Mixed Reality Lab (MRL) had a successful year at this year's ACM SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI). CHI is the leading international conference for human-computer interaction (HCI) research. It attracts over 2500 delegates each year. CHI 2012 will be the 30th CHI conference and will be held in Austin, Texas between 5th and 10th May.
This year, we have received the following CHI awards …
Best paper award—full paper (given to top 1% of all submissions)
Uncomfortable Interactions
Steve Benford, The University of Nottingham
Chris Greenhalgh, The University of Nottingham
Gabriella Giannachi, The University of Exeter
Brendan Walker, The University of Nottingham
Joe Marshall, The University of Nottingham
Tom Rodden, The University of Nottingham
Discomfort can enhance the entertainment, enlightenment and sociality of cultural experiences. We explore how four kinds of discomfort—visceral, cultural, control and intimacy—can be ethically embedded into experiences.
Best paper award—Long Case Study (given to top 1% of all submissions)
Methodological Insights on Doing HCI Research in Rwanda
Samantha Merritt, Indiana University
Abigail Durrant, The University of Nottingham
Stuart Reeves, The University of Nottingham
David S Kirk, Newcastle University
Case study of research on memorialisation in post-genocide Rwanda, focussing on methodological challenges of working in a "transnational" context. Findings develop methodological insights with relevance to wider HCI audiences.
Best paper award nomination—full paper (given to the top 5% of all submissions)
Envisioning Ubiquitous Computing
Stuart Reeves, The University of Nottingham
Examines technological visions of the future and the role of 'envisioning' within ubicomp and HCI communities. Critiques these envisionings and recommends changes in ways we read, interpret and use them.
Also, Steve Benford has been elected a member of the CHI Academy.
Beyond these awards, the MRL also had the following full papers accepted:
CamBlend: An Object Focused Collaboration Tool —Paper
James Norris, Mixed Reality Lab, The University of Nottingham
Holger Schnädelbach, Mixed Reality Lab, Computer Science, The University of Nottingham
Guoping Qiu , The University of Nottingham
New panoramic focus plus context video collaboration system designed to facilitate the interaction with and around objects. Exploratory study showed several successful new uses and existing problems in fractured spaces.
Digging in the Crates: An Ethnographic Study of DJs' Work—Paper
Ahmed Yousif Ahmed, The University of Nottingham
Steve Benford, The University of Nottingham
Andy Crabtree, The University of Nottingham
Presents an analysis of how DJs collect, prepare, perform and promote music. Raises implications for technologies to support DJs and for studies of music consumption and sharing in other settings.
Laying the Table for HCI: Uncovering Ecologies of Domestic Food Consumption - Paper
Annika Hupfeld, The University of Nottingham
Tom Rodden, The University of Nottingham
Study of family eating practices in the home and the artefacts and spaces involved. Provides a set of sensitizing concepts for interaction designers and technologists seeking to augment domestic eating.
“Act Natural”: Instructions, Compliance and Accountability in Ambulatory Experiences—Paper
Peter Tolmie, The University of Nottingham
Steve Benford, The University of Nottingham
Martin Flintham, The University of Nottingham
Patrick Brundell, The University of Nottingham Matt Adams - Blast Theory
Nicholas Tandavantij, Blast Theory
Ju Row Far, Blast Theory
Gabriella Giannachi, The University of Exeter
This paper presents an ethnographic study of instruction compliance in an ambulatory experience. Four levels of compliance are uncovered of broad relevance to instruction design.
A Hybrid Mass Participation Approach to Mobile Software Trials—Paper
Alistair Morrison, University of Glasgow
Donald McMillan, University of Glasgow
Stuart Reeves, The University of Nottingham
Scott Sherwood, University of Glasgow
Matthew Chalmers, University of Glasgow
Describes methodology for combining simultaneous 'app store' style mobile software trial with local deployment. Allows for explanation of observed behaviour, verification to prevent misleading findings and more solid ethical practice.
The Lab is also presenting an ACM Transactrons on CHI paper at the conference, as well as an alt,chi paper. We are also taking part in SIGS and workshops.
http://chi2012.acm.org/
Posted on Wednesday 11th April 2012