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TABLE OF CONTENTS 

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Welcome from the Chairs ...................................................................... 2 CHI 2015 Conference-at-a-Glance ................................................ 4 Monday-Tuesday.................................................................................... 4 Wednesday-Thursday ........................................................................ 6 Conference Committee ........................................................................... 9 General Information .................................................................................11 ACM SIGCHI ........................................................................................11 CHI 2015 Overview .........................................................................11 CHI 2015 Conference Proceedings.........................................12 CHI 2015 Extended Abstracts...................................................12 Simultaneous Translation Support...........................................13 Special Daytime and Evening Events ......................................14 CHI Information and Policies ......................................................15 Asian CHI Symposia ..................................................................................16 Awards ...............................................................................................................................18 CHI Awards..................................................................................................18 CHI Academy..............................................................................................18 Past Honorees ............................................................................................19 ACM/SIGCHI Best of CHI Awards ...............................................19 People’s Choice Best Talk Award ...................................................19 Plenaries and Keynotes......................................................................... 20 Technical Sessions ...................................................................................... 22 Monday .......................................................................................................... 22 Tuesday ...........................................................................................................28 Wednesday .................................................................................................. 36 Thursday ........................................................................................................44 Workshops .........................................................................................................51 Video Showcase .............................................................................................52 Courses ..................................................................................................................53 Student Events .............................................................................................. 54 Doctoral Consortium ........................................................................... 54 Research Competition.......................................................................... 54 Design Competition ................................................................................55 Games Competition ...............................................................................55 Works In Progress ......................................................................................56 First Rotation - Tuesday all day ........................................................56 Second Rotation - Wednesday all day.........................................59 Interactivity ......................................................................................................62 Exhibitors ........................................................................................................................63 Exhibits and Interactivity Map ...................................................... 65 COEX Convention & Exhibition Center Maps .................67 WIFI (please note: case sensitive): network name: CHI2015 user name: chi2015 password: chi2015

CHI 2015

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea |

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WELCOME FROM THE CHAIRS

Welcome to CHI 2015

CROSSIN

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| ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

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CHI 2015

WELCOME FROM THE CHAIRS

General Conference Chairs

Bo Begole, Huawei Technologies

CHI 2015

Jinwoo Kim, Yonsei University, Korea

Technical Program Chairs

Kori Inkpen, Microsoft Research

Woontack Woo, KAIST

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea |

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8:30 - 10:00

CONFERENCE AT A GLANCE

Opening Plenary Keynote (Hall D1) Lou Yonqi - Crossing: HCI, Design and Sustainability

16:30 - 17:50

MONDAY

14:30 - 15:50

11:30 - 12:50

10:00 - 11:30 – Coffee Break (Level 300/400 Foyers) • Student Games Competition (Hall E Foyer) • Video Showcase (Room 401) 401

402

403

E1/E2

E3

E4

E5

E6

Papers Non-Rigid Interaction Surfaces

Papers What Do I Hear? Communicating with Sound

Papers Rethinking Evaluation for Today’s HCI

Papers Improving Game Experiences

Papers Facebook Newsfeeds & Friendships

Papers Activism in Wikipedia & Beyond

Papers HMDs & Wearables to Overcome Disabilities

Papers Visualizing Data

Papers Understanding & Evaluating Performance

Papers Music & Art

Papers Supporting Change in Developing Countries

Papers Privacy, Security & Interruptions

Papers Making & Sharing Assistive Technologies

Papers Matching & Facilitating Social Interactions

Papers Crowdsourcing Fans & Friends

Papers Managing Personal Privacy

Papers Health Sensors & Monitoring

Papers Collaborative Tables, Walls & Rooms

12:50 - 14:30 – Lunch Break Special Papers SIGCHI Social Interaction Impact Award in 3D Space

15:50 - 16:30 – Coffee Break (Level 300/400 Foyers) Papers Papers Papers Papers Family Makers & How Fast Can Understand Communication Hackers You Type on & Enhancing Your Phone? Learning

18:00 - 19:30 – Conference Reception & Exhibit Grand Opening • Interactivity (Hall C2/C3)

8:30 - 9:20

7:00 - 8:20 – Women’s Breakfast (Room 327ABC) Tuesday Morning Keynote (Hall D1) Donghoon Chang - UX Design in the IoT Era

16:30 - 17:50

TUESDAY

14:30 - 15:50

11:30 - 12:50

9:30 - 10:50

9:20 - 9:30 – Break 401

402

Papers MuscleComputer Interfaces

Papers Phones for More Than Just Talking & Text

403

E1/E2

Papers Papers Search & Kids Haptic, Recommendations Wearable, Tangible Learning

E3

E4

E5

E6

Papers Motivation & Participation

Papers Sustainability & Recycling

Papers The Value of the Village in Caregiving

Papers I Like What I See - Interface Aesthetics

10:50 - 11:30 – Coffee Break • WIP Posters Rotation 1, Doctoral Consortium Posters • Interactivity (Hall C2/C3) Papers Papers Papers Papers Special Papers Papers Papers Healthcare Bias, Storytelling in Smart Evaluating Foundations New Smartwatch Tangible Engagement & InfoVis Crowdsourcing Smartphone & Trends in Evaluation Interaction Interactions Authentication Adaptation HCI 1 Approaches 12:50 - 14:30 – Lunch Break Special Panel SIGCHI Grip, Move Lifetime & Tilt: Novel Research Interaction Award

Papers Interactive Video & Collaborative Annotations

Papers HCI for the Elderly

Papers The Impact of Crowd Work on Workers

Papers Social Media and Mobile Camera Privacy

Papers DIY Healthcare: Apps & Wearables

Papers Social Embodied Interaction

15:50 - 16:30 – Coffee Break • WIP Posters Rotation 1, Student Design & Student Research Posters • Interactivity (Hall C2/C3) Papers Papers Papers Papers Papers Papers Papers Papers Sports Tracking Feeling & Families and Understanding Eco-Green: Design and Understanding Sharing & & Training Communicating Their Use of Crowdwork in Encouraging Collaboration 3D Object & Extending Emotions @ Work Technology Many Domains Energy Touch Fabrication Conservation Interfaces 18:00 - 19:30 • Job Fair & Recruiting Boards (Hall C2/C3)

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| ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

CONFERENCE AT A GLANCE 8:30 - 10:00

Opening Plenary Keynote (Hall D1) Lou Yonqi - Crossing: HCI, Design and Sustainability

10:00 - 11:30 – Coffee Break (Level 300/400 Foyers) • Student Games Competition (Hall E Foyer) • Video Showcase (Room 401) E7

308

317A

317BC

Panel Transfer of HCI Research Innovations

alt.chi Augmentation

Course (C01) Designing Websites for Adults 55+

Course (C02) Cross-Device, Contextdependent UI

318A

318BC Course (C04 ) Body, Whys & Videotape: Somatic Approaches

11:30 - 12:50

307

12:50 - 14:30 – Lunch Break Papers Reflecting Upon Design Reflection

Case Studies Industrial Innovation

Course (C06) Intro to Human-Computer Interaction 2/2

Course (C05) Design for Searching & Finding 2/2

SIG Interactive Childhood

Course (C08) Design for Online Video & Television 1/2

Course (C08) Design for Online Video & Television 2/2

MONDAY

Course (C05) Design for Searching & Finding 1/2

16:30 - 17:50

15:50 - 16:30 – Coffee Break (Level 300/400 Foyers) Papers alt.chi Course (C07) The Value of New User Actionable Things Interfaces Inexpensive Games Research 2/2

Course (C06) Intro to Human-Computer Interaction 1/2

14:30 - 15:50

Course (C07) Actionable Inexpensive Games Research 1/2

18:00 - 19:30 – Conference Reception & Exhibit Grand Opening • Interactivity (Hall C2/C3) 7:00 - 8:20 – Women’s Breakfast (Room 327ABC) 8:30 - 9:20

Tuesday Morning Keynote (Hall D1) Donghoon Chang - UX Design in the IoT Era

9:20 - 9:30 – Break E7 307

308

317A

317BC

Course (C09) Designing & Assessing Using Task Models 1/2

Course (C10) Learn to Sketch (Even if You Can’t Draw) 1/2

318A

10:50 - 11:30 – Coffee Break • WIP Posters Rotation 1, Doctoral Consortium Posters • Interactivity (Hall C2/C3) Course (C11) SIG Course (C10) Panel alt.chi Course (C09) Methods for Gender-Inclusive Learn to Sketch You’ve Been HCI Methodology Designing & Child Computer (Even if You Can’t Software Acquired! Assessing Using Interaction 2/2 Draw) 2/2 Task Models 2/2

Course (C13) Course (C14) Methods for HCI Mobile Human-Computer Research 1/2 Interaction 1/2

Course (C16) Sketching User Experiences 1/2

16:30 - 17:50

15:50 - 16:30 – Coffee Break • WIP Posters Rotation 1, Student Design & Student Research Posters • Interactivity (Hall C2/C3) Course (C15) Course (C16) Papers Special Course (C14) Course (C13) SIG HCI Lessons: Sketching User Critical Design Human Computer Mobile Methods for HCI Start and Run From Earth to Experiences 2/2 Interaction Human-Computer Research 2/2 a SIGCHI Local Outer Space 2/2 Journal 1 Interaction 2/2 Chapter

18:00 - 19:30 • Job Fair & Recruiting Boards (Hall C2/C3)

CHI 2015

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TUESDAY

Case Studies Education & Work

Course (C12) Practical UX Research Methodologies 2/2

14:30 - 15:50

12:50 - 14:30 – Lunch Break Course (C15) Papers HCI Lessons: Innovation in From Earth to Theories & Outer Space 1/2 Products

318BC Course (C12) Practical UX Research Methodologies 1/2

11:30 - 12:50

Papers Case Studies Supporting Art & Life Creativity through UX Design

9:30 - 10:50

Course (C11) Methods for Child Computer Interaction 1/2

8:30 - 9:20

CONFERENCE AT A GLANCE

Wednesday Morning Keynote (Hall D1) David Min - Journey to a Better Life

9:20 - 9:30 – Break 01

9:30 - 10:50

E5 Papers Accessibility at Home & on The Go

E6 Papers Telepresence Video, Robots, and Walls

10:50 - 11:30 – Coffee Break • WIP Posters Rotation 2 • Interactivity (Hall C2/C3) Papers Papers Papers Papers Papers Digital & Tactile Automation Art & Bridging People Materials Notifications and Interactive Performance & Beliefs with Fabrication for Phones & Feedback Social Media Wearables

Special Foundations & Trends in HCI 2

Papers Quantified Self for Humans & Pets

Papers Visualizing Statistics & Graphs

12:50 - 14:30 – Lunch Break Special Papers SIGCHI Understanding Lifetime Everyday Use of Practice Mobile Phones Award

Papers Security Feedback & Warnings

Papers Wellness & Wearables

Papers Task Interruption & Resumption

Papers Socio-Political Interactions

Papers Understanding Health through Online Behavior

Papers Natural User Interfaces for InfoVis

8:30 - 9:20

16:30 - 17:50

WEDNESDAY

14:30 - 15:50

Papers HMDs in Augmented & Virtual Reality

E4 Special Enhanced Security with Passwords & CAPTCHAs

11:30 - 12:50

401

402 Papers Tangible Interaction with Phones

403 Papers Neighborhoods & Disadvantaged Communities

Papers GUI Size, Resolution & Layout

E1/E2 Papers Player Performance & Experience in Games

Papers Kids Social, Emotional & Special Needs

E3 Papers Bridging People & Beliefs with Social Media

Papers HCI for Civic Engagement

15:50 - 16:30 – Coffee Break • WIP Posters Rotation 2 • Interactivity (Hall C2/C3) Papers Papers Papers Papers Papers Voting & HCI at Home Using Random Brain & Software Volunteerism Body Parts for Physiological Engineering Input Data use for Tools HCI

Thursday Morning Keynote, ACM-W Athena Lecture (Hall D1) Susan T. Dumais, ACM Fellow - Large-Scale Behavioral Data: Potential and Pitfalls

THURSDAY

14:30 - 15:50

11:30 - 12:50

9:30 - 10:50

9:20 - 9:30 – Break 01 401

402

403

E1/E2

E3

E4

E5

E6

Papers Augmented & Virtual Reality in the Real World

Papers Gesture Elicitation & Recognition

Papers Programming Environments

Papers Digital Collections, Practice & Legacy

Papers Multilingual Communication

Papers Empowering Users

Papers Accessibility for Vision Impaired Users

Papers Interactive & Multi-Surface Maps

10:50 - 11:30 – Coffee Break • Interactivity (Hall C2/C3) Papers Papers Papers Papers MOOCS & Understanding Robot Mid-Air e-Learning Gamers Personalities Gestures and Interaction

Papers Bridging Communities

Papers Gender & Technology

Papers Coping & Wellbeing Through HCI

Papers Interacting with Floors & Situated Displays

12:50 - 14:30 – Lunch Break Papers Papers Multi-Device Speech & Interaction Auditory Interfaces

Papers Social Media & Citizen Science

Papers Disasters & Humanitarian Events

Papers Home Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation

Papers Interaction Techniques for Tables & Walls

Papers Email & Social Media at Work

Papers Understanding & Protecting Kids Tech Use

16:30 - 17:50

15:50 - 16:30 – Coffee Break (Level 300/400 Foyers)

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Closing Plenary Keynote (Hall D1) PSY - Cultural Crossing from Local to Global through Music:Technology, Media, and Future

| ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

CONFERENCE AT A GLANCE

8:30 - 9:20

Wednesday Morning Keynote (Hall D1) David Min - Journey to a Better Life

9:20 - 9:30 – Break 01 Course (C18) Speech-based Interaction 1/2

Panels Experience Design for Games

alt.chi Arts and Phiolosphy

Course (C17) Intro to Creating Musical Interfaces 1/2

317BC

10:50 - 11:30 – Coffee Break • WIP Posters Rotation 2 • Interactivity (Hall C2/C3) Course (C18) Panel Special Course (C17) Special Speech-based Transdisciplinary Human Computer Intro to Creating Student Research Interaction 2/2 Design in Interaction Journal Musical Competition Education 2 Interfaces 2/2 Finals

318A

SIG Online Deliberative Processes and Tech

318BC Course (C19) Designing Surveys for HCI Research 1/2 Course (C19) Designing Surveys for HCI Research 2/2

Course (C23) Conceptual Models: Core to Good Design 1/2

Course (C23) Conceptual Models: Core to Good Design 2/2

16:30 - 17:50

317A

14:30 - 15:50

308

11:30 - 12:50

307

9:30 - 10:50

E7

12:50 - 14:30 – Lunch Break Course (C20) Designing Wearable Interfaces 1/2

Course (C21) Experience Sampling to Collect Deep Data 1/2

Special Student Design Competition Finals

15:50 - 16:30 – Coffee Break • WIP Posters Rotation 2 • Interactivity (Hall C2/C3) Special Papers Course (C20) Course (C21) Course (C22) Student Game UX Methods 4 Designing Experience Rapid Design Competition Wearable Sampling to Labs - Design-Led Interfaces Collect Deep Data Finals Innovation 2/2 2/2 2/2

SIG Understanding Sports

8:30 - 9:20

Thursday Morning Keynote, ACM-W Athena Lecture (Hall D1) Susan T. Dumais, ACM Fellow - Large-Scale Behavioral Data: Potential and Pitfalls

9:20 - 9:30 – Break 01 E7 307 Panel Mobile Devices Revolutionizing UI

308

317A

Case Studies Observation & Interaction

THURSDAY

Case Studies Special Environments

318BC Course (C26) Introduction to Positive Computing

14:30 - 15:50

12:50 - 14:30 – Lunch Break Papers Papers: Interacting with GUIs

Course (C27) Designing with the Mind in Mind

318A

11:30 - 12:50

10:50 - 11:30 – Coffee Break • Interactivity (Hall C2/C3) Course (C28) Panel alt.chi Benefit from Why Google Mindfulness and Using ISO Cannot Be the Care Standards #1 in Korea?

317BC Course (C24) Vision-Driven: Beyond Tangible Bits

9:30 - 10:50

Course (C25) Interaction Design for Reading Devices

15:50 - 16:30 – Coffee Break (Level 300/400 Foyers)

CHI 2015

16:30 - 17:50

Closing Plenary Keynote (Hall D1) PSY - Cultural Crossing from Local to Global through Music:Technology, Media, and Future

WEDNESDAY

Panels Course (C22) 10 Years of Rapid Design Labs - Design-Led alt.chi Innovation 1/2

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CHI 2015

CONFERENCE COMMITTEE General Conference Chairs

Jinwoo Kim, Yonsei University, Korea Bo Begole, Huawei, USA

Technical Program

Technical Program Chairs Woontack Woo, KAIST, Korea Kori Inkpen, Microsoft Research, USA Papers and Notes Andy Cockburn, University of Canterbury, New Zealand Joanna McGrenere, University of British Columbia, Canada Jun Rekimoto, University of Tokyo, Japan Best of CHI Awards Mark Billinghurst, University of Canterbury, New Zealand Panels Khai Truong, UNC Charlotte, USA Elaine M. Huang, University of Zurich, Switzerland Case Studies Danielle Cooley, USA Joonhwan Lee, Seoul National University, Korea Courses Regina Bernhaupt, Ruwido, Austria Matt Jones, Swansea University, United Kingdom Interactivity Julie Rico Williamson, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom Juhyun Eune, Seoul National University, Korea Video Showcase Jinwook Seo, Seoul National University, Korea Rodrigo de Oliveira, YouTube, USA SIGs

Enrico Rukzio, Ulm University, Germany Simone Barbosa, PUC-Rio, Brazil

Doctoral Consortium Si-Jung “Jun” Kim, University of Nevada Las Vegas, USA Jaime Teevan, Microsoft Research, USA Susan Fussell, Cornell University, USA Workshops Jürgen Steimle, Max Planck Institute for Informatics, Germany Bongshin Lee, Microsoft Research, USA Works in Progress Shamsi Iqbal, Microsoft Research, USA Shaun Lawson, University of Lincoln, UK Shendong Zhao, National University of Singapore, Singapore Student Design Competition Youn-Kyung Lim, KAIST, Korea Anirudha Joshi, IIT Bombay, India Student Research Competition Seungyon “Claire” Lee, Google, USA Derek Reilly, Dalhousie University, Canada Geehyuk Lee, KAIST, Korea Student Game Competition Floyd Muller, RMIT University, Australia Alessandro Canossa, Northeastern University, USA Soojin Jun, Yonsei University, Korea alt.chi Silvia Lindtner, University of California, Irvine, USA Morgan Ames, Intel, USA Henry Duh, UTAS, Australia TOCHI papers Jeff Nichols, IBM, USA Conference Theme/Local Heroes Kyle Hyunsuk Kim, Hongik University, Korea

Operations

Student Volunteers Coordinators Jon Haber, University of Calgary, Canada Siroberto Scerbo, Virginia Tech, USA Jieun Wee, Seoul National University, Korea Chair’s Assistants Yoojin Lee, Yonsei University, Korea Nikolas Martelaro, Stanford University, USA Data Management Max Van Kleek, University of Southampton, UK BoYu Gao, Konkuk University, Korea Design Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson, Splunk, Inc. Jina Wu, Cisco Systems Opening Animation Director Chris Inkyong Whang, Hongik University, Korea Technical Liason Sara Drenner, BI Worldwide, USA Scooter Morris, University of California, San Franscisco, USA Proceedings Deana Brown, Georgia Tech, USA Jaejeung Kim, KAIST, Korea Posters Hyunjoo Song, Seoul National University, Korea Infrastructure Accessibility Jongbae Kim, Yonsei University, Korea Digital Accessibility Jeff Bigham, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Local Hospitality Junho Choi, Yonsei University, Korea Video Previews Stéphane Huot, Inria, France Fanny Chevalier, Inria, France Social Media Max Wilson, University of Nottingham, UK Kwangsu Cho, Yonsei University, Korea Scheduling Christophe Hurter, ENAC, France Juho Kim, MIT, USA Mobile Applications Stephen Oney, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Jason Wiese, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Eiji Hayashi, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Célia Martinie, Université Toulouse 3, France Translations Susan Fussell, Cornell University, USA Naomi Yamashita, NTT, Japan Webmaster Juho Kim, MIT, USA Toni-Jan Keith Monserrat, UPLB, Philippines Conference Management Janeé Pelletier, Conference & Logistics Consultants, USA Allison Perrelli, Conference & Logistics Consultants, USA Sponsors, Exhibits & Recruitment Carol Klyver, Foundations of Excellence, USA Registration Yvonne Lopez, Executive Events Inc., USA Brooke Daley, Executive Events Inc., USA PCS Liaison Max van Kleek, University of Southampton, UK Carol Klyver, Foundations of Excellence, USA Scooter Morris, University of California, San Francisco, USA Women’s Breakfast Event Allison Druin, University of Mar yland, USA

CHI 2015

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10 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

GENERAL INFORMATION 

ACM SIGCHI

CHI 2015 is sponsored by ACM’s Special Interest Group on ComputerHuman Interaction (ACM SIGCHI). ACM, the Association for omputing ac iner is an educational and scientific societ uniting the world’s computing educators, researchers, and professionals to inspire dialogue s are resources and address t e field s c allenges ACM strengthens the profession’s collective voice through strong leadership, promotion of the highest standards, and recognition of technical excellence. ACM supports the professional growth of its members by providing opportunities for life-long learning, career development, and professional networking. ACM offers its more than 100,000 worldwide members cutting edge technical information through world class journals and magazines, dynamic special interest groups, and globally recognized conferences. Visit www.acm.org for more information about ACM. SIGCHI is the premier international society for professionals, academics, and students who are interested in human-computer interaction (HCI). We provide a forum for the discussion of all aspects of HCI t roug our conferences including our flags ip conference publications, web sites, email discussion groups, and other services. We advance education in HCI through courses, workshops, and outreach, and we promote informal access to a wide range of individuals and organizations involved in HCI. Members can be involved in HCI-related activities with others in their region through local SIGCHI chapters. Come to the SIGCHI Town Hall meeting on Wednesday at 12:50 in Room 308 or visit www.sigchi.org to learn more about SIGCHI.

