/2014 | Alina Goldman iSchool PhD Student |
Audience Performer Collaboration |
11/20/2014 | Beverly Harrison Principal Scientist & Director Mobile Research, Yahoo! |
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Yahoo Labs – Mobile Research Group |
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 | Expand
Details |
Spring 2014
Date | Leader | Topic |
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Jan 30 | Helena Mentis New UMBC HCI faculty member bio |
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Tracking the Body in Healthcare |
Feb 6 | Catherine Plaisant and Michael Gubbels | Reviewing CHI '13 best videos |
Feb 13 | Beverly Harrison Yahoo Research |
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Research at Yahoo Labs |
Feb 20 | Karyn Moffatt HCI Professor at McGill Univ. bio |
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Accessible Social Technology |
Feb 27 | Romain Vuillemot | |
March 6 | Megan Monroe PhD Student homepage |
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The Talk Talk |
March 13 | cancelled | |
March 20 | No Brown Bag. Spring Break. | |
March 27 | Jessica Vitak Assistant Professor in iSchool HCIL faculty member bio |
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Privacy Management in the Digital Age |
April 3 | Chris Imbriano CS Ph.D. Student Inclusive Design Lab |
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Talk and discussion about GitHub and why the HCIL may want to adopt it. |
April 10 | Vanessa Frias-Martinez Assistant Professor in iSchool bio |
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From Digital Footprints to Social Insights |
April 17 | Alex Pompe Senior Technical Advisor at IREX |
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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 |
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 |
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The goal of this session is to provide several students at various points in their academic programs |
Wed, Sept 25 | Jonathan Donner | External Speaker |
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Everybody’s internet? :Designing for mobile-centric internet users in the developing world Expand
Jonathan Donner - Researcher, Technology for Emerging Markets, Microsoft Research |
Th, Oct 3 | Ed Cutrell | External Speaker |
Expand Technology for Emerging Markets (TEM) group at Microsoft Research
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Th, Oct 10 | Marshini Chetty Assistant Professor in iSchool and HCIL faculty member http://marshini.net |
Talk |
Expand HCI and Networking - Taming the Internet One Bit at a Time
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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 | Expand Bryan Sivak's bio
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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 |
ExpandDiscussion of creative work in digital media and computational arts.
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Th, Dec 12 |