![]() Talk Title: Participatory approaches to AI in digital health and well-being ![]() This includes work around designing user interfaces for recommender systems modeling human information behaviors from computational traces supporting crowdwork and online collaboration, and studying the power relationships involved systems and models connecting social media, identity, and memory and various other topics that he helped students work on along the way. Before that, he was an associate professor at Cornell in the Information Science department, doing both design-based and analytic research in the spaces of Human-Computer Interaction and Computer-Supported Cooperative Work. I plan to have the talk itself run a little short so we can have a more interactive discussion, so feel free to bring a few of your own worries along to share.īio: Dan Cosley is a permanent program officer at NSF as of September 2020, homed in the Human-Centered Computing program in CISE and associated with a number of other solicitations, with a mostly up to date list at. I haven’t given a talk like this before, and many of the issues have already been observed in some form by people smarter than me, but I think there’s value in bringing them together and hope that talking about this will be useful for both HCI practice and HCI research. Failure To Generalize (A Grounded Theory of X?).Things Change (Tweet, Tweet… Musk!) and.Whither the Artifact? (Goldilocks and the Three Stances).Our Methods Make Us Dumb (Other People Know Things).I tentatively plan to focus on four main issues, based both on work I’ve been involved with myself and on other studies I’ve seen: Speaker: Dan Cosley, Program Officer, National Science FoundationĪbstract: In this talk, rather than report out on some research that I’m involved with, I plan to do some meta-reflection on things that I worry reduce the contribution and impact of research in HCI, CSCW, and related areas. Talk Title: (Some) things I worry about in HCI/CSCW research “Celebrating Happy Memories” (or Catherine recounts some of the many reasons you should be proud of HCIL).Sharing the Productivity Tools & Tips That Help You Get Work Done.Developing an Approach to Support Instructors to Provide Emotional and Instructional Scaffolding for English Language Learners Through Biosensor-Based Feedback.Computational Thinking and Creativity – Do they go together?.Brown Bag Talk: Human Spaceflight Risk from Decreasing Ground Support on Long-Duration Missions Beyond Low-Earth Orbit.Brown Bag Talk: Aligning incentives with institutional values.Katie Davis discusses her new book, “Technology’s Child” Andrea Parker presents “Transforming the Health of Communities through Innovations in Social Computing” Brown Bag Talk: Andy Stefik shares “Evidence Standards and Data Science for All”. ![]()
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