Membership Information

Please contact ACM’s Member Services Department Online: Tel: Fax: Email: Write:

Level 300

Asian CHI Symposia - Open to Public

Level 300

Workshops provide a valuable opportunity for small communities of people with diverse perspectives to engage in rich one- and two-day discussions about a topic of common interest. Workshop participants are pre-selected based on submitted position papers and a brief description of each workshop appears in the CHI 2015 Extended Abstracts. Some workshops choose to display a poster in the Exhibit Hall E Poster Area. CHI 2015 is offering a series of special symposia for topics pertinent to HCI communities across Asia. These symposia may contain content in English or in a regional language. Participants include both presenters and audience members. The symposia descriptions appear in the CHI 2015 Extended Abstracts.

Choosing sessions to attend 1.

3.

CHI 2015 OVERVIEW

The CHI 2015 technical program showcases presentations of outstanding research in human-computer interaction (HCI), demonstrations of new and innovative technology, discussions of timely and controversial issues, and presentations of the latest developments in HCI design and practice. The CHI technical program includes presentations in multiple formats, recorded in the CHI 2015 Proceedings and Extended Abstracts available from the ACM Digital Library and on the CHI 2015 USB key.

TECHNICAL PROGRAM | MONDAY — THURSDAY

CHI 2015 received over 3200 submissions and accepted over 1000 presentations and events distributed across 15 parallel sessions over four days. With so many presentations happening at once, how do you choose? CHI 2015 offers the following resources to help you make the most of your conference experience:

2.

www.acm.org +1-800-342-6626 (USA/Canada) +1-212-626-0500 (International) +1-212-944-1318 [emailprotected] Association for Computing Machinery, Inc. eneral ost ffice P.O. Box 30777 New York, NY 10087-0777, USA

 SATURDAY– SUNDAY EVENTS Doctoral Consortium - Invitation Only

Workshops - Invitation Only

4.

5.

This CHI 2015 Conference Program describes the venues and offers at-a-glance summaries of all events in the main technical program, as well as times and locations. The CHI 2015 USB key provided when you register includes the CHI 2015 Conference Proceedings and Extended Abstracts, also available in the ACM Digital Library, and the CHI 2015 Video Previews (see below). Extra USB keys are available for purchase at the Registration Desk. The free CHI 2015 Mobile App contains the full CHI 2015 program as well as a personal interactive schedule to help you keep track of events you would like to see. The CHI 2015 Proceedings and Extended Abstracts as well as Video Previews (below) can be loaded into the Mobile App for easy access. That app can be downloaded from Apple’s App Store and Google Play. A web version can be accessed at: http://chi2015.acm.org/mobileapp. The CHI 2015 Video Previews are 30-second video overviews of most presentations in the main technical program. You can browse Video Previews on the CHI 2015 USB, the CHI 2015 web site and the CHI 2015 Mobile App. CHI 2015 Student Volunteers (SVs) are available to point you in the right direction or answer questions about the program.

Room 308AB

Selected doctoral students present and explore their research topics with senior researchers and other students in a two-day interdisciplinary workshop. Doctoral Consortium posters are displayed in the Commons and brief descriptions appear in the CHI 2015 Extended Abstracts. Doctoral Consortium Mentors: Gregory Abowd, Mark Blythe, Susan Fussell (Co-Chair), Darren Gergle, Jim Hollan, Si-Jung ‘‘Jun’’ Kim (Co-Chair), Alice Oh, Jaime Teevan (Co-Chair)

CHI 2015

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 11

GENERAL INFORMATION  CHI 2015 CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS

 CHI 2015 EXTENDED ABSTRACTS

The CHI 2015 Conference Proceedings contain Papers and Notes, the most rigorously reviewed and prestigious material in the main technical program. The CHI 2015 Program Committee received 2125 submissions for Papers and Notes. Each was reviewed by one or more Associate Chairs, as well as three or more external reviewers. After a rebuttal phase, the 200+ senior Associate Chairs met in person within specialized subcommittees to discuss and select the accepted papers. The CHI 2015 acceptance rate was 23%.

The CHI 2015 Extended Abstracts record interactive events designed to provoke, intrigue, teach and inspire the CHI audience and capture a history of HCI practice.

The CHI 2015 Papers and Notes document research that makes a lasting and significant contri ution to our no ledge and understanding of human-computer interaction. CHI Conference Proceedings are read and cited worldwide, with a broad impact on the development of HCI principles, theories, techniques, and their practical application.

CHI Papers

Courses

Rooms 317A, 317BC, 318BC, E7

One or two 80-minute units List on page 53 Courses provide professional development opportunities for existing and prospective HCI community members. Pre-register to receive t e course notes and an identifier on our adge t at permits entr to t e course ou ma register for an unfilled courses at t e Registration Desk.

Case Studies

Room 308ABC

20-minute presentations

apers present significant contri utions to researc de elopment and practice in all areas of human-computer interaction.

Case Studies describe examples of best practices in human-computer interaction. The goal is to explain methods that deliver reliable, highquality results based on real-world experience and to present the lessons learned.

CHI Notes

Panels

20-minute presentations

10-minute presentations Notes are briefer and more focused than CHI Papers but follow the same rigorous review process.

TOCHI Papers 20-minute presentations papers ere pu lis ed it in t e past ear in S journal, ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction.

s flags ip

Room 307ABC

80-minute sessions anels ta e arious formats ut al a s in ol e significant interaction among panelists and audience mem ers around a specified topic The goal is to stimulate thought and discussion on current issues in human-computer interaction.

alt.chi

Room 308ABC

20-minute presentations Entering its tenth year, alt.chi offers an outlet for unusual, controversial, alternati e or t oug t pro o ing or t at does not fit it in t e standard CHI submission process. The format encourages lively audience participation.

Special Interest Groups (SIGs)

Room 318A

80-minute sessions SIGs offer a forum for conference attendees who share similar interests to discuss a specified topic re ious S s a e launc ed ne conferences and publications or generated new CHI activities.

Video Showcase

Room 401

80-minute session List on page 52 The CHI 2015 Video Showcase features engaging videos that offer a variety of perspectives on human-computer interaction, including no el interfaces reflecti e pieces and future en isionments ome and enjoy the videos during Monday morning break (10:00 – 11:30) followed by the Golden Mouse award ceremony. The People’s Choice Video award will be announced at the Closing Plenary.

Interactivity

Hall C2/C3

Hands-on demonstrations List on page 62 Interactivity offers hands-on demonstrations that let you see, hear and touch interactive visions of the future. They take the form of prototypes, demonstrations, artworks, design experiences and inspirational technologies. Interactivity offers an alternative to CHI’s traditional te t format to present ad ances in t e field nteracti it promotes and provokes discussion about the role of technology through hands-on engagement. Come see Interactivity at the CHI 2015 Conference Reception and Exhibits Grand Opening (Monday 18:00 – 19:30, Hall C2/C3) and during coffee breaks.

12 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

GENERAL INFORMATION  SIMULTANEOUS TRANSLATION SUPPORT Works in Progress (WIP)

Hall C2/C3

Posters List on page 56 or s in rogress present or at an earl stage t at can enefit from one-on-one discussions with colleagues. WIP Posters will be displayed in t o rotations t e first rotation on uesda st pril and t e second on Wednesday (22nd April). Morning and afternoon coffee breaks on Tuesday and Wednesday are designated sessions during which WIP authors will be available at their posters to informally discuss their research with colleagues. These sessions will also feature some structured interactive activities where authors will describe their work. Please come and hear about their ground-breaking work at these times.

Doctoral Consortium

Room 308AB

Posters List on page 54

This year, CHI is planning to provide simultaneous translation from English to Chinese, Japanese and Korean in the main auditorium t roug out t e first and last da of conference co ering t e pening and Closing sessions along with other sessions. Additional translation support such as machine translation and closed captioning will be available for other sessions throughout the conference. Translation Chairs: Susan Fussell, Cornell University, USA Naomi Yamashita, NTT, Japan Translation Support Committee: Bo Begole, Huawei R&D, USA Fanny Chevalier, INRIA, France Henry Duh, University of Tasmania, Australia Stéphane Huo, Université Paris-Sud, France Walter Lasecki, University of Rochester, USA

Doctoral Consortium students are available to discuss their research in the DC Spotlight session Tuesday during morning coffee break (10:50 – 11:30).

Yoojin Lee, Yonsei University, Korea

Student Research Competition

Masayuki Otani, Kyoto University, Japan

Rodrigo de Oliveira, Google, USA

Posters and 80-minute session List on page 54

Eunice Sari, University of Western Australia, Australia

The Student Research Competition (SRC) is a branch of the ACM Student Research Competition. Students’ posters are on display in Hall C2/C3 with author presentations during Tuesday's afternoon break (15:50-16:30). Final presentations are held on Wednesday (11:30 – 12:50, Room 317BC). Winners are announced at the Closing Plenary.

Juergen Steimle, MIT, TU Darmstadt, Germany

Saiph Savage, Universidad Nacional Autonóma de México, México SakolTeeravarunyou, King Mongkut’s University of Technology,Thailand Bimlesh Wadhwa, National University of Singapore, Singapore Koji Yatani, University of Tokyo, Japan

Student Design Competition Posters and 80-minute session List on page 55 The Student Design Competition (SDC) challenges students to design a product, application, technology, or service that enable people who are a new and completely unexplored user group in any country to appropriate things and technologies around them. Monday 10:00 – Room B is t e losed ur Session Semi finalist posters are displayed in the Hall C2/C3 poster area, and authors will be presenting their work to all attendees during Tuesday's afternoon break (15:50 – e SD ur selects four finalists to present on Wednesday (14:30 – 15:50, Room 317BC). The winner is announced at the Closing Plenary.

Student Game Competition Demonstrations and 80-minute session List on page 55 The Student Game Competition (SGC) challenges students to design games in three categories: Games for a Purpose, Innovative Interface, and Innovative Game Design. Students demonstrate their games on Monday (10:00 – all o er e final presentations and ceremony is held on Wednesday (16:30 – 17:50, Room 317BC). Winners are also announced at the Closing Plenary.

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COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 13

GENERAL INFORMATION  SPECIAL DAYTIME EVENTS Student Games Exhibition

Hall E Foyer

Monday, 10:00 – 11:30 CHI attendees can try out the games from the Student Games Competition (listed on page 55) during this special morning break.

Women’s Breakfast

Room 327ABC

Tuesday, 7:00 – 8:30 This breakfast offers participants the opportunity to broaden personal professional net or s in t e field of and to engage in discussions on such topics as mentoring networks, work-life balance, diverse success paths, and personal-branding. During this program participants share their stories of success and challenge which can inspire CHI omen o ma e longtime leaders or ne to t e field

ACM SIGCHI Town Hall Lunch

Room 308

Wednesday, 12:50 – 14:30 S officers present ongoing programs and acti ities follo ed an audience Q&A session. Participants interested in shaping SIGCHI’s future are encouraged to attend. An informal lunch is available on a first come first ser ed asis

 SPECIAL EVENING EVENTS Conference Reception & Exhibits Grand Opening

Hall C2/C3

Monday, 18:00 – 19:30 Catch up with old friends and meet new ones at the CHI 2015 Conference Reception! Explore almost 50 hands-on demonstrations and performances at the Grand Opening of Exhibits and Interactivity. The reception features Korean themed food choices and live performances. Admission and drinks tickets are included with your conference registration; additional tickets may be purchased at the Registration Desk. Tickets are not available at the door.

Job Fair & Recruiting Boards

Hall C2/C3

Tuesday, 18:00 – 19:30 Recruiters and job candidates are invited to take advantage of the CHI 2015 Job Fair on Tuesday evening. Visit the Recruiting Boards and designated e i it oot s t roug out t e conference to find out more about available positions. CHI 2015 Hero Sponsor Recruiters: Samsung

Booths 1-3

CHI 2015 Champion Sponsor Recruiters: Golfzon

Booths 17 & 18

Google

Booths 21 & 22

CHI 2015 Contributing Sponsor Recruiters: Disney Research

Recruiting Board

Facebook

Booth 16

CHI 2015 Additional Recruiters: Bentley University

Recruiting Board

Cisco Systems

Recruiting Board

Robert Bosch

Recruiting Board

GE

Recruiting Board

LG

Recruiting Board

Samsung SDS, CX Team Booth 11 SAP

Booths 34 & 35

SMART Technologies

Recruiting Board

Splunk, Inc.

Recruiting Board

Hospitality Receptions

various locations

Wednesday evening Private and public receptions are often hosted by different companies, universities, and other organizations on Wednesday evening. Your badge is your ticket to enter if these are public, so please be sure to wear it.

14 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

GENERAL INFORMATION  OPENING HOURS Registration and Merchandise Desk

Register for the CHI 2015 Conference and Workshops at the Registration Desk located on Saturday and Sunday morning in the Level 300 Foyer and for the CHI 2015 Conference and Courses (subject to availability) Sunday afternoon through Thursday in the Hall D1 Foyer of the Convention Center. CHI 2015 Merchandise, including plush toy tigers and T-shirts, will be available for purchase (subject to availability). Saturday Sunday Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday

07:30 – 12:00 07:30 – 10:00 16:00 – 18:00 07:30 – 19:00 07:30 – 19:00 07:30 – 17:30 07:30 – 16:30

Level 300 Foyer Level 300 Foyer Hall D1 Foyer Hall D1 Foyer Hall D1 Foyer Hall D1 Foyer Hall D1 Foyer

The Commons (Exhibit Hall)

Hall C2/C3

all is on e el rd floor of t e on ention and Exhibition Center. Here you can enjoy a beverage and light snack during coffee breaks, talk with colleagues or explore Exhibits, Posters and Interactivity demonstrations and performances. Opens on Monday evening. Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday

18:00 – 19:30 10:30 – 18:00 10:30 – 17:30 10:30 – 13:30

Opening Reception (18:00 – 19:30 Job Fair)

Regularly scheduled morning and afternoon coffee breaks are complimentary for all registered CHI 2015 attendees: 10:00 – 11:30 15:50 – 16:30 Tuesday-Wednesday 10:50 – 11:30 15:50 – 16:30 Thursday 10:50 – 11:30 15:50 – 16:30

Speaker Ready Room

Level 300&400 Foyers Level 300&400 Foyers Hall C2/C3 Hall C2/C3 Hall C2/C3 Level 300&400 Foyers

Room 306

Speakers and session chairs may use this room as a central check-in point and speakers may reserve a projector to prepare materials and rehearse their presentations. Sign up early with the staff person, since appointments are on a first come first ser ed asis and onl one projector is available. Sunday-Wednesday Thursday

Media/Press Office

Hall C2/C3

Student Volunteers staff the Information desk during Exhibits hours. e are app to elp ans er our uestions or find someone o can. At other times, stop by the Registration Desk for information.

Student Volunteers

Room 301AB

as ell o er Student olunteers easil identified their bright colored SV t-shirts. Most are graduate students in humancomputer interaction and some are seeking jobs or internships.

Name Badges

Your CHI 2015 name badge serves as your admission pass to conference sessions and events. Please wear your name badge at all times while inside the convention center. Conference management reserves the right to deny admission to anyone not wearing a CHI 2015 name badge.

Internet Café

Hall C2/C3

Enjoy chatting with colleagues during the breaks at the Internet Café, located in the Exhibit Hall. CHI 2015 provides access to power for your mobile devices in addition to wireless access.

Wireless Access

CHI 2015 offers wireless high-speed internet access throughout the convention center including in all meeting rooms. Also, please be considerate of your colleagues and limit your time spent online.

Blogging & Photosharing

Coffee Breaks Monday

 CHI INFORMATION AND POLICIES CHI 2015 Information Desk

08:00 – 17:00 08:00 – 14:00

CHI encourages conference attendees to blog CHI. Please add the category or keyword “CHI 2015” to your blog entries so that ot ers ma find t em easil e encourage p otos aring ser ices such as Flickr, but please add a “CHI 2015” tag to your photos and “#chi2015” to your tweets.

Photography and Recording

Photographing crowd scenes and people interacting with technology is common at CHI and attendees should be aware that their image might be captured. Please use common courtesy when taking photos or video of individuals that are later uploaded to YouTube, Flickr or similar sites and ask permission before posting pictures of identifia le people e use of an t pe of audio or ideo recording device is not permitted during any part of the conference.

Smoking Policy

The COEX Convention and Exhibition Center is a non-smoking facility and smoking is permitted outside only in designated areas.

Room 309

CHI 2015 welcomes members of the media. Please stop by the Media ffice onda t roug ursda to get information on sc eduled Media Events this week, and to learn more about CHI 2015, SIGCHI, and future CHI conferences. CHI 2015 media coordinators will be happy to schedule interviews with select authors at the conference. e edia ffice ours are t e same as t e Registration Des

CHI 2015

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 15

ASIAN CHI SYMPOSIA 

ASIAN CHI SYMPOSIA

CHI 2015 is offering a series of special symposia for topics pertinent to HCI communities across Asia. These symposia may contain content in English or in a regional language. Participants include both presenters and audience members. The symposia descriptions appear in the CHI 2015 Extended Abstracts.

S01

Chinese CHI Symposium: Chinese HCI Society

Room 318AB

Saturday April 18th - Sunday April 19th

http://chchi2015.icachi.org/

Chinese CHI is the Chinese leading forum for research in all areas of Human-Computer Interaction. It attracts an international community of practitioners, researchers, academics and students from a wide range of disciplines including user experience design, software engineering, human factors, information systems, social science and creative industries among other disciplines.

