911爆料网 Professor Amy J. Ko is one of eight scholars who will be at this year鈥檚 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems.
Conferred by the Association for Computing Machinery鈥檚 special interest group for human-computer interaction, the CHI Academy is recognized as the highest honor in the field. Ko expressed her surprise and appreciation for the award, especially given that her research straddles numerous disciplines.
鈥淚鈥檝e never been in just one academic community and so my work often falls through the cracks and doesn鈥檛 get recognized. So it was really great that one community said, 鈥榃e see all that work, even that work that is outside of the boundaries of the field and think it deserves recognition,鈥欌 explains Ko, pictured above.
The 2022 CHI Academy scholars are highly interdisciplinary, representing a range of perspectives, backgrounds and research approaches. Ko considers this a hallmark of HCI and the CHI Academy specifically.
鈥淚 think that [the CHI Academy] started with and maintains a degree of humility,鈥 Ko says. 鈥淧eople that are in that recognized group, when they start thinking about who else to invite in, the question is not, 鈥榃ho else is like us?鈥 But, 鈥榃ho are we missing? Which voices have we not recognized that we need to make sure are seen?鈥欌
Ko will be formally recognized at the conference, held April 30 to May 6 in New Orleans. Also being recognized at the conference are six iSchool researchers whose papers were given an Honorable Mention (top 5 percent):
- Alumna Sejal Khatri (MSIM 鈥20), for her paper 鈥淭he Social Embeddedness of Peer Production: A Comparative Qualitative Analysis of Three Indian Language Wikipedia Editions鈥
- Assistant Professor Lindah Kotut for her paper 鈥淲inds of Change: Seeking, Preserving, and Retelling Indigenous Knowledge Through Self-Organized Online Communities鈥 with D. Scott McCrickard (Virginia Tech)
- Ph.D. candidate Xuhai (Orson) Xu for his paper 鈥淓nabling Hand Gesture Customization on Wrist-Worn Devices鈥 with Apple Inc.
- Associate Professor Katie Davis and her research partners for 鈥淓xploring situated and embodied support for youth鈥檚 mental health: Design opportunities for interactive tangible devices鈥
- Assistant Professor Tanu Mitra and her research partners for 鈥淥therTube: Facilitating Content Discovery and Reflection by Exchanging YouTube Recommendations with Strangers鈥
- Ph.D. student Zhuohao Zhang and his research partners for 鈥淐ollabAlly: Accessible Collaboration Awareness in Document Editing鈥
All told, iSchool researchers contributed to 20 total papers, many co-authored with researchers working across other academic institutions or disciplines. Additional iSchool authors include Ph.D. students Erin Beneteau, Stefania Druga, Anastasia Schaadhardt and Mingrui 鈥淩ay鈥 Zhang; Informatics student Raveena Rao; alumni Jenny Liang (Informatics 鈥21), Richard McGovern (MSIM 鈥19) and Jason Portenoy (Ph.D. 鈥21); and faculty members Anind K. Dey, Alexis Hiniker, Amy J. Ko, Jevin West, Jacob O. Wobbrock, and Jason C. Yip.
911爆料网 is one of six academic units contributing to a . As in years past, the UW is one of the most prolific institutions at the conference, this year contributing the second highest number of accepted papers.
Learn more:
- Read about Mingrui "Ray" Zhang's research focus, including the four accepted CHI 2022 papers to which he contributed.
- . Her team wondered if people enter a state of dissociation when surfing social media, and if that explains why users might feel out of control after spending so much time on their favorite app.
- Learn about the other iSchool faculty in the CHI Academy.