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Explore user-centered computing, health monitoring, indoor navigation, and privacy-respecting RFID ecosystems with practical sensor-based models in a research-focused environment at the University of Washington. Discover innovative hardware with new capabilities and real-world sensing applications. Learn from leaders like Richard Anderson, Gaetano Borriello, and James Landay.
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Department of Computer Science and Engineering University of Washington UbiCompEdTechDevWorld
User Centered Computing II • Richard Anderson • Tom Anderson • Gaetano Borriello • James Fogarty • James Landay • Ed Lazowska • Steve Tanimoto • David Wetherall
Ubiquitous Computing • Gaetano Borriello • David Wetherall • Deiter Fox • James Landay • James Fogarty
Personal Monitoring Health and fitness
Persuasive Technology Information where and when you need it to help you make better choices
RFID Ecosystem Privacy-respecting,RFID-based, scalablesmart spaces
Practical Sensor-Based Models of Office Worker Interruptibility James FogartyReal World Sensing Practical Sensor-Based Models Interruptibility Unobtrusive and Low-Cost Home Activity Sensing • Real World Deployment and Evaluation of Sensing-Based Applications • Human-Understandable Machine Learning • Privacy-Appropriate Sensing
Intel Research Seattle (IRS) • Roughly 20 person research lab, located off the edge of campus, part of a larger Intel Research • Focus is on computing systems that function as part of everyday environments (ubicomp) • Tied to UW CSE, and EE, iSchool, etc., via students and faculty
MSB iMote ISRB IRS research mix HCI Statistical reasoning Systems Hardware
Educational Technology • Richard Anderson • Steve Tanimoto
Transparent design tools – T-STAR. 2. Transparent programming environments: “Data Factory” – by default, all data is visible. Teaching and Learning with “Transparent” SoftwareSteve Tanimoto
3. Transparent image processing: “Pixel Calculator” -- Mathematical representations are not hidden away. 4. Transparent educational assessment: Computers can help students learn by recognizing their conceptions and misconceptions. Making assessment transparent to students is a current focus. “Transparent” Software(continued)
Computing for the Developing World • Richard Anderson • Tom Anderson • Gaetano Borriello • Ed Lazowska
Digital Study Hall • Participants • Richard Anderson • Tom Anderson • Paul Javid • Randy Wang (MSRI) • Facilitated Video instruction for primary education
Appropriate Computing Technologies for Rural Development - Tapan Parikh