S03

Saturday April 18th

Room 317B http://hci.tokyo/

This symposium showcases the latest work from Japan on interactive systems and user interfaces that address under-explored problems and demonstrate unique approaches. In addition to circulating ideas and sharing a vision of future research in human-computer interaction, this symposium aims to foster the social network among young researchers and create a fresh community. Organizers: Jun Kato, National Institute of Advanced, Japan Hiromi Nakamura, The University of Tokyo, Japan Yuta Sugiura, Keio University, Japan

Organizers: Hao-Chuan Wang, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan

Taku Hachisu, University of Electro-Communications, Japan

Gary Hsieh, University of Washington, USA

Daisuke Sakamoto, The University of Tokyo, Japan

Xiaojun Bi, Google, USA

Koji Yatani, The University of Tokyo, Japan

Henry Duh, University of Tasmania, Australia

Yoshifumi Kitamura, Tohoku University, Japan

Yihsiu Chen, HTC Creative Labs, USA

S02

Japanese CHI Symposium 1: Emerging Japanese HCI Research Collection

S04

Crossing HCI for Development in Asia Pacific

Sunday April 19th

Room 319 http://hci4d.uxindo.com/

sia acific is ell no n for its ide di ersit in languages and cultures, which subsequently make the ICT landscapes in the region to be unique and diverse in many terms. This symposium provides an excellent opportunity for academia and professionals to showcase the latest HCI for Development (HCI4D) research, case studies, and industrial engagement in sia acific As a part of Asian CHI Symposia (ACHIS) of CHI 2015 conference, we welcome participation from academia and professionals who are interested in t e researc and de elopment of in sia acific Under the big conference theme “CROSSINGS”, we would like to bring cross-exchange of information and transfer of knowledge in this multidisciplinary environment and socioeconomic aspects of research in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI). This symposium is open to everyone interested in HCI and UX. Organizers: Eunice Sari, University of Western Australia, Australia Bimlesh Wadhwa, National University of Singapore, Singapore Adi Tedjasaputra, UX Indonesia, Indonesia Masitah Ghazali, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Malaysia Anirudha Joshi, IIT Bombay, India

Japanese CHI Symposium 2: Japanese Culture and Kansei

Sunday April 19th

Room 309

http://user-engineering.net/SIGCHI2015/index.html

Psychologically, «Kansei» is related to emotion and cognition and sociologically is related to culture and history. Historically, the origin of the concept of «Kansei» as a Japanese term goes back to «Aesthesis» by Aristotle and «Aesthetics» concepts by Baumgarten and Kant. When this concept was imported to Japan in Meiji era, about 150 years ago, the concept was translated as «Bigaku» or the science of beauty as well as was translated as «Kansei» or the concept with the connotation including sensitivity, sensibility, emotion and feeling. Hence Kansei is related to the science of beauty in its historical background in Japan. JSKE (Japan Society of Kansei Engineering) started a series of KEER (Kansei Engineering and Emotion Research) conference and ISASE (International Symposium on Affective Science and Engineering) in the latter sense of aesthetics. This is a peculiar situation of the Japanese language. Similarly, the term «Kansei» can be interpreted differently from country to country, and from culture to culture. This symposium is organized to discuss the concept of «Kansei» from different cultural perspectives. For example, «kawaii» is now used internationally as can be found in Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/ wiki/Kawaii) and OED. At the same time, this symposium aims not only to differentiate the differences among various cultures, but also e pects to find out t e common aspects ased on t e fact t at e are all the human beings with the emotional system and the cognitive system. Organizers: Hisao Shiizuka, Fuzzy Logic System Institute, Japan Masaaki Kurosu, The Open University of Japan, Japan Michiko Ohkura, Shibaura Institute of Technology, Japan

16 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

CHI AWARDS  LIFETIME RESEARCH AWARD The SIGCHI Lifetime Research Award is presented to individuals for outstanding contributions to the study of human-computer interaction.This a ard recogni es t e er est most fundamental and influential researc contributions. It is awarded for a lifetime of innovation and leadership Jim Hollan is Professor of Cognitive Science & Computer Science and Engineering at UC San Diego, where he co-directs the Design Lab. Following a postdoc in AI at Stanford, Hollan led the UCSD Intelligent Systems Group in the Institute for Cognitive Science and the Future Technologies Group at NPRDC. He left UCSD to become Director of the MCC Human Interface Lab and subsequently established the Computer Graphics and Interactive Media Research Group at Bellcore. He then moved to the University of New Mexico as Chair of the Computer Science Department. He returned to UC San Diego in 1997. Hollan’s early work explored graphical interfaces to aid understanding of complex dynamic systems. This work resulted in a series of training systems (e.g., Steamer and Moboard) and one of the first o ect oriented grap ics editors e science t at accompanied t ese de elopment efforts made significant contri utions to understanding direct manipulation interfaces and advancing research on mental models. The next phase of Hollan’s research focused on designing multimodal interfaces to high-functionality systems. He lead the Human Interface Lab at MCC in creating t e uman nterface ool Suite S ic as among t e first prototyping systems to integrate gestures, graphics, sketching, and natural language. Other work begun at MCC on history-enriched digital objects, colla orati e filtering and e ond eing t ere continued en e mo ed to Bellcore, where he initiated a large scale project to explore multiscale information visualization. The resulting system, Pad++, was a precursor to current zoomable interfaces. When he returned to UCSD he focused on developing distributed cognition as a theoretical and methodological base for advancing HCI research. In recent work, Hollan and his students are developing tools (ChronoViz) to aid visualization and analysis of multiple streams of video and other time-based data and exploring techniques to help reestablish the context of interrupted activities.

 LIFETIME PRACTICE AWARD The SIGCHI Lifetime Practice Award is presented to individuals for outstanding contributions to the practice and understanding of humancomputer interaction. This award recognizes the very best and most influential applications of uman computer interaction t is a arded for a lifetime of innovation and leadership. Susan M. Dray has worked to advance human-centered design since 1979, initially in a human factors research group at Honeywell, and later championing usability of corporate systems at American Express. She was one of t e founders of S in Since er consulting firm Dray & Associates, has provided user experience research for a long list of clients to help them create innovative products and services that are useful, usable, and desirable.Through her publications, teaching, mentoring, and many spea ing engagements Susan as contri uted significantl to t e e olution of U researc practice especiall in field researc naturalistic usa ilit evaluation, and international usability and user research. Extensive experience doing research in developing countries led to her involvement in forming a professional community focused on user-centered design for development (UCD4D), applying UCD to technological aspects of economic development. She is currently pursuing this interest as a Fulbright Scholar on the faculty at the Technological University of Panama. Susan is a Fellow of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, recipient of the SIGCHI Lifetime Service Award, member of the CHI Academy and an ACM Distinguished Engineer. She is a long-time Column/Forum editor for Interactions and served as Director of Publications on the Board of the User Experience Professionals Association. Susan holds a doctorate in Psychology from UCLA. Bill Verplank is an interaction designer and educator known for his diagrams and sketches. He studied engineering at Stanford and MIT. At ero e participated in testing and refining and presenting at the Xerox Star. He helped write (and diagram) the SIGCHI Curricula. At Stanford, he learned to teach visual thinking from Bob McKim and helped Terry Winograd create an HCI design course. He was hired by industrial designer Bill Moggridge at ID2 and started “interaction design”. At Interval Research, he developed design methods: “body storming” and “informance design”; and pioneered tangible user-interfaces (TEI) and experimented with haptic force-feedback. When Interval closed in 2000, he joined Max Mathews at Stanford’s CCRMA to develop a course on HCI for computer

CHI 2015

music and a conference (spun off from CHI) called NIME (New Interfaces for Musical Expression). He was on the steering committee at the Interaction Design Institute Ivrea (IDII) and once or twice a year continues to teach at Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design (CIID).

 LIFETIME SERVICE AWARD The SIGCHI Lifetime Service Award goes to individuals who have contributed to the growth of SIGCHI in a variety of capacities. This award is for extended services to the community at large over a number of years. Michel Beaudouin-Lafon is Professor of Computer Science, Classe Exceptionnelle, at Université Paris-Sud (France) and a senior fellow of Institut Universitaire de France. He has worked in human-computer interaction for 30 years and was elected to the ACM SIGCHI Academy in 2006. His research interests include fundamental aspects of interaction, novel interaction techniques, computer-supported cooperative work and engineering of interactive systems. He has published over 150 papers and is an ACM Distinguished Speaker. His current research is conducted in the Ex Situ group, a joint lab between Université Paris-Sud, CNRS and Inria, where he heads the 22M€ Digiscope project. Michel is heavily involved in the management of research. He has been vice-president of the computer science department at Université Paris-Sud. He was director of LRI, the laboratory for computer science joint between Université Paris-Sud and CNRS (280 faculty, staff, and Ph.D. students), where he now heads the Human-Centered Computing lab. He participates in the evaluation of many research institutions and research proposals at the French, European and international levels. He currently sits on t e Scientific ommittee of NRS for omputer Science ic el as worked tirelessly to develop HCI in France. He has advised twenty-eight Ph.D. students and has served on more than 100 Ph.D. and French “habilitation” committees. He founded and co-directs two international masters in HCI, and is co-director of the graduate school in computer science. He founded AFIHM, the Francophone association for human-computer interaction, and as its first president ic el as also een acti e in and S for o er 20 years. He has served on the program committees of many conferences, especially CHI and UIST, several times (7) as chair or co-chair. He was chair of UIST 2001, co-chair of IHM 2004, co-chair of ECSCW 2005, and Technical Program Co-chair for CHI 2013 in Paris. He sits on the editorial boards of ACM Books and ACM TOCHI. He has served on the ACM Council and the ACM Publications Board, and on several award and nominating committees of ACM and SIGCHI. He is currently serving on the ACM Europe Council and on U t e ne uropean polic office of Jean Scholtz or ed as a student olunteer at er first conference in 1988. Since then, she has volunteered at many CHI conferences in various positions including: reviewer, session chair, associate reviewer, co-chair of late breaking submissions, co-chair of Technical notes, Co-chair of Organizational Overviews, Co-Industry Liaison, Co-chair of Panels, and Special Area Chair – robotics. She was also the Vice-Chair of Finance of the SIGCHI from 1997–2001. Jean was involved in starting a local SIGCHI in Portland, OR in 1991. CHIFOO (The Computer Human Interaction Forum of Oregon) is still going strong. She also was involved in starting a local Chapter in the District of Columbia in the late 90’s. Jean’s research in the CHI area started with studying transfer of skill in programming languages and identifying the elements needed for tutoring systems to help experienced programmers move to new languages. She continued this work as a faculty member at Portland State University where she developed a master’s degree track in HCI. She spent several years working at Intel where she conducted usability tests and did user requirements for audio and video conferencing systems. She moved to the east coast with her husband and worked at the National Institute of Standards (NIST) and Technology where she helped in developing test environments and metrics for Urban Search and Rescue Robots and Explosive Ordnance Disposal Robots. She was also the driving force behind the NIST Industry Usability Reporting (IUSR) Project.This project developed the Common Industry Format (CIF) that enabled companies to request usability data on software being considered for purchase.The CIF became an ANSI/INCITS standard in 2001 and an ISO standard in 2006. Jean also served as a program manager at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) where she managed work in Collaborative Systems and the Invisible Computing Initiative.Today Jean is retired from NIST but is a chief scientist in t e isual nal tics roup at t e acific Nort est National a orator in Richland,WA. She works part–time and spends the rest of her time gardening and creating mosaics at her home on the Oregon Coast. COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 17

CHI AWARDS  SOCIAL IMPACT AWARD This award is given to individuals who promote the application of human-computer interaction research to pressing social needs. Leysia Palen is an Associate Professor of Computer Science, and Chair and Associate Professor of Information Science at the University of Colorado Boulder. She is also a Full Adjunct Professor at the University of Agder in Norway. Palen is a graduate of the University of California, San Diego with a BS in Cognitive Science, and of the University of California, Irvine with an MS and PhD in Information and Computer Science. Prof. Palen is a leader in the area of crisis informatics, an area she forged with her graduate students and colleagues at CU-Boulder. She brings her training in human-computer interaction (HCI), computer-supported cooperative work and social computing to bear on understanding and advancing socio-technical issues of societal import. Prof. Palen is the author of over 70 articles and a co-edited book in the areas of human computer interaction, computer supported cooperative work, mobility, and crisis informatics. She was awarded an NSF CAREER in 2006. She is an Associate Editor for the Human Computer Interaction Journal (Taylor and Francis) and for the Computer-Supported Cooperative Work Journal (Springer).

 CHI ACADEMY The CHI Academy is an honorary group of individuals who have made su stantial contri utions to t e field of uman computer interaction ese are t e principal leaders of t e field ose efforts a e s aped the disciplines and/or industry, and led the research and/or innovation in human-computer interaction. Stephen Brewster is a Professor of Human-Computer Interaction in the School of Computing Science at the University of Glasgow. He got his PhD in auditory interfaces at the University of York. After a period spent working in Finland and Norway, he has worked in Glasgow since 1995. His research focuses on multimodal HCI, or using multiple sensory modalities and control mechanisms (particularly hearing, touch and gesture) to create a rich, natural interaction between human and computer. His work has a strong experimental focus, applying perceptual research to practical situations. A long term focus has been on mobile interaction and how we can design better user interfaces for users who are on the move. He pioneered the study of non-speech audio and haptic interaction for mobile devices with work starting in the 1990’s. According to Google Scholar, he has 375 publications. He has served as an Associate Chair, Sub-Committee Chair and Papers Chair, and has chaired the Interactivity, Doctoral Consortium and Student Design Competition tracks at CHI. Andy Cockburn is a Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering at the University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand, where he directs the Human Computer Interaction Lab. Andy’s research focuses on designing, evaluating and modelling user interfaces that exploit underlying human factors. His contributions include many interface designs that use human spatial memor to support e pertise de elopment in asic tas s suc as file retrieval, command invocation, window switching, and scrolling. With his colleagues and students he has published more than 150 papers, with several receiving best paper and honourable mention awards. Dr.Cockburn serves on the Editorial Board of ACM ToCHI, and he was papers co-chair for CHI 2014 and 2015. Anind K. Dey is the Charles M. Geschke Chair, and Director of the Human-Computer Interaction Institute at Carnegie Mellon University. He has spent much of career doing research at the intersection of human-computer interaction, ubiquitous computing and machine learning, with a particular focus on context-aware computing. He has authored over 100 papers on these topics and serves on the editorial board of several journals. Before joining the faculty at Carnegie Mellon University, Anind was a Senior Researcher at Intel Labs in Berkeley. Anind received his PhD in computer science from Georgia Tech, along with a Masters of Science in both Computer Science and Aerospace Engineering. He received his Bachelors of Applied Science in Computer Engineering from Simon Fraser University. 18 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

Ernest Edmonds is a Research Professor specializing in creative technologies and interactive art systems and is based at the University of Technology, Sydney and at De Montfort University Leicester. His publications include nearly 300 books and papers, including some of t e first articles a out interacti e art iterati e design met ods (1974), user interface architectures (1982) and the support of creativity (1989). He founded HCI research centres including Loughborough University Computer Human Interaction Research Centre and the Creativity and Cognition Studios at the University of Technology, Sydney. In 1993, he founded the Creativity & Cognition conference series, a SIGCHI sponsored event since 1999, and was a founding member of the Steering Committee of the ACM SIGART/SIGCHI Intelligent User Interface Conferences. He is well known for his pioneering use of computers in art and has exhibited artwork in many countries. The Victoria and Albert Museum London collects his art and archives. He is currently an active member of the Art.CHI community and will be the Arts Exhibit Chair at CHI2016. Scott MacKenzie is an Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at York University, Toronto. His research is in human-computer interaction with an emphasis on human performance measurement and modeling, experimental methods and evaluation, interaction devices and techniques, Fitts’ law, text entry, touch-based and sensor-based input, language modeling, mobile computing, and accessible computing. He earned a PhD in Education from the University of Toronto in 1991. Sharon Oviatt is internationally known for her work on humancentered, multimodal, mobile, and educational interfaces, as well as interface design and evaluation. She has published over 150 articles in a multidisciplinary range of venues. She was recipient of the inaugural ICMI Sustained Accomplishment Award for innovative, long-lasting, and influential contri utions to defining t e field of multimodal and multimedia interaction, interfaces, and systems. She also was recipient of an NSF Special Creativity Award for pioneering research on mobile multimodal interfaces. Sharon was one of the founders of the ACM International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces, and has served as eneral or rogram air fi e times S e is an ssociate ditor of t e main ournals and edited oo collections in t e field of uman centered interfaces. Sharon currently serves as President and Director of Incaa Designs Nonprofit or most of er career s e as een in academics where she has been as a professor of Computer Science, Psychology, and also Linguistics. She received her PhD in Experimental Psychology at University of Toronto. In 2013, Sharon published The Design of Future Educational Interfaces (Routledge Press). Her latest book, The Paradigm Shift to Multimodality in Contemporary Computer Interfaces (co-authored with Phil Cohen) will be published in 2015. Catherine Plaisant is a Senior Research Scientist at the University of Maryland Institute for Advanced Computer Studies, and Associate Director of Research of the Human-Computer Interaction Lab. She earned a PhD in industrial engineering in France. She enjoys working everyday with PhD students and nurturing the supportive environment of the Maryland HCIL community. Inspiration and fun have come from working closely with epidemiologists, engineers, librarians, geographers, intelligence analysts and teachers. Or was it when throwing ideas or polishing interfaces with physicians, literary scholars, social workers, families or persons with disabilities? Early pioneering work focused on touchscreen interfaces, search and browsing, then information visualization became a central theme of research, as well as evaluation strategies. Recent projects include novel designs for electronic health record systems and visual analytics environments for the analysis of temporal event sequences. She co-authored with Ben Shneiderman the 4th and 5th Editions of Designing the User Interface. She launched the Information Visualization and Visual Analytics Challenges, and has served on the editorial boards of Information Visualization and Interacting with Computers, and as guest editor of multiple special issues. Most happy outdoors, enjoying life with friends and family.

CHI 2015

PAST HONOREES  PAST HONOREES SIGCHI Lifetime Research Award 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010

Steve Whittaker George G. Robertson Dan Olsen Terry Winograd Lucy Suchman

SIGCHI Lifetime Practice Award 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010

Gillian Crampton Smith Jakob Nielsen Joy Mountford Larry Tesler Karen Holtzblatt

SIGCHI Lifetime Achievement Award 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1998

Sara Kiesler Bill Buxton James D. Foley Gary M. Olson, Judith S. Olson Tom Landauer Thomas P. Moran John M. Carroll Donald A. Norman Ben Shneiderman Stuart K. Card Douglas Engelbart

SIGCHI Lifetime Service Award 2014 2013 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001

Wendy Mackay, Tom Hewett Joseph A. Konstan i e t ood e in Sc ofield Arnie Lund, Jim Miller Mary Czerwinski Clare-Marie Karat, Steven Pemberton John Karat, Marian Williams Richard I. Anderson Susan M. Dray Sara Bly, John ‘Scooter’ Morris, Don Patterson, Gary Perlman, Marilyn Mantei Tremaine Robin Jeffries, Gene Lynch Lorraine Borman Dan R. Olsen Jr. Austin Henderson

SIGCHI Social Impact Award 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005

Richard E. Ladner Sara J. Czaja Batya Friedman Alan Newell, Clayton Lewis Allison Druin, Ben Bederson Helen Petrie Vicki Hanson Gregory Abowd, Gary Marsden Ted Henter Gregg Vanderheiden

CHI Academy Members Class of 2014 John C. Tang, Jeff A. Johnson, Susan Dray, Jodi L. Forlizzi, Keith Edwards, Ken Hinckley, Richard H. R. Harper, Gary Marsden Class of 2013 Patrick Baudisch, Victoria Bellotti, Clarisse Sieckenius de Souza, Alan Dix, Rebecca E. Grinter, Eric Horvitz, Bonnie Nardi, Thomas S. Tullis

CHI 2015

Class of 2012 Ben Bederson, Steve Benford, Hugh Dubberly, Carl Gutwin, Joy Mountford, Alan Newell, Yvonne Rogers Class of 2011 Ravin Balakrishnan, Steven Feiner, Joseph Konstan, James Landay, Jenny Preece, Abigail (Abi) Sellen, Dennis Wixon Class of 2010 Susanne Bødker, Mary Czerwinski, Austin Henderson, David Kieras, Arnie Lund, Larry Tesler, Shumin Zhai Class of 2009 Mark Ackerman, Bill Gaver, Clayton Lewis, Wendy E. Mackay, Aaron Marcus, Elizabeth Mynatt, Tom Rodden Class of 2008 Gregory Abowd, Paul Dourish, Wendy Kellogg, Randy Pausch, Mary Beth Rosson, Steve Whittaker Class of 2007 Joëlle Coutaz, Karen Holtzblatt, Gerhard Fischer, Robert J. K. Jacob, Jun Rekimoto, Chris Schmandt Class of 2006 Scott Hudson, Hiroshi Ishii, Michel Beaudouin-Lafon, Jakob Nielsen, Peter Pirolli, George Robertson Class of 2005 Ron Baecker, Susan Dumais, John Gould, Saul Greenberg, Bonnie E. John, Andrew Monk Class of 2004 George Furnas, Jonathan Grudin, Brad Myers, William Newman, Dan R. Olsen Jr., Brian Shackel, Terry Winograd Class of 2003 Thomas Green, James D. Hollan, Robert E. Kraut, Gary M. Olson, Peter G. Polson Class of 2002 William A. S. Buxton, John M. Carroll, Douglas C. Engelbart, Sara Kiesler, Thomas K. Landauer, Lucy A. Suchman Class of 2001 Stuart K. Card, James D. Foley, Morten Kyng, Thomas P. Moran, Judith S. Olson, Ben Shneiderman

ACM/SIGCHI BEST OF CHI AWARDS

The SIGCHI “Best of CHI” awards honor exceptional papers published at the CHI conference. The top 5% of submissions are chosen by the associate chairs to receive an award. Among these, the associate chairs and a separate Best Papers Committee select the very best 1% of submissions to receive a Best Paper award. The CHI Associate Chairs nominated 5% of the Paper and Notes submissions. 84 papers and notes received Honorable Mention, designated by a medallion logo. The separate Best Papers committee selected the top 1% of total submissions. 21 Papers and Notes received a Best Paper award, designated by a trophy logo. Mark Billinghurst (Chair), University of Canterburgy, New Zealand; Carl Gutwin, University of Saskatchewan; Mark Blythe, University of Northumbria; N. Sadat Shami, IBM; Caroline Appert, CNRS & Univ. Paris Sud; Alexander De Luca, University of Munich

 PEOPLE'S CHOICE BEST TALK AWARD The People’s Choice Best Talk Awards are meant to celebrate the very best of in-conference presentations. Did a presenter go the extra mile to make their talk genuinely interesting and informative? Did a speaker make you stop and think about something new? Did a presentation make an otherwise dull topic come alive? Nominate the speaker for a People’s Choice Best Talk Award! It takes only a moment, and helps to reward those who spend the extra time to make help make the conference truly memorable and extraordinary. You may cast as many votes as you wish, provided they don’t occupy the same time slot (overlapping sessions are ok). Please, do not wait until the end of the conference to choose a single ‘best’. Think of your votes as nominations for awards made to the best that the conference has to offer. Vote using the CHI 2015 mobile application or the voting site: http://chi2015.acm.org/vote. Your Voter ID is on the back of your name badge. Winners of the People’s Choice Best Talk Awards will be announced at the CHI 2015 closing plenary! COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 19

OPENING PLENARY AND KEYNOTES 

OPENING PLENARY

Crossing: HCI, Design and Sustainability Lou Yongqi Monday 20 April, 9:00

Hall D1

Two great inventions that opened the era of human-computer interaction design—desktop and mouse—are now disappearing. Computers are becoming smaller and smaller, smarter and smarter. Everyone is now surrounded by many visible and invisible computers, which are all highly connected through the Internet ubiquitously. A new orld of artificial intelligence is emerging en t e intelligence of human-being is expanded to his/her surroundings, condensed into a new kind of Intelligent life, the relationship between human-being and the rest of t e orld as een redefined o to cross t e oundaries and to enable the sustainable interaction between nature (the 1st system), uman eings t e nd s stem artificial orld t e rd s stem and the cyber world (the 4th system), becomes an interesting proposition and merits new design. But before that, it’s necessary to rethink the anthropocentric view and even design itself.The most attractive feature of design is optimistic. What makes a human being human, lies in that one is not leading a ind of life ic merel as needs to e fulfilled but can also use his/her subjective initiative to control and conduct his/ her behavior for a certain common value.Today sustainability is not only a value of ethics, but a value of surviving. How to use and encourage a new kind of HCI design, to generate sustainable behaviors and social changes, further, to redesign the commensalism of the four systems mentioned above will be the main focus of my talk. Biography

Prof. Dr. Lou Yongqi is Dean of the College of Design and Innovation at Tongji University in Shanghai. He is a full professor at Tongji, Visiting Professor at the School of Art, Design, and Architecture at Aalto University in Finland, and Visiting Professor at the School of Design of Politecnico di Milano in Italy. Lou has been the pioneer in China for design-driven innovation education that connects design, business, and technology. He advances these issues through his leadership of two institutions at Tongji University: the College of Design and Innovation, and the Sino-Finnish Centre. He also furthers this agenda through international collaboration. ou is a leading figure in sustaina le interdisciplinar design education researc and practice ou as t e first designer in ina to connect social innovation and sustainable design thinking with rural development. This is the subject of his latest book, Design Harvests: An Acupunctural Design Approach Toward Sustainability. Lou’s design works include the United Nations Pavilion of World Expo 2010, the LiangPing New Jindai Sustainable School funded by the China-US Center for Sustainable Development, and the TsingTao Horticultural Expo 2014. Lou is Vice President of CUMULUS, the International Association of Universities and Colleges of Art, Design, and Media. He is Founding Executive Editor of She Ji — the Journal of Design, Innovation, and Economics published by Tongji University and in cooperation with Elsevier. In 2014, the President of Finland honoured Lou with the Order of the Lion of Finland as a Knight, First Class.

20 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

TUESDAY MORNING KEYNOTE

UX Design in the loT Era Donghoon Chang Tuesday 21 April, 9:00

Hall D1

The current advancement of IoT technology has accelerated the era of hyper-connectivity in our lives. This has vastly driven convergence among different fields along it t e e pansion of our t oug ts and behaviors. However, to provide meaningful experiences, these relational expansions and unprecedented possibilities opened up by IoT need to be founded on core human values. Furthermore, harmonious integration between technology and design is also essential. Today, I would like to talk about what must be done in order to foster the IoT as a human-centered innovation and how UX design can realize the well balanced and harmonious IoT environment. Biography Donghoon Chang is Executive VP, Head of Design Strategy Team and UX Center in Corporate Design Center, Samsung Electronics. Since joining Samsung in 2006, he has played a critical role in establishing the company’s design vision for the future which has gradually shifted from a focus on style and convenience to a holistic user experience design and has developed mid to long-term design strategies, including ‘Design 3.0’ which envisions design that delivers new meaning and delight to people and contributes to society by creating sustainable and innovative value. Chang received two MFA degrees from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (Chicago, USA) and Seoul National University (Seoul, Korea). He worked for IBM Korea and Time &amps; Space Tech inc. as a communications specialist and art director respectively. Before joining Samsung, he was a professor at EWHA Womans University (Seoul, Korea) where he taught visual design, information design as well as user experience design. He was selected as ‘the 2nd most creative people in the world’ by Fast Company in 2013.

WEDNESDAY MORNING KEYNOTE

Journey to a Better Life David Min Wednesday 22 April, 9:00

Hall D1

New technologies and devices are coming out every day along with the rapid growth of the internet and enhancement of hardware performance. These trends are connected and tangled with each other. This era of Smart rings us great enefits and con enience ut t ere are still many technical hurdles and interface obstacles to be crossed. Now we are able to access massive amount of data, but at the expense of privacy and security. How can we untie this knot? We all strive for the same goal to ma e people s li es etter no matter o e define our role in life. In this talk, we will present what we do in LG Electronics to address this goal within the aspects of software engineering and UX design, and also discuss what we should care about when delivering innovative products to the world.

CHI 2015

KEYNOTES AND CLOSING PLENARY

Biography David Min is a Senior Research Fellow at LG Electronics and is head of the Software Center. He is known for spearheading one of the most successful SmartTV platforms in the industry, providing a superior user experience and an open API for 3rd party developers. David studied computer science and statistics at Seoul National University for BS degree and computer science at Korea Advanced Institute of Science & Technology for MS degree. After four years work at Samsung Co. as an IT system analyst, he went to the USA to enroll in the computer science PhD program at the University of Illinois at Ur ana ampaign fter finis ing is ad anced studies at U U e worked for many years at various companies in computer, software, and consumer electronics industries, including Digital Equipment Corp. (now HP), Microsoft, Samsung Electronics. David joined LG Electronics in 2006.

THURSDAY MORNING KEYNOTE

ACM-W Athena Lecture: Large-Scale Behavioral Data: Potential and Pitfalls Susan Dumais Thursday 23 April, 9:00

Hall D1

Over the last decade, the rise of web services has made it possible to gat er traces of uman e a ior in situ at a scale and fidelit pre iousl unimaginable. Large-scale behavioral data enables researchers and practitioners to detect adverse drug reactions and interactions, to understand how information diffuses through social networks, how people browse and search for information, how individual learning strategies are related to educational outcome, etc. Using examples from search, I will highlight how observational logs provide a rich new lens onto the diversity of searchers, tasks, and interactivity that characterize information systems today, and how experimental logs have revolutionized the way in which web-based systems are designed and evaluated. Although logs provide a great deal of information about what people are doing, they provide little insight about why they are doing so or et er t e are satisfied omplementar met ods from observations, laboratory studies and panels are necessary to provide a more complete understanding of and support for search which is increasingly a core fabric of people’s everyday lives.The CHI community should lead the way in shaping best practices and policy in behavioral log studies. Biography Susan Dumais, ACM Fellow, a Distinguished Scientist at Microsoft and Deputy Managing Director of the Microsoft Research Lab in Redmond. Prior to joining Microsoft Research, she was at Bell Labs and Bellcore, where she worked on Latent Semantic Analysis, techniques for combining search and navigation, and

CHI 2015

organizational impacts of new technology. Her current research focuses on user modeling and personalization, context and search and temporal dynamics of information. She has worked closely with several Microsoft groups (Bing, Windows Desktop Search, SharePoint, and ffice nline elp on searc related inno ations Susan as pu lis ed idel in t e fields of information science uman computer interaction and cognitive science, and holds several patents on novel retrieval algorithms and interfaces. Susan is also an adjunct professor in the Information School at the University of Washington. She is PastChair of ACM’s Special Interest Group in Information Retrieval (SIGIR), and serves on several editorial boards, technical program committees, and government panels. She was elected to the CHI Academy in 2005, an ACM Fellow in 2006, received the SIGIR Gerard Salton Award for Lifetime Achievement 2009, was elected to the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) in 2011, and received the ACM Athena Lecturer Award, and Tony Kent Strix Award in 2014.

CLOSING PLENARY

Cultural Crossing from Local to Global through Music: Technology, Media, and Future PSY Thursday 23 April, 16:30 Hall D1 Many people think that the global success of the song Gangnam Style has contributed to the tremendous success of the Korean Wave. Being in front of experts in technology and human interactions, I’d like to share my thinking and story about questions like the following: What was the effect of global social media such as YouTube on the global crossing of local culture? How do I plan and utilize the new way of interacting with audience across national and cultural boundaries? Reflecting on t e great success of angnam St le at as t e main trigger to the big bang of the spread of the Korean wave? As both a musician and an entrepreneur, what do I think is the new process from the ideation of a new song to a global distribution, publicity, and performance of that song? For the creativity that can be appreciated by global audience, how do I think about the technology and media of the future, in terms of creative works? I am looking forward to sharing my experience and opinion here at CHI 2015. Biography Jai Sang Park, better known as PSY, is a singer-songwriter, record producer, rapper and entrepreneur. He is best known for producing t e first ideo on ou u e to a e exceeded 1 billion views. , Gangnam Style is still the most viewed video at over 2.14 billion views, breaking the software counter on the online service. His provocative and irreverent lyrics and style have led to dozens of music awards across the globe. PSY is a recipient of Korea’s Ministry of Culture’s Okgwan Order of Cultural Merit. PSY studied at Boston University and Berklee College of Music. In addition to music performances, he has given speeches at Harvard and Oxford Universities. PSY speaks about creative processes and impact of social media on our modern cross-cultural society.

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 21

MONDAY 11:30 – 12:50

MONDAY

Opening Plenary Keynote 8:30 – 10:00 Lou Yonqi Hall D1 Crossing: HCI, Design and Sustainability

10:00 – 11:30 Video Showcase Presentation Preview games from Student Games Competition

Room 401 Hall E Foyer

10:00 – 11:30 Coffee Break Level 300/400 Foyers

401

Papers: Non-Rigid Interaction Surfaces

Papers: Rethinking Evaluation for Today's HCI CHAIR: WENDY E. MACKAY

bioLogic: Natto Cells as Nanoactuators for Shape Changing Interfaces

Remote Paper Prototype Testing

Lining Yao, Jifei Ou, Chin-Yi Cheng, Helene Steiner, Wen Wang, Guanyun Wang, Hiroshi Ishii

Control of Non-Solid Diffusers by Electrostatic Charging Deepak R. Sahoo, Diego Martinez Plasencia, Sriram Subramanian

Investigation of Material Properties for Thermal ImagingBased Interaction Yomna Abdelrahman, Alireza Sahami Shirazi, Niels Henze, Albrecht Schmidt

ShapeClip: Towards Rapid Prototyping with Shape-Changing Displays for Designers John Hardy, Christian Weichel, Faisal Taher, John Vidler, Jason Alexander

FluxPaper: Reinventing Paper with Dynamic Actuation Powered by Magnetic Flux Masa Ogata, Masaaki Fukumoto

402

403

CHAIR: JÖRG MÜLLER

Papers: What do I hear? Communicating with Sound CHAIR: IAN OAKLEY

TabLETS Get Physical: Non-Visual Text Entry on Tablet Devices João Guerreiro, André Rodrigues, Kyle Montague, Tiago Guerreiro, Hugo Nicolau, Daniel Gonçalves

VocalSketch: Vocally Imitating Audio Concepts Mark Cartwright, Bryan Pardo

An Evaluation of Multidimensional Controllers for Sound Design Tasks Robert Tubb, Simon Dixon

AnnoTone: Record-time Audio Watermarking for Context-aware Video Editing Ryohei Suzuki, Daisuke Sakamoto, Takeo Igarashi

ploring esture Sonification to Support Reflecti e Craft Practice

Kevin Chen, Haoqi Zhang

Controlling In-The-Wild Evaluation Studies Sandy Claes, Niels Wouters, Karin Slegers, Andrew Vande Moere

Evaluation Probes Anna Luusua, Johanna Ylipulli, Marko Jurmu, Henrika Pihlajaniemi, Piia Markkanen, Timo Ojala

Real orld ffinit Diagramming ractices Bridging t e Paper–Digital Gap Gunnar Harboe, Elaine M. Huang

Situational Ethics: Re-thinking Approaches to Formal Ethics Requirements for Human-Computer Interaction Cosmin Munteanu, Heather Molyneaux, Wendy Moncur, Mario Romero, Susan O'Donnell, John Vines

E1/E2 Papers: Improving Game Experiences CHAIR: LENNART E. NACKE

The Royal Corgi: Exploring Social Gaze Interaction for Immersive Gameplay Melodie Vidal, Remi Bismuth, Andreas Bulling, Hans Gellersen

Exploring 3D User Interface Technologies for Improving the Gaming Experience Arun Kulshreshth, Joseph LaViola Jr.

Quantifying and Mitigating the Negative Effects of Local Latencies on Aiming in 3D Shooter Games Zenja Ivkovic, Ian Stavness, Carl Gutwin, Steven Sutcliffe

First Person vs.Third Person Perspective in Digital Games: Do Player Preferences Affect Immersion? Alena Denisova, Paul Cairns

VIZMO Game Browser: Accessing Video Games by Visual Style and Mood Jin Ha Lee, Sungsoo (Ray) Hong, Hyerim Cho,Yea-Seul Kim

Thomas Smith, Simon J Bowen, Bettina Nissen, Jonathan Hook, Arno Verhoeven, John Bowers, Peter Wright, Patrick Olivier

22 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

MONDAY 11:30 – 12:50 E3

Papers: Facebook Newsfeeds & Friendships

E6

CHAIR: DAVID SHAMMA

CHAIR: CHRISTOPHE HURTER

“I Always Assumed That I Wasn’t Really That Close to [Her]”: Reasoning About Invisible Algorithms in the News Feed

MatrixWave: Visual Comparison of Event Sequence Data Jian Zhao, Zhicheng Liu, Mira Dontcheva, Aaron Hertzmann, Alan Wilson

The Effects of Representation and Juxtaposition on Graphical Perception of Matrix Visualization

News Feed: What's in it for Me?

Xiaotong Liu, Han-Wei Shen

Paul Lapides, Apoorve Chokshi, Sheelagh Carpendale, Saul Greenberg

g-Miner: Interactive Visual Group Mining on Multivariate Graphs

Understanding User Beliefs About Algorithmic Curation in the Facebook News Feed

Nan Cao,Yu-Ru Lin, Liangyue Li, Hanghang Tong

Trajectory Bundling for Animated Transitions

Emilee Rader, Rebecca Gray

Modelling What Friendship Patterns on Facebook Reveal about Personality and Social Capital

Fan Du, Nan Cao, Jian Zhao,Yu-Ru Lin

307

Panel: Transfer of HCI Research Innovations

Yong Liu, Jayant Venkatanathan, Jorge A. Goncalves, Evangelos Karapanos, Vassilis Kostakos

Technology Transfer of HCI Research Innovations: Challenges and Opportunities

Papers: Activism in Wikipedia & Beyond

Parmit K. Chilana, Mary P. Czerwinski, Tovi Grossman, Chris Harrison, Ranjitha Kumar, Tapan S. Parikh, Shumin Zhai

CHAIR: GARY HSIEH

308 Cross-language Wikipedia Editing of Okinawa, Japan

alt.chi: Augmentation CHAIR: AARON QUIGLEY

Scott A. Hale

Societal Controversies in Wikipedia Articles Erik Borra, Esther Weltevrede, Paolo Ciuccarelli, Andreas Kaltenbrunner, David Laniado, Giovanni Magni, Michele Mauri, Richard Rogers, Tommaso Venturini

The Heart Work of Wikipedia: Gendered, Emotional Labor in the World’s Largest Online Encyclopedia Amanda Menking, Ingrid Erickson

Barriers to the Localness of Volunteered Geographic Information Shilad W. Sen, Heather Ford, David R. Musicant, Mark Graham, Oliver S. Keyes, Brent Hecht

How Activists Are Both Born and Made: An Analysis of Users on Change.org Shih-Wen Huang, Minhyang (Mia) Suh, Benjamin Mako Hill, Gary Hsieh

E5

Papers: HMDs & Wearables to Overcome Disabilities CHAIR: SHAUN K. KANE

ChameleonMask: Embodied Physical and Social Telepresence Using Human Surrogates Kana Misawa, Jun Rekimoto

Consider the Moon. Human-Computer Bricolage of Extended Objects Cosima Rughinis, Razvan Rughinis

The Broken Dream of Pervasive Sentient Ambient Calm Invisible Ubiquitous Computing Matthew P. Aylett, Aaron Quigley

ormal nal sis of t e S User Experience

Definition of

Alexander Mirnig, Alexander Meschtscherjakov, Daniela Wurhofer, Thomas Meneweger, Manfred Tscheligi

317A C01: Designing Websites for Adults 55+ 1/1 Designing Websites for Adults 55+: Toward Universal Design Jeff A. Johnson

Personalized, Wearable Control of a Head-mounted Display for Users with Upper Body Motor Impairments Meethu Malu, Leah Findlater

Designing Conversation Cues on a Head-Mounted Display to Support Persons with Aphasia Kristin Williams, Karyn Moffatt, Denise McCall, Leah Findlater

Head-Mounted Display Visualizations to Support Sound Awareness for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Dhruv Jain, Leah Findlater, Jamie Gilkeson, Benjamin Holland, Ramani Duraiswami, Dmitry Zotkin, Christian Vogler, Jon Froehlich

Using Interactive Machine Learning to Support Interface Development Through Workshops with Disabled People Simon Katan, Mick Grierson, Rebecca Fiebrink

Tongue-in-Cheek: Using Wireless Signals to Enable Non-Intrusive and Flexible Facial Gestures Detection

317BC C02: Cross-Device, Context-dependent UI 1/1 Design and Adaptation for Cross-Device, Context-dependent User Interfaces Fabio Paternò

318BC C04: Body,Whys & Videotape: Somatic Approaches 1/1 Body, Whys & Videotape: Somatic Approaches to Experience in HCI Thecla Schiphorst, Lian Loke

12:50 – 14:30 Lunch Break Restaurants, bars & cafés available nearby

Mayank Goel, Chen Zhao, Ruth Vinisha, Shwetak N. Patel

CHI 2015

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 23

MONDAY

Motahhare Eslami, Aimee N. Rickman, Kristen Vaccaro, Amirhossein Aleyasen, Andy Vuong, Karrie G. Karahalios, Kevin Hamilton, Christian Sandvig

E4

Papers: Visualizing Data

MONDAY 14:30 – 15:50 401

Special: SIGCHI Social Impact Award

E3

CHAIR: LOREN TERVEEN

Papers: Supporting Change in Developing Countries CHAIR: ANIRUDHA JOSHI

SIGCHI Social Impact Award Talk Leysia Palen

MONDAY

402

Sangeet Swara: A Community-Moderated Voice Forum in Rural India

Papers: Interaction in 3D Space

Aditya Vashistha, Edward Cutrell, Gaetano Borriello, William Thies

CHAIR: KENING ZHU

Mobile Phones for Maternal Health in Rural India Neha Kumar, Richard J Anderson

Physical Loci: Leveraging Spatial, Object and Semantic Memory for Command Selection

Residual Mobilities: Infrastructural Displacement and Post-Colonial Computing in Bangladesh

Simon T. Perrault, Eric Lecolinet,Yoann Pascal Bourse, Shengdong Zhao, Yves Guiard

Syed Ishtiaque Ahmed, Nusrat Jahan Mim, Steven J. Jackson

LeviPath: Modular Acoustic Levitation for 3D Path Visualisations

Más Tecnologia, Más Cambio? Investigating an Educational Technology Project in Rural Peru

Themis Omirou, Asier Marzo, Sue Ann Seah, Sriram Subramanian

Emeline Therias, Jon Bird, Paul Marshall

Twist and Learn: Interface Learning in 3DOF Exploration of 3D Scatterplots

E4

CHAIR: EMILEE RADER

Mark Shovman, James Bown, Andrea Szymkowiak, Kenneth C. Scott-Brown

THING: Introducing a Tablet-based Interaction Technique for controlling 3D Hand Models

Playing the Legal Card: Using Ideation Cards to Raise Data Protection Issues within the Design Process

Merwan Achibet, Géry Casiez, Anatole Lécuyer, Maud Marchal

Ewa Luger, Lachlan Urquhart, Tom Rodden, Michael Golembewski

The Roly-Poly Mouse: Designing a Rolling Input Device Unifying 2D and 3D Interaction

ro dsourced

onfigurations

Open Book: A Socially-inspired Cloaking Technique that Uses Lexical Abstraction to Transform Messages

Papers: Understanding & Evaluating Performance

Eric Gilbert

CHAIR: RICHARD C. DAVIS

Sensors Know When to Interrupt You In the Car: Detecting Driver Interruptibility Through Monitoring of Peripheral Interactions

ModelTracker: Redesigning Performance Analysis Tools for Machine Learning Saleema Amershi, Max Chickering, Steven M. Drucker, Bongshin Lee, Patrice Simard, Jina Suh

ploration of Securit

Qatrunnada Ismail, Tousif Ahmed, Apu Kapadia, Michael Reiter

Gary Perelman, Marcos Serrano, Mathieu Raynal, Celia Picard, Mustapha Derras, Emmanuel Dubois

403

Papers: Privacy, Security & Interruptions

SeungJun Kim, Jaemin Chun, Anind K. Dey

E5

Papers: Making & Sharing Assistive Technologies

o ood is Sur e ool to onnect lassifier Evaluation to Acceptability of Accuracy

CHAIR: SURANGA NANAYAKKARA

Matthew Kay, Shwetak N. Patel, Julie A. Kientz

Being Seen: Co-Interpreting Parkinson’s Patient’s Movement Ability in Deep Brain Stimulation Programming

Examining the Peak-End Effects of Subjective Experience Andy Cockburn, Philip Quinn, Carl Gutwin

Survival Analysis: Objective assessment of Wait Time in HCI Siddhartha Asthana, Pushpendra Singh, Parul Gupta

E1/E2 Papers: Music & Art

Helena M. Mentis, Rita Shewbridge, Sharon Powell, Paul Fishman, Lisa Shulman

Designing for and with People with Parkinson’s: A Focus on Exergaming

CHAIR: JONATHAN HOOK

Roisin McNaney, Madeline Balaam, Amey Holden, Guy Schofield, Daniel Jackson, Mary Webster, brook galna, gillian barry, Dadirayi Mhiripiri, lynn rochester, Patrick Olivier

Deformable Interfaces for Performing Music

LApp: A Speech Loudness Application for People with Parkinson’s on Google Glass

Giovanni Maria Troiano, Esben W. Pedersen, Kasper Hornbæk

Sculpting a Mobile Musical Soundtrack Adrian Hazzard, Steve Benford, Gary Burnett

Walking by Drawing Daniela K. Rosner, Allison Chambliss, Jeremy Friedland, Hidekazu Saegusa

ArtMaps: Interpreting the Spatial Footprints of Artworks Tim Coughlan, Laura Carletti, Gabriella Giannachi, Steve Benford, Derek McAuley, Dominic Price, Cristina Locatelli, Rebecca Sinker, John Stack

24 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

Roisin McNaney, Ivan Poliakov, John Vines, Madeline Balaam, Pengfei Zhang, Patrick Olivier

The Virtual Meditative Walk: Virtual Reality Therapy for Chronic Pain Management Diane Gromala, Xin Tong, Amber Choo, Mehdi Karamnejad, Chris D. Shaw

Sharing is Caring: Assistive Technology Designs on Thingiverse Erin Buehler, Stacy Branham, Abdullah Ali, Jeremy J. Chang, Megan Kelly Hofmann, Amy Hurst, Shaun K. Kane

CHI 2015

MONDAY 14:30 – 15:50 E6

Papers: Matching & Facilitating Social Interactions CHAIR: JOFISH KAYE

Case Studies: Industrial Innovation CHAIR: DONGWHAN KIM

Understanding the Role of Community in Online Dating

a

irror

Reflecting on

indo Displa s

Lida Theodorou, Patrick G. T. Healey

Making Social Matching Context-Aware - Design Concepts and Open Challenges

Industry Is Changing, And So Must We

The Known Stranger: Supporting Conversations between Strangers with Personalized Topic Suggestions

Umer Farooq, Joseph T. Munko

BodyGuard: A Case Study of Telecare Product Innovation and Development

Tien T. Nguyen, Duyen T. Nguyen, Shamsi T. Iqbal, Eyal Ofek

Andrea Taylor, Lorna Bernard, Hugh Pizey, Craig Whittet, Samantha Davies, David Hammond, Julian Edge

Augmenting Social Interactions: Realtime Behavioural Feedback using Social Signal Processing Techniques

Volvo Single View of Vehicle: Building a Big Data Service from Scratch in the Automotive Industry

Ionut Damian, Chiew Seng Sean Tan, Tobias Baur, Johannes Schöning, Kris Luyten, Elisabeth Andre

Paweł Woźniak, Robert Valton, Morten Fjeld

C07: Actionable Inexpensive Games Research 1/2 Actionable Inexpensive Games User Research Lennart E. Nacke, Steve Engels, Pejman Mirza-Babaei

Pa ers

e ec in

n esi n e ec i n

CHAIR: RON WAKKARY

Understanding Long-Term Interactions with a Slow Technology: An Investigation of Experiences with FutureMe

317A C06: Intro to Human-Computer Interaction 1/2 Introduction to Human-Computer Interaction Jonathan Lazar, Simone D. J. Barbosa

317BC C05: Design for Searching & Finding 1/2 Design for Searching & Finding Daniel Russell, Jaime Teevan, Meredith Ringel Morris, Marti Hearst, Ed H. Chi

318A SIG: Interactive Childhood

William Odom

CCI SIG: Interactive Childhood - Crossing Cultures and Continents

Reflecti e nformatics onceptual Dimensions for Designing ec nologies of Reflection

Janet C. Read, Juan Pablo Hourcade, Allison Druin, Panos Markopoulos, Tilde Bekker, Ole Sejer Iversen

Eric P. S. Baumer

Stock Lamp: An Engagement-Versatile Visualization Design Yuzuru Tanahashi, Kwan-Liu Ma

318BC C08: Design for Online Video & Television 1/2 Interaction Design for Online Video and Television David Geerts, Pablo Cesar

Real-Time Representation Versus Response Elicitation in Biosensor Data Mark Matthews, Jaime Snyder, Lindsay Reynolds, Jacqueline T. Chien, Adam Shih, Jonathan W. Lee, Geri Gay

15:50 – 16:30 Coffee Break Level 300/400 Foyers

CHI 2015

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 25

MONDAY

Christina Masden, W. Keith Edwards

Julia M. Mayer, Starr Roxanne Hiltz, Quentin Jones

E7

308

MONDAY 16:30 – 17:50 401

Papers: Makers & Hackers

E1/E2 Papers: Family Communication

CHAIR: ELLEN YI-LUEN DO

CHAIR: SIÂN E. LINDLEY

Tutorial Authorship and Hybrid Designers: The Joy (and Frustration) of DIY Tutorials

Couples’ Communication Channels: What, When & Why? Henriette Cramer, Maia L. Jacobs

MONDAY

Ron Wakkary, Markus Lorenz Schilling, Matthew A. Dalton, Sabrina Hauser, Audrey Desjardins, Xiao Zhang, Henry W. J. Lin

The Messaging Kettle: Prototyping Connection over a Distance between Adult Children and Older Parents

Hybrid Practice in the Kalahari: Design Collaboration through Digital Tools and Hunter-Gatherer Craft

Margot Brereton, Alessandro Soro, Kate Vaisutis, Paul Roe

The Effect of Signal Expense and Dependability on Family Communication in Rural and Northern Canada

Jennifer Jacobs, Amit Zoran

The Proper Care and Feeding of Hackerspaces: Care Ethics and Cultures of Making

Roberta M. Melvin, Andrea Bunt, Erick Oduor, Carman Neustaedter

Texting while Parenting: How Adults Use Mobile Phones while Caring for Children at the Playground

Austin L. Toombs, Shaowen Bardzell, Jeffrey Bardzell

Patterns of Physical Design Remixing in Online Maker Communities

Alexis Hiniker, Kiley Sobel, Hyewon Suh,Yi-Chen Sung, Charlotte P. Lee, Julie A. Kientz

Lora Oehlberg, Wesley Willett, Wendy E. Mackay

402

Exploring Time-Dependent Concerns about Pregnancy and Childbirth from Search Logs

Papers: How Fast Can you Type on your Phone?

Adam Fourney, Ryen W. White, Eric Horvitz

CHAIR: MICHAEL ROHS

E3

CHAIR: SHAUN LAWSON

Effects of Language Modeling and its Personalization on Touchscreen Typing Performance Andrew Fowler, Kurt Partridge, Ciprian Chelba, Xiaojun Bi, Tom Ouyang, Shumin Zhai

Run Spot Run: Capturing and Tagging Footage of a Race by Crowds of Spectators

VelociTap: Investigating Fast Mobile Text Entry using Sentence-Based Decoding of Touchscreen Keyboard Input

Martin D. Flintham, Raphael Velt, Max L. Wilson, Edward J. Anstead, Steve Benford, Anthony Brown, Timothy Pearce, Dominic Price, James Sprinks

Keith Vertanen, Haythem Memmi, Justin Emge, Shyam Reyal, Per Ola Kristensson

Crowdsourcing Synchronous Spectator Support: (go on, go on, you’re the best)n-1

Text Entry on Tiny QWERTY Soft Keyboards Luis A. Leiva, Alireza Sahami, Alejandro Catala, Niels Henze, Albrecht Schmidt

Franco Curmi, Maria Angela Ferrario, Jon Whittle, Florian Mueller

Bootlegger: Turning Fans into Film Crew

Performance and User Experience of Touchscreen and Gesture Keyboards in a Lab Setting and in the Wild

Guy Schofield, Tom Bartindale, Peter Wright

Papers: Understand & Enhancing Learning

In-group Questions and Out-group Answers: Crowdsourcing Daily Living Advice for Individuals with Autism

CHAIR: CHRIS QUINTANA

Hwajung Hong, Eric Gilbert, Gregory D. Abowd, Rosa I. Arriaga

Shyam Reyal, Shumin Zhai, Per Ola Kristensson

403

Papers: Crowdsourcing Fans & Friends

E4 Using Time-Anchored Peer Comments to Enhance Social Interaction in Online Educational Videos Yi-Chieh Lee, Wen-Chieh Lin, Fu-Yin Cherng, Hao-Chuan Wang, Ching-Ying Sung, Jung-Tai King

Designing a Physical Aid to Support Active Reading on Tablets Andrea Bianchi, So-Ryang Ban, Ian Oakley

Motivation as a Lens to Understand Online Learners: Towards Data-Driven Design with the OLEI Scale

Papers: Managing Personal Privacy CHAIR: SAMEER PATIL

Your Location has been Shared 5,398 Times! A Field Study on Mobile App Privacy Nudging Hazim Almuhimedi, Florian Schaub, Norman Sadeh, Idris Adjerid, Alessandro Acquisti, Joshua Gluck, Lorrie Cranor,Yuvraj Agarwal

Can an Algorithm Know the “Real You”?: Understanding People’s Reactions to Hyper-personal Analytics Systems

René F. Kizilcec, Emily Schneider

Jeffrey Warshaw, Tara Matthews, Steve Whittaker, Chris Kau, Mateo Bengualid, Barton A. Smith

Large-Scale Educational Campaigns

Privacy Tipping Points in Smartphones Privacy Preferences

Yun-En Liu, Christy Ballweber, Eleanor O’Rourke, Eric Butler, Phonraphee Thummaphan, Zoran Popović

Fuming Shih, Ilaria Liccardi, Daniel Weitzner

VeilMe: An Interactive Visualization Tool for Privacy onfiguration of Using ersonalit raits Yang Wang, Liang Gou, Anbang Xu, Michelle X. Zhou, Huahai Yang, Hernan Badenes

26 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

MONDAY 16:30 – 17:50 E5

Papers: Health Sensors & Monitoring

307

CHAIR: MARK BLYTHE

No News is Good News: Remote Monitoring of mplanta le ardio erter Defi rillator atients

The Challenges of Using Biodata in Promotional Filmmaking

On Vintage Values: The Experience of Secondhand Fashion Reacquisition

Smart Homes that Monitor Breathing and Heart Rate Fadel Adib, Hongzi Mao, Zachary Kabelac, Dina Katabi, Robert C. Miller

Anne E. Bowser, Oliver L. Haimson, Edward F. Melcer, Elizabeth F. Churchill

Balancing Accuracy and Fun: Designing Camera Based Mobile Games for Implicit Heart Rate Monitoring

Your Money’s No Good Here: The Elimination of Cash Payment on London Buses

Teng Han, Xiang Xiao, Lanfei Shi, John Canny, Jingtao Wang

Gary Pritchard, John Vines, Patrick Olivier

Measuring Photoplethysmogram-Based Stress-Induced Vascular Response Index to Assess Cognitive Load and Stress Yongqiang Lyu, Xiaomin Luo, Jun Zhou, Chun Yu, Congcong Miao, Tong Wang,Yuanchun Shi, Ken-ichi Kameyama

Papers: Collaborative Tables,Walls & Rooms CHAIR: HARALD REITERER

Fluid Grouping: Quantifying Group Engagement around Interactive Tabletop Exhibits in the Wild Florian Block, James Hammerman, Michael Horn, Amy Spiegel, Jonathan Christiansen, Brenda Phillips, Judy Diamond, E. Margaret Evans, Chia Shen

Up Close and Personal: Collaborative Work on a High-Resolution Multitouch Wall Display Mikkel R. Jakobsen, Kasper Hornbæk

Junius Gunaratne, Oded Nov

308

alt.chi: New User Interfaces CHAIR: TOVI GROSSMAN

Emergent Interfaces: Constructive Assembly of Identical Units Alexandru Dancu, Stig Anton Nielsen, Kening Zhu, Ayça Ünlüer, Max Witt, Catherine Hedler, Hanna Frank, Axel Pelling, Christian Carlsson, Morten Fjeld

Your Paper is Dead! Bringing Life to Research Articles with Animated Figures Tovi Grossman, Fanny Chevalier, Rubaiat Habib Kazi

Flexible Ecologies And Incongruent Locations

“I Woke Up as a Newspaper”: Designing-in Interaction Analytics

Paul K. Luff, Naomi Yamashita, Hideaki Kuzuoka, Christian Heath

Michael Evans, Lianne Kerlin, Caroline Jay

Mapping out Work in a Mixed Reality Project Room

Not all Days are Equal: Investigating The Meaning In The Digital Calendar

Derek Reilly, Andy Echenique, Andy Wu, Anthony Tang, W. Keith Edwards

E7

Informing and Improving Retirement Saving Performance using Behavioral Economics Theory-driven User Interfaces

C07: Actionable Inexpensive Games Research 2/2 Actionable Inexpensive Games User Research Lennart E. Nacke, Steve Engels, Pejman Mirza-Babaei

Daniel Buzzo, Nicolo Merendino

317A C06: Intro to Human-Computer Interaction 2/2 Introduction to Human-Computer Interaction Jonathan Lazar, Simone D. J. Barbosa

317BC C05: Design for Searching & Finding 2/2 Design for Searching & Finding Daniel Russell, Jaime Teevan, Meredith Ringel Morris, Marti Hearst, Ed H. Chi

318BC C08: Design for Online Video & Television 2/2 Interaction Design for Online Video and Television David Geerts, Pablo Cesar

18:00 – 19:30

CHI 2015

Conference Reception and Exhibit Grand Opening Interactivity List on page 62

Hall C2/C3 Hall C2/C3

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 27

MONDAY

Stuart Reeves, Sarah E. Martindale, Paul Tennent, Steve Benford, Joe Marshall, Brendan Walker

Mikael B. Skov, Pauline G. Johansen, Charlotte S. Skov, Astrid Lauberg

E6

Papers: The Value of Things

CHAIR: REGAN L. MANDRYK

TUESDAY 9:30 – 10:50 7:00 – 8:20

Women’s Breakfast

Room 327ABC

Tuesday Morning Keynote 8:30 – 9:20 Donghoon Chang Hall D1 UX Design in the IoT Era 401

Papers: Muscle-Computer Interfaces

403

CHAIR: SUSAN DUMAIS

Understanding Gesture Expressivity through Muscle Sensing

Blended Recommending: Integrating Interactive Information Filtering and Algorithmic Recommender Techniques Benedikt Loepp, Katja Herrmanny, Juergen Ziegler

Informing the Design of Novel Input Methods with Muscle Coactivation Clustering

A Large-Scale Study of User Image Search Behavior on the Web

Myroslav Bachynskyi, Gregorio Palmas, Antti Oulasvirta, Tino Weinkauf

Jaimie Y. Park, Neil O’Hare, Rossano Schifanella, Alejandro Jaimes, Chin-Wan Chung

Advancing Muscle-Computer Interfaces with High-Density Electromyography

DynamicMaps: Similarity-based Browsing through a Massive Set of Images

Christoph Amma, Thomas Krings, Jonas Böer, Tanja Schultz

TUESDAY

Papers: Search & Recommendations

CHAIR: CHRIS HARRISON

Baptiste Caramiaux, Marco Donnarumma, Atau Tanaka

Proprioceptive Interaction

Yanir Kleiman, Joel Lanir, Dov Danon,Yasmin Felberbaum, Daniel Cohen-Or

Pedro Lopes, Alexandra Ion, Willi Mueller, Daniel Hoffmann, Patrik Jonell, Patrick Baudisch

402

9:20 – 9:30 Break

S.O.S.: Does Your Search Engine Results Page (SERP) Need Help?

Papers: Phones for more than Just Talking & Text CHAIR: NAOMI YAMASHITA

Maximilian Speicher, Andreas Both, Martin Gaedke

E1/E2 Papers: Kids Haptic,Wearable,Tangible Learning CHAIR: KORI INKPEN

AudioScope: Smartphones as Directional Microphones in Mobile Audio Augmented Reality Systems Florian Heller, Jan Borchers

FeelSleeve: Haptic Feedback to Enhance Early Reading

ScanShot: Detecting Document Capture Moments and Correcting Device Orientation

Nesra Yannier, Ali Israr, Jill Fain Lehman, Roberta L. Klatzky

Jeungmin Oh, Woohyeok Choi, Joohyun Kim, Uichin Lee

BodyVis: A New Approach to Body Learning Through Wearable Sensing and Visualization

Mechanics of Camera Work in Mobile Video Collaboration

Leyla Norooz, Matthew Louis Mauriello, Anita Jorgensen, Brenna McNally, Jon E. Froehlich

Brennan Jones, Anna Witcraft, Scott Bateman, Carman Neustaedter, Anthony Tang

Exploring Expressive Augmented Reality: The FingAR Puppet System for Social Pretend Play

User Interfaces for Smart Things - A Generative Approach with Semantic Interaction Descriptions

Zhen Bai, Alan F. Blackwell, George Coulouris

Learning from Mixed-Reality Games: Is Shaking a Tablet as Effective as Physical Observation?

Simon Mayer, Andreas Tschofen, Anind K. Dey, Friedemann Mattern

Reducing the Stress of Coordination: Sharing Travel Time Information Between Contacts on Mobile Phones Frank R. Bentley,Ying-Yu Chen, Christian Holz

You Can’t Smoke Here: Towards Support for Space Usage Rules in Location-aware Technologies Pavel Andreevich Samsonov, Xun Tang, Johannes Schöning, Werner Kuhn, Brent Hecht

Nesra Yannier, Kenneth R. Koedinger, Scott E. Hudson

E3

Papers: Motivation & Participation CHAIR: MEREDITH R. MORRIS

Gauging Receptiveness to Social Microvolunteering Erin L. Brady, Meredith Ringel Morris, Jeffrey P. Bigham

o ile amification for ro dsourcing Data ollection Leveraging the Freemium Model Kristen Dergousoff, Regan Mandryk

Unequal Time for Unequal Value: Implications of Differing Motivations for Participation in Timebanking Patrick C. Shih, Victoria Bellotti, Kyungsik Han, John M. Carroll

A Muddle of Models of Motivation For Using Peer-to-Peer Economy Systems Victoria Bellotti, Alexander Ambard, Daniel Turner, Christina Gossmann, Kamila Demkova, John M. Carroll

28 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

TUESDAY 9:30 – 10:50 E4

Papers: Sustainability & Recycling CHAIR:

E7

ADRIAN K. CLEAR

C11: Methods for Child Computer Interaction 1/2 Research Methods for Child Computer Interaction Janet C. Read, Shuli Gilutz

Analysis of Recycling Capabilities of Individuals and Crowds to Encourage and Educate People to SeparateTheir Garbage Playfully

307

CHAIR: LUCIANO GAMBERINI

Pascal Lessel, Maximilian Altmeyer, Antonio Krüger

and at did e t ro out through the Food Waste Diary

ro ing on Reflection

Using Metrics of Curation to Evaluate Information-Based Ideation

Eva Ganglbauer, Geraldine Fitzpatrick, Florian Güldenpfennig

Andruid Kerne, Andrew Webb, Steven M. Smith, Rhema Linder, Nic Lupfer,Yin Qu, Jonathan Moeller, Sashikanth Damaraju

Energy Babble: Mixing Environmentally-Oriented Internet Content to Engage Community Groups

GEM-NI: A System for Creating and Managing Alternatives In Generative Design

William Gaver, Mike Michael, Tobie Kerridge, Alex Wilkie, Andy Boucher, Liliana Ovalle, Matthew Plummer Fernandez

Loutfouz Zaman, Wolfgang Stuerzlinger, Christian Neugebauer, Rob Woodbury, Maher Elkhaldi, Naghmi Shireen, Michael Terry

Beyond the Individual: The Contextual Wheel of Practice as a Research Framework for Sustainable HCI

Motif: Supporting Novice Creativity through Expert Patterns Joy Kim, Mira Dontcheva, Wilmot Li, Michael S. Bernstein, Daniela Steinsapir

Johanne Mose Entwistle, Mia Kruse Rasmussen, Nervo Verdezoto, Robert S. Brewer, Mads Schaarup Andersen

E5

Papers: Supporting Creativity through UX Design

DesignScape: Design with Interactive Layout Suggestions Peter O’Donovan, Aseem Agarwala, Aaron Hertzmann

Papers: The Value of the Village in Caregiving

Effects of Public Commitments and Accountability in a Technology-Supported Physical Activity Intervention Sean A. Munson, Erin Krupka, Caroline Richardson, Paul Resnick

Karin Slegers, Sanne Ruelens, Jorick Vissers, Pieter Duysburgh

308

Case Studies: Art & Life CHAIR: FRISINA CHRIS

Rare World: Towards Technology for Rare Diseases Haley MacLeod, Kim Oakes, Danika Geisler, Kay Connelly, Katie Siek

Health Vlogs as Social Support for Chronic Illness Management Jina Huh, Leslie S. Liu, Tina Neogi, Kori M. Inkpen, Wanda Pratt

Looking for Respite and Support: Technological Opportunities for Spousal Caregivers

Kimiko Ryokai, Noriko Misra,Yoshinori Hara

TRANSFORM: Embodiment of “Radical Atoms” at Milano Design Week

Matthieu Tixier, Myriam Lewkowicz

Hiroshi Ishii, Daniel Leithinger, Sean Follmer, Amit Zoran, Philipp Schoessler, Jared Counts

Barriers and Negative Nudges: Exploring Challenges in Food Journaling

Moving on its Own: How do Audience Interacts with an Autonomous Moving Artwork

Felicia Cordeiro, Daniel A. Epstein, Edison Thomaz, Elizabeth Bales, Arvind K. Jagannathan, Gregory D. Abowd, James Fogarty

E6

Artistic Distance: Body Movements as Launching Points For Art Inquiry

Papers: I Like What I See - Interface Aesthetics CHAIR: SIMON J. BOWEN

Florent Levillain, Sébastien Lefort, Elisabetta Zibetti

Colormaps that Improve Perception of High-Resolution Ocean Data Francesca Samsel, Mark Petersen, Terece Geld, Greg Abram, Joanne Wendelberger, James Ahrens

317A C09: Designing & Assessing Task Models 1/2

Computation of Interface Aesthetics Aliaksei Miniukovich, Antonella De Angeli

Designing and Assessing Interactive Systems Using Task Models

Patina Engraver: Visualizing Activity Logs as Patina in Fashionable Trackers

Philippe Palanque, Célia Martinie

Moon-Hwan Lee, Seijin Cha, Tek-Jin Nam

Real-time Guidance Camera Interface to Enhance Photo Aesthetic Quality Yan Xu, Joshua Ratcliff, James Scovell, Gheric Speiginer, Ronald Azuma

Infographic Aesthetics: Designing for the First Impression Lane Harrison, Katharina Reinecke, Remco Chang

ISOTYPE Visualization – Working Memory, Performance, and Engagement with Pictographs

317BC C10: Learn to Sketch (Even if You Can’t Draw) 1/2 Learn to Sketch (Even if You Can’t Draw): Hands-on Sketching Course Stephanie Foehrenbach

318BC C12: Practical UX Research Methodologies 1/2 Practical UX Research Methodologies Sarah E. Garcia

Steve Haroz, Robert Kosara, Steven Franconeri

WIP Posters Rotation 1 Doctoral Consortium Posters Interactivity CHI 2015

List on page 56 List on page 54 List on page 62

Hall C2/C3 Hall C2/C3 Hall C2/C3

10:50 – 11:30 Coffee Break Hall C2/C3

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 29

TUESDAY

Using Game Principles in UX Research: A Board Game for Eliciting Future User Needs

CHAIR: LENA MAMYKINA

TUESDAY 11:30 – 12:50 401

Papers: Smartwatch Interaction

E1/E2 Special: Foundations & Trends in HCI 1

CHAIR: DANIEL ASHBROOK

CHAIR: GREGORY ABOWD

n estigating t e nformation ransfer fficienc of a Watch-back Tactile Display

A Survey of Augmented Reality

Jaeyeon Lee, Jaehyun Han, Geehyuk Lee

Augmented Reality Expert Panel Discussion

SplitBoard: A Simple Split Soft Keyboard for Wristwatch-sized Touch Screens

Mark Billinghurst, Adrian Clark, Gun Lee

Mark Billinghurst, Woontack Woo, Thad Starner, Shahram Izadi

Jonggi Hong, Seongkook Heo, Poika Isokoski, Geehyuk Lee

E3

Papers: Evaluating Crowdsourcing CHAIR:

Beats: Tapping Gestures for Smart Watches

BONGWON SUH

Ian Oakley, DoYoung Lee, MD. Rasel Islam, Augusto Esteves

Comparing Person- and Process-centric Strategies for Obtaining Quality Data on Amazon Mechanical Turk

WatchConnect: A Toolkit for Prototyping Smartwatch-Centric Cross-Device Applications

Tanushree Mitra, C.J. Hutto, Eric Gilbert

Steven Houben, Nicolai Marquardt

Crowdsourced Feedback With Imagery Rather Than Text: Would Designers Use It?

It’s About Time: Smartwatches as Public Displays Jennifer Pearson, Simon Robinson, Matt Jones

402

David A. Robb, Stefano Padilla, Britta Kalkreuter, Mike J. Chantler

Papers: Tangible Interactions

Measuring Crowdsourcing Effort with Error-Time Curves

TUESDAY

CHAIR: OTMAR HILLIGES

Justin Cheng, Jaime Teevan, Michael S. Bernstein

The Effects of Sequence and Delay on Crowd Work

TUIkit: Evaluating Physical and Functional Experiences of Tangible User Interface Prototypes Jorick Vissers, David Geerts

Crowd Size, Diversity and Performance

Lamello: Passive Acoustic Sensing for Tangible Input Components

Lionel Robert, Daniel M. Romero

Valkyrie Savage, Andrew Head, Björn Hartmann, Dan B. Goldman, Gautham Mysore, Wilmot Li

WonderLens: Optical Lenses and Mirrors for Tangible Interactions on Printed Paper Rong-Hao Liang, Chao Shen,Yu-Chien Chan, Guan-Ting Chou, Liwei Chan, De-Nian Yang, Mike Y. Chen, Bing-Yu Chen

E4

Papers: Smart Smartphone Authentication CHAIR:

ANDREA BIANCHI

I Know What You Did Last Week! Do You? Dynamic Security Questions for Fallback Authentication on Smartphones Alina Hang, Alexander De Luca, Heinrich Hussmann

FugaciousFilm: Exploring Attentive Interaction with Ephemeral Material

Improving Accuracy, Applicability and Usability of Keystroke Biometrics on Mobile Touchscreen Devices

Hyosun Kwon, Shashank Jaiswal, Steve Benford, Sue Ann Seah, Peter Bennett, Boriana Koleva, Holger Schnädelbach

Daniel Buschek, Alexander De Luca, Florian Alt

D rinting neumatic De ice ontrols it Activation Force Capabilities

Emanuel von Zezschwitz, Alexander De Luca, Bruno Brunkow, Heinrich Hussmann

aria le

Marynel Vázquez, Eric Brockmeyer, Ruta Desai, Chris Harrison, Scott E. Hudson

403

Walter S. Lasecki, Jeffrey M. Rzeszotarski, Adam Marcus, Jeffrey P. Bigham

Papers: New Evaluation Approaches CHAIR: DAVID ENGLAND

Bridging the Theory-Practice Gap: Lessons and Challenges of Applying the Attachment Framework for Sustainable HCI Design Christian Remy, Silke Gegenbauer, Elaine M. Huang

The Transfer of Learning as HCI Similarity: Towards an Objective Assessment of the Sensory-Motor Basis of Naturalness François Bérard, Amélie Rochet-Capellan

SwiPIN - Fast and Secure PIN-Entry on Smartphones

Glass Unlock: Enhancing Security of Smartphone Unlocking through Leveraging a Private Near-eye Display Christian Winkler, Jan Gugenheimer, Alexander De Luca, Gabriel Haas, Philipp Speidel, David Dobbelstein, Enrico Rukzio

eel i e m a ing Selfies ll Da o ards Understanding Biometric Authentication on Smartphones Alexander De Luca, Alina Hang, Emanuel von Zezschwitz, Heinrich Hussmann

Interrupt Now or Inform Later?: Comparing Immediate and Delayed Privacy Feedback Sameer Patil, Roberto Hoyle, Roman Schlegel, Apu Kapadia, Adam J. Lee

Formalizing Agreement Analysis for Elicitation Studies: New easures Significance est and ool it Radu-Daniel Vatavu, Jacob O. Wobbrock

Exploring the Effect of Pre-operational Priming Intervention on Number Entry Errors Yunqiu Li, Patrick Oladimeji, Harold Thimbleby

30 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

TUESDAY 11:30 – 12:50 E5

Papers: Healthcare Bias, Engagement & Adaptation

alt.chi: HCI Methodology

CHAIR: TAE-JUNG YUN

CHAIR: HENRY DUH

From Care Plans to Care Coordination: Opportunities for Computer Support of Teamwork in Complex Healthcare

HCI as an Inter-Discipline

Ofra Amir, Barbara J. Grosz, Krzysztof Z. Gajos, Sonja M. Swenson, Lee M. Sanders

Technological and Organizational Adaptation of EMR Implementation in an Emergency Department Sun Young Park,Yunan Chen, Scott Rudkin

Engaging Pregnant Women in Kenya with a Hybrid Computer-Human SMS Communication System Trevor Perrier, Nicola Dell, Brian DeRenzi, Richard Anderson, John Kinuthia, Jennifer Unger, Grace John-Stewart

It Is All About Perspective: An Exploration of Mitigating Selective Exposure with Aspect Indicators Q. Vera Liao, Wai-Tat Fu, Sri Shilpa Mamidi

E6

308

Papers: Storytelling in InfoVis

Storytelling in Information Visualizations: Does it Engage Users to Explore Data? Jeremy Boy, Jean-Daniel Fekete, Francoise Detienne

Understanding Data Videos: Looking at Narrative Visualization through the Cinematography Lens Fereshteh Amini, Nathalie Henry Riche, Christophe Hurter, Bongshin Lee, Pourang Irani

How Deceptive are Deceptive Visualizations?: An Empirical Analysis of Common Distortion Techniques

The User Experience Designer’s Charlatan Test: A First Step towards UX Sanity Checking Jonathan S. Arnowitz

Design + Ethnography + Futures: Surrendering in uncertainty Yoko Akama, Sarah Pink, Annie Fergusson

Deep Cover HCI: Value, Ethics, and Practice Julie R. Williamson, Daniel Sundén

317A C09: Designing & Assessing Task Models 2/2 Designing and Assessing Interactive Systems Using Task Models Philippe Palanque, Célia Martinie

317BC C10: Learn to Sketch (Even if You Can’t Draw) 2/2 Learn to Sketch (Even if You Can’t Draw): Hands-on Sketching Course Stephanie Foehrenbach

318A SIG: Gender-Inclusive Software SIG: Gender-Inclusive Software: What We Know About Building It Margaret M. Burnett, Elizabeth F. Churchill, Michael J. Lee

318BC C12: Practical UX Research Methodologies 2/2 Practical UX Research Methodologies Sarah E. Garcia

Anshul Vikram Pandey, Katharina Rall, Margaret L. Satterthwaite, Oded Nov, Enrico Bertini

STRATOS: Using Visualization to Support Decisions in Strategic Software Release Planning Bon Adriel Aseniero, Tiffany Wun, David Ledo, Guenther Ruhe, Anthony Tang, Sheelagh Carpendale

E7

C11: Methods for Child Computer Interaction 2/2 Research Methods for Child Computer Interaction Janet C. Read, Shuli Gilutz

307

Panel: You’ve Been Acquired! You’ve Been Acquired! Iram W. Mirza, Meng Chee

CHI 2015

12:50 – 14:30 Lunch Break Restaurants, bars & cafés available nearby

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 31

TUESDAY

CHAIR: CHARLES PERIN

Alan F. Blackwell

TUESDAY 14:30 – 15:50 401

Special: SIGCHI Lifetime Research Award

E1/E2 Papers: HCI for the Elderly

CHAIR: SCOTT R. KLEMMER

CHAIR: MARIA K. WOLTERS

SIGCHI Lifetime Research Award Talk James Hollan

402

An Age Old Problem: Examining the Discourses of Ageing in HCI and Strategies for Future Research

Papers: Grip, Move & Tilt: Novel Interaction

John Vines, Gary Pritchard, Peter C. Wright, Patrick Olivier, Katie Brittain

CHAIR: JESSICA CAUCHARD

Long-Term Use of Motion-Based Video Games in Care Home Settings

Supporting Subtlety with Deceptive Devices and Illusory Interactions

Kathrin M. Gerling, Regan L. Mandryk, Conor Linehan

CoFaçade: A Customizable Assistive Approach for Elders and Their Helpers

Fraser Anderson, Tovi Grossman, Daniel Wigdor, George Fitzmaurice

Understanding Users’Touch Behavior on Large Mobile Touch-Screens and Assisted Targeting by Tilting Gesture

Jason Chen Zhao, Richard C. Davis, Pin Sym Foong, Shengdong Zhao

“My hand doesn’t listen to me!”: Adoption and Evaluation of a Communication Technology for the ‘Oldest Old’

Youli Chang, Sehi L’Yi, Kyle Koh, Jinwook Seo

One-Handed Bend Interactions with Deformable Smartphones

TUESDAY

Audrey Girouard, Jessica Lo, Md Riyadh, Farshad Daliri, Alexander Keith Eady, Jerome Pasquero

Barbara Barbosa Neves, Rachel L. Franz, Cosmin Munteanu, Ronald Baecker

E3

CHAIR: JAIME TEEVAN

Grip Change as an Information Side Channel for Mobile Touch Interaction Matei Negulescu, Joanna McGrenere

Working with Machines: The Impact of Algorithmic and Data-Driven Management on Human Workers

An Experimental Comparison of Vertical and Horizontal Dynamic Peephole Navigation

403

Papers: The Impact of Crowd Work on Workers

Min Kyung Lee, Daniel Kusbit, Evan Metsky, Laura Dabbish

Jens Müller, Roman Rädle, Hans-Christian Jetter, Harald Reiterer

TurkBench: Rendering the Market for Turkers

Papers: Interactive Video & Collaborative Annotations

Benjamin V. Hanrahan, Jutta K. Willamowski, Saiganesh Swaminathan, David B. Martin

CHAIR:

AMY OGAN

Exploring the Role of Activity Trace Design on Evaluations of Online Worker Quality

RIMES: Embedding Interactive Multimedia Exercises in Lecture Videos

Jennifer Marlow, Laura A. Dabbish, Jodi L. Forlizzi

We Are Dynamo: Overcoming Stalling and Friction in Collective Action for Crowd Workers

Juho Kim, Elena L. Glassman, Andres Monroy-Hernandez, Meredith Ringel Morris

Niloufar Salehi, Lilly C. Irani, Michael S. Bernstein, Ali Alkhatib, Eva Ogbe, Kristy Milland, Clickhappier

A Framework for Automatically Generating Interactive Instructional Scaffolding

Understanding Malicious Behavior in Crowdsourcing Platforms: The Case of Online Surveys

Eleanor O’Rourke, Erik Andersen, Sumit Gulwani, Zoran Popovic

Mudslide: A Spatially Anchored Census of Student Confusion for Online Lecture Videos Elena L. Glassman, Juho Kim, Andres Monroy-Hernandez, Meredith Ringel Morris

Ujwal Gadiraju, Ricardo Kawase, Stefan Dietze, Gianluca Demartini

E4

Papers: Social Media and Mobile Camera Privacy CHAIR: PAM BRIGGS

Making Software Tutorial Video Responsive Cuong Nguyen, Feng Liu

Gaze-Based Annotations for Reading Comprehension Shiwei Cheng, Zhiqiang Sun, Lingyun Sun, Kirsten Yee, Anind K. Dey

“I Saw Images I Didn’t Even Know I Had” Understanding User Perceptions of Cloud Storage Privacy Jason W. Clark, Peter Edwin Snyder, Damon McCoy, Chris Kanich

Sensitive Lifelogs: A Privacy Analysis of Photos from Wearable Cameras Roberto Hoyle, Robert Templeman, Denise Anthony, David Crandall, Apu Kapadia

Somebody’s Watching Me? Assessing the Effectiveness of Webcam Indicator Lights Rebecca S. Portnoff, Linda N. Lee, Serge Egelman, Pratyush Mishra, Derek Leung, David Wagner

From Third to Surveilled Place: The Mobile in Irish Pubs Norman Makoto Su, Lulu Wang

Is This Thing On? Crowdsourcing Privacy Indicators for Ubiquitous Sensing Platforms Serge Egelman, Raghudeep Kannavara, Richard Chow

32 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

TUESDAY 14:30 – 15:50 E5

Papers: DIY Healthcare: Apps & Wearables

Case Studies: Education & Work

CHAIR: DAVID COYLE

CHAIR: LUIS A. LEIVA

Blood Pressure Beyond the Clinic: Rethinking a Health Metric for Everyone

Connective MOOC for K-12 Teacher Professional Development in Native American Pueblo Schools

Logan Kendall, Dan Morris, Desney Tan

Josephine Kilde, Lorenzo Gonzales

Concealing or Revealing Mobile Medical Devices? Designing for Onstage and Offstage Presentation

Rapid Usability Assessment of an Enterprise Application in an Agile Environment with CogTool

Aisling Ann O’Kane,Yvonne Rogers, Ann E. Blandford

Anil Shankar, Honray Lin, Hans-Frederick Brown, Colson Rice

Understanding Individual Differences for Tailored Smoking Cessation Apps

Testing the Effectiveness of iPad Math Game: Lessons Learned from Running a Multi-Classroom Study

Jeni Paay, Jesper Kjeldskov, Mikael B. Skov, Lars Lichon, Stephan Rasmussen

Kristen Pilner Blair, Jay Pfaffman, Maria Cutumisu, Nicole Hallinen, Daniel Schwartz

FeedFinder: A Location-Mapping Mobile Application for Breastfeeding Women

Historical Research Using Email Archives

Madeline Balaam, Rob Comber, Selina Sutton, Ed Jenkins, Andy Garbett

E6

308

Sudheendra Hangal, Vihari Piratla, Chaiyasit Manovit, Peter Chan, Monica S. Lam, Glynn Edwards

317A C14: Mobile Human-Computer Interaction 1/2

Papers: Social Embodied Interaction CHAIR: GINA VENOLIA

Mobile Human-Computer Interaction

Using an Interactive Avatar’s Facial Expressiveness to Increase Persuasiveness and Socialness Jennifer Hyde, Elizabeth J. Carter, Sara Kiesler, Jessica K. Hodgins

Study on Gaze Direction Perception of Face Image Displayed on Rotatable Flat Display Ikkaku Kawaguchi, Hideaki Kuzuoka,Yusuke Suzuki

DynamicDuo: Co-presenting with Virtual Agents Ha Trinh, Lazlo Ring, Timothy Bickmore

317BC C13: Methods for HCI Research 1/2 Methods for Human-Computer Interaction Research Sandy J J Gould, Duncan P. Brumby, Anna L. Cox, Geraldine Fitzpatrick, ettie Hoonhout, avid amas, fie aw

318BC C16: Sketching User Experiences 1/2 Sketching User Experiences: The Hands-on Course Nicolai Marquardt, Saul Greenberg

My Self and You: Tension in Bodily Sharing of Experience Helena M. Mentis, Jarmo Laaksolahti, Kristina Höök

E7

C15: HCI Lessons: From Earth to Outer Space 1/2 HCI Lessons: From Earth to Outer Space... and Back Guy André Boy, Jeffrey M. Bradshaw, Soyeon Yi

307

Papers: Innovation in Theories & Products CHAIR: VOLKER WULF

From User-Centered to Adoption-Centered Design: A Case Study of an HCI Research Innovation Becoming a Product Parmit K. Chilana, Andrew J. Ko, Jacob Wobbrock

Creating Sustainable Cyberinfrastructures David P. Randall, E.Ilana Diamant, Charlotte P. Lee

Standards and/as Innovation: Protocols, Creativity, and Interactive Systems Development in Ecology Steven J. Jackson, Sarah Barbrow

Does Distance Still Matter? Revisiting the CSCW Fundamentals on Distributed Collaboration Pernille Bjorn, Morten Esbensen, Rasmus Eskild Jensen, Stina Matthiessen

WIP Posters Rotation 1 Student Design Posters Student Research Posters Interactivity CHI 2015

List on page 56 List on page 55 List on page 54 List on page 62

Hall C2/C3 Hall C2/C3 Hall C2/C3 Hall C2/C3

15:50 – 16:30 Coffee Break Hall C2/C3

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 33

TUESDAY

Niels Henze, Enrico Rukzio

TUESDAY 16:30 – 17:50 401

Papers: Design and 3D Object Fabrication

E1/E2 Papers: Families and Their Use of Technology

CHAIR: DAVID KIM

CHAIR: JENNIFER MARLOW

Tactum: A Skin-Centric Approach to Digital Design and Fabrication

Managing Children’s Online Identities: How Parents Decide what to Disclose about their Children Online

Madeline Gannon, Tovi Grossman, George Fitzmaurice

Tawfi Ammari, Priya umar, li

a ered a ric D rinter for Soft nteracti e

ects

Understanding and Supporting Fathers and Fatherhood on Social Media Sites

Huaishu Peng, Jennifer Mankoff, Scott E. Hudson, James McCann

Tawfi Ammari, Sarita Schoenebeck

latener o idelit a rication of D ects Su stituting D rint it aser ut lates

Family Rituals and the Potential For Interaction Design: A Study of Christmas

ustin Beyer, Serafima Gurevich, Ste anie Mueller, Hsiang Ting hen, Patrick Baudisch

D oil

ands on pproac to Digital D

Daniela Petrelli, Ann Light

odels Design

Look, My Baby Is Using an iPad! An Analysis of YouTube Videos of Infants and Toddlers Using Tablets

Huaishu Peng, Amit Zoran, François V. Guimbretière

402

Juan Pablo Hourcade, Sarah L. Mascher, David C. Wu, Luiza Pantoja

Papers: Understanding & Extending Touch Interfaces CHAIR: THEOPHANIS TSANDILAS

ampe, Sarita Schoenebeck

E3

Papers: Understanding Crowdwork in Many Domains CHAIR: UICHIN LEE

TUESDAY

Performance and Ergonomics of Touch Surfaces: A Comparative Study using Biomechanical Simulation Myroslav Bachynskyi, Gregorio Palmas, Antti Oulasvirta, Jürgen Steimle, Tino Weinkauf

How Much Faster is Fast Enough? User Perception of Latency & Latency Improvements in Direct and Indirect Touch Jonathan Deber, Ricardo Jota, Clifton Forlines, Daniel Wigdor

The Effect of Edge Targets on Touch Performance Daniel Avrahami

FlickBoard: Enabling Trackpad Interaction with Automatic Mode Switching on a Capacitive-sensing Keyboard Ying-Chao Tung, Ta Yang Cheng, Neng-Hao Yu, Chiuan Wang, Mike Y. Chen

ExtensionSticker: A Proposal for a Striped Pattern Sticker to Extend Touch Interfaces and its Assessment

Apparition: Crowdsourced User Interfaces That Come To Life As You Sketch Them Walter S. Lasecki, Juho Kim, Nick Rafter, Onkur Sen, Jeffrey P. Bigham, Michael S. Bernstein

Zensors: Adaptive, Rapidly Deployable, Human-Intelligent Sensor Feeds Gierad Laput, Walter S. Lasecki, Jason Wiese, Robert Xiao, Jeffrey P. Bigham, Chris Harrison

Exploring Privacy and Accuracy Trade-Offs in Crowdsourced Behavioral Video Coding Walter S. Lasecki, Mitchell Gordon, Winnie Leung, Ellen Lim, Jeffrey P. Bigham, Steven P. Dow

Crowdsourcing Stereotypes: Linguistic Bias in Metadata Generated via GWAP Jahna Otterbacher

Kunihiro Kato, Homei Miyashita

403

Papers: Sharing & Collaboration @ Work CHAIR: STEVEN M. DRUCKER

MUBox: Multi-User Aware Personal Cloud Storage Michael Nebeling, Matthias Geel, Oleksiy Syrotkin, Moira Norrie

DocuViz: Visualizing Collaborative Writing Dakuo Wang, Judith S. Olson, Jingwen Zhang, Trung Nguyen, Gary M. Olson

Communication through Boundary Objects in Distributed Agile Teams Johan Kaj Blomkvist, Johan Persson, Johan Aberg

How to Drive a London Bus: Measuring Performance in a Mobile and Remote Workplace Gary W. Pritchard, Pam Briggs, John Vines, Patrick Olivier

34 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

TUESDAY 16:30 – 17:50 E4

Papers: Eco-Green: Encouraging Energy Conservation

E7

CHAIR: GERMAINE IRWIN

C15: HCI Lessons: From Earth to Outer Space 2/2 HCI Lessons: From Earth to Outer Space... and Back Guy André Boy, Jeffrey M. Bradshaw, Soyeon Yi

Tiree Energy Pulse: Exploring Renewable Energy Forecasts on the Edge of the Grid.

307

CHAIR: GIULIO JACUCCI

Will Simm, Maria Angela Ferrario, Adrian Friday, Peter Newman, Stephen Forshaw, Mike Hazas, Alan Dix

panding and Refining Design and riticalit in

Designing Persuasive Technology to Manage Peak Electricity Demand in Ontario Homes

James Pierce, Phoebe J. Sengers, Tad Hirsch, Tom Jenkins, William W. Gaver, Carl DiSalvo

Valerie Sugarman, Edward Lank

Immodest Proposals: Research Through Design and Knowledge

Eco-Forecasting for Domestic Electricity Use Jesper Kjeldskov, Mikael B. Skov, Jeni Paay, Dennis Lund, Tue Madsen, Michael Nielsen

Jeffrey Bardzell, Shaowen Bardzell, Lone Koefoed Hansen

Making Multiple Uses of the Obscura 1C Digital Camera: Reflecting on t e Design roduction ac aging and Distribution of a Counterfunctional Device

Beyond Eco-Feedback: Adding Online Manual and Automated Controls to Promote Workplace Sustainability Ray Yun, Azizan Aziz, Peter Scupelli, Bertrand Lasternas, Chenlu Zhang, Vivian Loftness

James Pierce, Eric Paulos

Pause Moment Experience in SNS Communication

Understanding the Role of Thermography in Energy Auditing: Current Practices and the Potential for Automated Solutions

E5

Jae-eul Bae,Youn-kyung Lim, Jin-bae Bang, Myung-suk Kim

308

Papers: Sports Tracking & Training

Special: Human Computer Interaction Journal 1 CHAIR: SHARON OVIATT

CHAIR: HAO-HUA CHU

Keepin’ it Real: Challenges when Designing Sports-Training Games Mads Møller Jensen, Majken K. Rasmussen, Florian Mueller, Kaj “Floyd” Grønbæk

Wendy Moncur, Judith Masthoff, Ehud Reiter,Yvonne Freer, Hien Nguyen

Flow is Not Enough: Understanding the Needs of Advanced Amateur Runners to Design Motivation Technology

User Experience of On-Screen Interaction Techniques: An Experimental Investigation of Clicking, Sliding, Zooming, Hovering, Dragging, and Flipping

ristina M naving, Paweł W Woźniak, Morten Fjeld, Sta an

Bj rk

Jogging with a Quadcopter

S. Shyam Sundar, Saraswathi Bellur, Jeeyun Oh, Qian Xu, Haiyan Jia

all op

Florian Mueller, Matthew Muirhead

anage

erflo ing

indo s on a arge Displa

Xiaojun Bi, Seok-Hyung Bae, Ravin Balakrishnan

ClimbSense - Automatic Climbing Route Recognition using Wrist-worn Inertia Measurement Units

317A C14: Mobile Human-Computer Interaction 2/2 Mobile Human-Computer Interaction

Felix Kosmalla, Florian Daiber, Antonio Krüger

E6

Providing Adaptive Health Updates Across the Personal Social Network

Papers: Feeling & Communicating Emotions

Niels Henze, Enrico Rukzio

317BC C13: Methods for HCI Research 2/2

CHAIR: RONGRONG WANG

Methods for Human-Computer Interaction Research Towards Multimodal Affective Feedback - Interaction between Visual and Haptic Modalities Akshita Akshita, Harini Alagarai Sampath, Bipin Indurkhya, Eunhwa Lee, Yudong Bae

Emotions Mediated Through Mid-Air Haptics Marianna Obrist, Sriram Subramanian, Elia Gatti, Benjamin Long, Thomas Carter

In the Heat of the Moment: Subjective Interpretations of Thermal Feedback During Interaction

Sandy J J Gould, Duncan P. Brumby, Anna L. Cox, Geraldine Fitzpatrick, ettie Hoonhout, avid amas, fie aw

318A SIG: Start and Run a SIGCHI Local Chapter How and Why to Start and Run a SIGCHI Local Chapter Tuomo Kujala

318BC C16: Sketching User Experiences 2/2 Sketching User Experiences: The Hands-on Course Nicolai Marquardt, Saul Greenberg

Graham Wilson, Gavin Davidson, Stephen Brewster

EnviroPulse: Providing Feedback about the Expected Affective Valence of the Environment Deltcho Valtchanov, Mark Hancock

o CHI 2015

air

Recruiting Boards

Hall C2/C3 COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 35

TUESDAY

Matthew Louis Mauriello, Leyla Norooz, Jon E. Froehlich

Papers: Critical Design

WEDNESDAY 9:30 – 10:50

Wednesday Morning Keynote 8:30 – 9:20 David Min Hall D1 Journey to a Better Life 401

Papers: HMDs in Augmented & Virtual Reality

9:20 – 9:30 Break

403

CHAIR: TOM GROSS

Eye-Wearable Technology for Machine Maintenance: Effects of Display Position and Hands-free Operation

Displayed Uncertainty Improves Driving Experience and Behavior: The Case of Range Anxiety in an Electric Car

Xianjun Sam Zheng, Cedric Foucault, Patrik Matos da Silva, Siddharth Dasari, Tao Yang, Stuart Goose

Malte F. Jung, David Sirkin, Turgut M. Gür, Martin Steinert

Designing Information for Remediating Cognitive Biases in Decision-Making

Belt: An Unobtrusive Touch Input Device for Head-worn Displays

Yunfeng Zhang, Rachel K. E. Bellamy, Wendy A. Kellogg

David Dobbelstein, Philipp Hock, Enrico Rukzio

Quick Affective Judgments: Validation of a Method for Primed Product Comparisons

Content Destabilization for Head-Mounted Displays Felix Lauber, Sophia Cook, Andreas Butz

Jussi P. P. Jokinen, Johanna Maria Silvennoinen, Piia M. Perälä, Pertti O. Saariluoma

A Dose of Reality: Overcoming Usability Challenges in VR Head-Mounted Displays

Effects of Ad Quality & Content-Relevance on Perceived Content Quality.

Mark McGill, Daniel Boland, Roderick Murray-Smith, Stephen A. Brewster

Accuracy of Pedometry on a Head-mounted Display Ilias Apostolopoulos, Dan Coming, Eelke Folmer

Henriette Cramer

E1/E2 Papers: Player Performance & Experience in Games CHAIR: JAN D. SMEDDINCK

Level-Ups: Motorized Stilts that Simulate Stair Steps in Virtual Reality Dominik Schmidt, Rob Kovacs, Vikram Mehta, Udayan Umapathi, Sven Köhler, Lung-Pan Cheng, Patrick Baudisch

402

The Goal of Scoring: Exploring the Role of Game Performance in Educational Games

Papers: Tangible Interaction with Phones

Casper Harteveld, Steven C. Sutherland

CHAIR: SHENGDONG ZHAO

WEDNESDAY

Papers: UI Impact on Performance & Decisions

CHAIR: SHAHRAM IZADI

Moving Beyond Fun: Evaluating Serious Experience in Digital Games Ioanna Iacovides, Anna L. Cox

Acoustruments: Passive, Acoustically-Driven, Interactive Controls for Handheld Devices

Now You Can Compete With Anyone: Balancing Players of Different Skill Levels in a First-Person Shooter Game

Gierad Laput, Eric Brockmeyer, Scott E. Hudson, Chris Harrison

Rodrigo Vicencio-Moreira, Regan L. Mandryk, Carl Gutwin

HaptiCase: Back-of-Device Tactile Landmarks for Eyes-Free Absolute Indirect Touch

All about that Base: Differing Player Experiences in Video Game Genres and the Unique Case of MOBA Games

Christian Corsten, Christian Cherek, Thorsten Karrer, Jan Borchers

The Trial of Bendi in a Coffeehouse: Use of a Shape-Changing Device for a Tactile-Visual Phone Conversation Young-Woo Park, Joohee Park, Tek-Jin Nam

Spec rans ersatile aterial lassification for nteraction with Textureless, Specular and Transparent Surfaces Munehiko Sato, Shigeo Yoshida, Alex Olwal, Boxin Shi, Atsushi Hiyama, Tomohiro Tanikawa, Michitaka Hirose, Ramesh Raskar

Daniel Johnson, Lennart E. Nacke, Peta A. Wyeth

E3

Papers: Neighborhoods & Disadvantaged Communities CHAIR: KATHARINA REINECKE

Exploring Learning Ecologies among People Experiencing Homelessness Angelika Strohmayer, Rob Comber, Madeline Balaam

The Promise of the Sharing Economy among Disadvantaged Communities Tawanna R. Dillahunt, Amelia R. Malone

Practice-based Design of a Neighborhood Portal: Focusing on Elderly Tenants in a City Quarter Living Lab Claudia Müller, Dominik Hornung, Theodor Hamm, Volker Wulf

This Digital Life: A Neighborhood-Based Study of Adolescents’ Lives Online Jessica A. Pater, Andrew D. Miller, Elizabeth D. Mynatt

36 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

WEDNESDAY 9:30 – 10:50 E4

Papers: Enhanced Security with Passwords & CAPTCHAs

E7

CHAIR: SERGE EGELMAN

C18: Speech-based Interaction 1/2 Speech-based Interaction: Myths, Challenges, and Opportunities

Towards Making Random Passwords Memorable: Leveraging Users’ Cognitive Ability Through Multiple Cues

Cosmin Munteanu, Gerald Penn

307

Mahdi Nasrullah Al-Ameen, Matthew Wright, Shannon Scielzo

Papers: Experience Design for Games CHAIR: FLORIAN MUELLER

ActivPass: Your Daily Activity is Your Password Sourav Kumar Dandapat, Swadhin Pradhan, Bivas Mitra, Romit Roy Choudhury, Niloy Ganguly

Automatic Game Progression Design through Analysis of Solution Features

Constructing Secure Audio CAPTCHAs by Exploiting Differences between Humans and Machines

Eric Butler, Erik Andersen, Adam M. Smith, Sumit Gulwani, Zoran Popovic

Hendrik Meutzner, Santosh Gupta, Dorothea Kolossa

Pass the Ball: Enforced Turn-Taking in Activity Tracking

Easy to Draw, but Hard to Trace? On of the Observability of Grid-based (Un)lock Patterns

The Data Driven Lives of Wargaming Miniatures

John Rooksby, Mattias Rost, Alistair Morrison, Matthew Chalmers

Emanuel von Zezschwitz, Alexander De Luca, Philipp Janssen, Heinrich Hussmann

Dimitrios Paris Darzentas, Michael A. Brown, Martin Flintham, Steve Benford

On the Effectiveness of Pattern Lock Strength Meters – Measuring the Strength of Real World Pattern Locks

Provenance for the People: An HCI Perspective on the W3C PROV Standard through an Online Game Khaled Bachour, Richard Wetzel, Martin Flintham, Trung Dong Huynh, Tom Rodden, Luc Moreau

Youngbae Song, Geumhwan Cho, Seongyeol Oh, Hyoungshick Kim, Jun Ho Huh

E5

Papers: Accessibility at Home & on The Go

alt.chi: Arts and Phiolosphy

CHAIR: HIRONOBU TAKAGI

CHAIR: MORGAN AMES

RegionSpeak: Quick Comprehensive Spatial Descriptions of Complex Images for Blind Users

Reimagining Digital Fabrication as Performance Art

Yu Zhong, Walter S. Lasecki, Erin Brady, Jeffrey P. Bigham

Behind The Scenes at HCI’s Turn To The Arts

An Assisted Photography Framework to Help Visually Impaired Users Properly Aim a Camera

Rachel Jacobs, Steve Benford, Ewa A. Luger

Marynel Vázquez, Aaron Steinfeld

Roy Shilkrot, Jochen Huber, Wong Meng Ee, Pattie Maes, Suranga Chandima Nanayakkara

Collaborative Accessibility: How Blind and Sighted Companions Co-Create Accessible Home Spaces Stacy M. Branham, Shaun K. Kane

Papers: Telepresence Video, Robots, and Walls CHAIR: JOHN TANG

Laura Devendorf, Daniela K. Rosner

ouc f e e Does ser ation Reflect aptic Metaphors In Art Drawing? Suk Kyoung Choi, Steve DiPaola

Games Against Health: A Player-Centered Design Philosophy Conor Linehan, Sabine Harrer, Ben J. Kirman, Shaun W. Lawson, Marcus Carter

317A C17: Intro to Creating Musical Interfaces 1/2 Introduction to Creating Musical Interfaces Michael J. Lyons, Sidney S. Fels

318BC C19: Designing Surveys for HCI Research 1/2

ImmerseBoard: Immersive Telepresence Experience using a Digital Whiteboard

Designing Surveys for HCI Research Hendrik Müller, Aaron Sedley

Keita Higuchi,Yinpeng Chen, Philip A. Chou, Zhengyou Zhang, Zicheng Liu

Can You See Me Now? How Field of View Affects Collaboration in Robotic Telepresence Steven J. Johnson, Irene Rae, Bilge Mutlu, Leila A. Takayama

Sharing Domestic Life through Long-Term Video Connections Carman Neustaedter, Carolyn Pang, Azadeh Forghani, Erick Oduor, Serena Hillman, Tejinder K. Judge, Michael Massimi, Saul Greenberg

Accuracy of Deictic Gestures to Support Telepresence on Wall-sized Displays Ignacio Avellino, Cédric Fleury, Michel Beaudouin-Lafon

WIP Posters Rotation 2 Interactivity CHI 2015

List on page 59 List on page 62

Hall C2/C3 Hall C2/C3

10:50 – 11:30 Coffee Break Hall C2/C3

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 37

WEDNESDAY

FingerReader: A Wearable Device to Explore Printed Text on the Go

E6

308

WEDNESDAY 11:30 – 12:50 401

Papers: Digital & Materials Fabrication

E1/E2 Papers: Art & Performance

CHAIR: STEFANIE MUELLER

CHAIR: THECLA SCHIPHORST

Foundations of Materials Experience: An Approach for HCI

What if HCI Becomes a Fashion Driven Discipline?

Elisa Giaccardi, Elvin Karana

Yue Pan, Erik Stolterman

PaperPulse: An Integrated Approach for Embedding Electronics in Paper Designs

The Smartphone Project - An Augmented Dance Performance

Raf Ramakers, Kashyap Todi, Kris Luyten

Leif Oppermann, Clemens Putschli, Constantin Brosda, Oleksandr Lobunets, Fabien Prioville

Data-Things: Digital Fabrication Situated within Participatory Data Translation Activities

I’d Hide You: Performing Live Broadcasting in Public Stuart Reeves, Christian Greiffenhagen, Martin Flintham, Steve Benford, Matt Adams, Ju Row Farr, Nicholas Tandavantij

Bettina Nissen, John Bowers

Being t e ac ine Reconfiguring genc and ontrol in Hybrid Fabrication

Making the Invisible Visible: Design to Support the Documentation of Participatory Arts Experiences

Laura Devendorf, Kimiko Ryokai

Pa ers ac i e

ifica i ns f r P nes

Jonathan Hook, Rachel Clarke, John McCarthy, Kate Anderson, Jane Dudman, Peter Wright

eara es

CHAIR: MAX WILSON

Trap it! : A Playful Human-Biology Interaction for a Museum Installation Seung Ah Lee, Engin Bumbacher, Alice M. Chung, Nate Cira, Byron Walker, Ji Young Park, Barry Starr, Paulo Blikstein, Ingmar H. Riedel-Kruse

OmniVib: Towards Cross-body Spatiotemporal Vibrotactile Notifications for o ile ones Jessalyn Alvina, Simon T. Perrault, Thijs Roumen, Shengdong Zhao, Maryam Azh, Morten Fjeld

NotiRing omparati e Stud of Notification for Wearable Interactive Rings

E3

annels

Thijs Roumen, Simon T. Perrault, Shengdong Zhao

Modeling Ideology and Predicting Policy Change with Social Media: Case of Same-Sex Marriage

Skin Drag Displays: Dragging a Physical Tactor across the User’s Skin Produces a Stronger Tactile Stimulus than Vibrotactile

Amy X. Zhang, Scott Counts

“Is it Weird to Still Be a Virgin?:” Anonymous, Locally Targeted Questions on Facebook Confession Boards

WEDNESDAY

Alexandra Ion, Edward Jay Wang, Patrick Baudisch

Cruise Control for Pedestrians: Controlling Walking Direction using Electrical Muscle Stimulation

403

Papers: Bridging People & Beliefs with Social Media CHAIR: N. SADAT SHAMI

Jeremy Birnholtz, Nicholas Aaron Ross Merola, Arindam Paul

Max Pfeiffer, Tim Dünte, Stefan Schneegass, Florian Alt, Michael Rohs

Social Media Dynamics of Global Co-presence During the 2014 FIFA World Cup

Affordance++: Allowing Objects to Communicate Dynamic Use

Jae Won Kim, Dongwoo Kim, Brian Keegan, Joon Hee Kim, Suin Kim, Alice Oh

Pedro Lopes, Patrik Jonell, Patrick Baudisch

Bridges into the Unknown: Personalizing Connections to Little-known Countries

Papers: Automation and Interactive Feedback

Yelena Mejova, Javier Borge-Holthoefer, Ingmar Weber

CHAIR: DAVIDE SPANO

E4 “Automation Surprise” in Aviation: Real-Time Solutions Frederic Dehais, Vsevolod Peysakhovich, Sébastien Scannella, Jennifer Fongue, Thibault Gateau

Special: Foundations & Trends in HCI 2 CHAIR: YVONNE ROGERS

Choice Architecture for Human-Computer Interaction

The Role of Environmental Predictability and Costs in Relying on Automation

Anthony Jameson, Bettina Berendt, Silvia Gabrielli, Federica Cena, Cristina Gena, Fabiana Vernero, Katharina Reinecke

Steven C. Sutherland, Casper Harteveld, Michael E.Young

Designing for Healthy Lifestyles: Design Considerations for Mobile Technologies to Encourage Consumer Health and Wellness

An Architecture for Generating Interactive Feedback in Probabilistic User Interfaces Julia Schwarz, Jennifer Mankoff, Scott E. Hudson

Sunny Consolvo, Predrag V. Klasnja, David W. McDonald, James A. Landay

IDSense: A Human Object Interaction Detection System Based on Passive UHF RFID Hanchuan Li, Can Ye, Alanson P. Sample

38 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

WEDNESDAY 11:30 – 12:50 Pa ers

an ified e f f r

ans

Pe s

307

CHAIR: RODRIGO DE OLIVEIRA

Change of Heart: Emotion Tracking to Promote Behavior Change Victoria Hollis, Artie Konrad, Steve Whittaker

Beyond Self-Tracking and Reminders: Designing Smartphone Apps That Support Habit Formation Katarzyna Stawarz, Anna L. Cox, Ann Blandford

Problematising Upstream Technology through Speculative Design e ase of Quantified ats and Dogs Shaun Lawson, Ben Kirman, Conor Linehan, Tom Feltwell, Lisa Hopkins

Re-Centering Multispecies Practices: A Canine Interface for Cancer Detection Dogs Clara Mancini, Rob Harris, Brendan Aengenheister, Claire Guest

E6

Papers: Visualizing Statistics & Graphs CHAIR: BENJAMIN BACH

Panel: Transdisciplinary Design in Education Transdisciplinary Interaction Design in Design Education Eli Blevis, Ilpo K. Koskinen, KunPyo Lee, Susanne Bødker, Lin-Lin Chen, Youn-kyung Lim, Huaxin Wei, Ron Wakkary

308

Special: Human Computer Interaction Journal 2 CHAIR: SCOTT R. KLEMMER

What Designers Talk About When They Talk About Context Jared S. Bauer, Mark W. Newman, Julie A. Kientz

Multi-sited Design: An Analytical Lens for Transnational HCI Amanda M. Williams, Silvia Lindtner, ken t. anderson, Paul Dourish

A Design Thinking Rationality Framework: Framing and Solving Design Problems in Early Concept Generation Jieun Kim, Hokyoung Ryu

A Situated Approach of Roles and Participation in Open Source Software Communities Flore Barcellini, Francoise Detienne, Jean-marie Burkhardt

317A C17: Intro to Creating Musical Interfaces 2/2 (s|qu)eries: Visual Regular Expressions for Querying and Exploring Event Sequences Emanuel Zgraggen, Steven M. Drucker, Danyel Fisher, Robert DeLine

Statsplorer: Guiding Novices in Statistical Analysis Chat Wacharamanotham, Krishna Subramanian, Sarah Theres Völkel, Jan Borchers

Investigating the Direct Manipulation of Ranking Tables for Time Navigation Romain Vuillemot, Charles Perin

Dynamic Opacity Optimization for Scatter Plots Justin Matejka, Fraser Anderson, George Fitzmaurice

Eric D. Ragan, John R. Goodall, Albert Tung

E7

Michael J. Lyons, Sidney S. Fels

317BC Special: Student Research Competition Finals Student Research Competition Thad Starner, Regan L. Mandryk, Tilde Bekker, John Tang, Xiangshi Ren

318A SIG: Online Deliberative Processes and Tech Design for Online Deliberative Processes and Technologies: Towards a Multidisciplinary Research Agenda Weiyu Zhang, Lu Xiao, Anna Przybylska, Anna De Liddo, Gregorio Convertino, Todd Davies, Mark Klein

318BC C19: Designing Surveys for HCI Research 2/2 Designing Surveys for HCI Research Hendrik Müller, Aaron Sedley

C18: Speech-based Interaction 2/2 Speech-based Interaction: Myths, Challenges, and Opportunities Cosmin Munteanu, Gerald Penn

12:50 – 14:30 Lunch Break Restaurants, bars & cafés available nearby

CHI 2015

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 39

WEDNESDAY

Evaluating How Level of Detail of Visual History Affects Process Memory

Introduction to Creating Musical Interfaces

WEDNESDAY 14:30 – 15:50 401

Special: SIGCHI Lifetime Practice Award

E1/E2 Papers: Kids Social, Emotional & Special Needs

CHAIR: JACOB ROBERT

CHAIR: KONSTANTINOS KAZAKOS

SIGCHI Lifetime Practice Award Talk Susan Dray

402

Designing Social and Emotional Skills Training: The Challenges and Opportunities for Technology Support

Papers: Understanding Everyday Use of Mobile Phones

Petr Slovák, Ran Gilad-Bachrach, Geraldine Fitzpatrick

CHAIR: MATT JONES

Designing Autism Research for Maximum Impact Elizabeth J. Carter, Jennifer Hyde

Demand in My Pocket: Mobile Devices and the Data Connectivity Marshalled in Support of Everyday Practice

Networked Empowerment on Facebook Groups for Parents of Children with Special Needs

Carolynne Lord, Mike Hazas, Adrian K. Clear, Oliver Bates, Rosalind Whittam, Janine Morley, Adrian Friday

Tawfi Ammari, Sarita Schoenebeck

An In-Situ Study of Mobile App & Mobile Search Interactions

Toward 3D-Printed Movable Tactile Pictures for Children with Visual Impairments

Juan Pablo Carrascal, Karen Church

Jeeeun Kim, Tom Yeh

The Composition and Use of Modern Mobile Phonebooks

Multimodal Analysis in Participatory Design with Children: A Primary School Case Study

Frank R. Bentley,Ying-Yu Chen

To Call or to Recall? That’s the Research Question

Jan Derboven, Maarten Van Mechelen, Karin Slegers

Juan Pablo Carrascal, Rodrigo de Oliveira, Mauro Cherubini

403

CHAIR: ENRICO RUKZIO

Effects of Display Size and Resolution on User Behavior and Insight Acquisition in Visual Exploration Khairi Reda, Andrew E. Johnson, Michael E. Papka, Jason Leigh

Subjective and Objective Effects of Tablet’s Pixel Density Lars Lischke, Sven Mayer, Katrin Wolf, Alireza Sahami, Niels Henze

Push-Edge and Slide-Edge: Scrolling by Pushing Against the Viewport Edge Sylvain Malacria, Jonathan Aceituno, Philip Quinn, Géry Casiez, Andy Cockburn, Nicolas Roussel

WEDNESDAY

The Fun-Serious Ambiguity in Educational Game

Papers: GUI Size, Resolution & Layout

Investigating Visual Feedforward for Target Expansion Techniques Maxime Guillon, François Leitner, Laurence Nigay

GACA: Group-Aware Command-based Arrangement of Graphic Elements Pengfei Xu, Hongbo Fu, Chiew-Lan Tai, Takeo Igarashi

40 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

Jan Derboven, Bieke Zaman, Jorick Vissers, David Geerts, Dirk De Grooff

E3

Papers: HCI for Civic Engagement CHAIR: JOHN VINES

HCI, Civic Engagement & Trust Mike Harding, Bran nowles, Nigel avies, Mark Rouncefield

Factful: Engaging Taxpayers in the Public Discussion of a Government Budget Juho Kim, Eun-Young Ko, Jonghyuk Jung, Chang Won Lee, Nam Wook Kim, Jihee Kim

Contesting the City: Enacting the Political Through Digitally Supported Urban Walks Clara Crivellaro, Rob Comber, Martyn Dade-Robertson, Simon J. Bowen, Peter Wright, Patrick Olivier

Data-in-Place: Thinking through the Relations Between Data and Community Alex S. Taylor, Siân E. Lindley, Tim Regan, David Sweeney, Vasillis Vlachokyriakos, Lillie Grainger, Jessica Lingel

CHI 2015

WEDNESDAY 14:30 – 15:50 E4

Papers: Security Feedback & Warnings

E6

CHAIR: ALEXANDER DE LUCA

CHAIR: MARTIN HALVEY

Scaling the Security Wall: Developing a Security Behavior Intentions Scale (SeBIS)

SwitchBack: Using Focus and Saccade Tracking to Guide Users’ Attention for Mobile Task Resumption

Serge Egelman, Eyal Peer

Alexander Mariakakis, Mayank Goel, Md Tanvir Islam Aumi, Shwetak N. Patel, Jacob O. Wobbrock

How Polymorphic Warnings Reduce Habituation in the Brain—Insights from an fMRI Study

EyeBookmark: Assisting Recovery from Interruption during Reading

Bonnie Brinton Anderson, C. Brock Kirwan, David Eargle, Jeffrey L. Jenkins, Seth Howard, Anthony Vance

Jaemin Jo, Bohyoung Kim, Jinwook Seo

Improving SSL Warnings: Comprehension and Adherence

The Effects of Chronic Multitasking on Analytical Writing

Adrienne Porter Felt, Alex Ainslie, Robert W. Reeder, Sunny Consolvo, Somas Thyagaraja, Alan Bettes, Helen Harris, Jeff Grimes

Danielle M. Lottridge, Christine Rosakranse, Catherine S. Oh, Sean J. Westwood, Katherine A. Baldoni, Abrey S. Mann, Clifford I. Nass

A Spoonful of Sugar? The Impact of Guidance and Feedback on Password-Creation Behavior

What Makes Interruptions Disruptive? A Process-Model Account of the Effects of the Problem State Bottleneck on Task Interruption and Resumption

Richard Shay, Lujo Bauer, Nicolas Christin, Lorrie Faith Cranor, Alain Forget, Saranga Komanduri, Michelle L. Mazurek, William Melicher, Sean M. Segreti, Blase Ur

E5

Papers: Task Interruption & Resumption

Jelmer P. Borst, Niels A. Taatgen, Hedderik van Rijn

Papers: Wellness & Wearables

Interruptibility of Software Developers and its Prediction Using Psycho-Physiological Sensors

CHAIR: MARIANNA OBRIST

Manuela Züger, Thomas Fritz

E7

C22: Rapid Design Labs - Design-Led Innovation 1/2

Snot, Sweat, Pain, Mud, and Snow - Performance and Experience in the Use of Sports Watches

Rapid Design Labs—A Tool to Turbocharge Design-Led Innovation

Jakob Tholander, Stina Nylander

Jim E. Nieters, Carola Fellenz Thompson

onte tual nfluences on t e Use and Non Use of Digital Technology While Exercising at the Gym

307

ears of alt c i Reflections and

Misha Patel, Aisling Ann O’Kane

TastyBeats: Designing Palatable Representations of Physical Activity Rohit Ashok Khot, Jeewon Lee, Deepti Aggarwal, Larissa Hjorth, Florian ‘Floyd’ Mueller

Ana Tajadura-Jiménez, Maria Basia, Ophelia Deroy, Merle Fairhurst, Nicolai Marquardt, Nadia Bianchi-Berthouze

utloo

Morgan G. Ames, Silvia Lindtner, Barry Brown, Daniela K. Rosner, Sidney S. Fels, Roel Vertegaal

308

C20: Designing Wearable Interfaces 1/2 The Glass Class: Designing Wearable Interfaces Mark Billinghurst, Dr. Thad Starner

317A C21: Experience Sampling to Collect Deep Data 1/2 Using Experience Sampling Methodology to Collect Deep Data About Your Users Kathy K. Baxter, Anna Avrekh, Bob Evans

317BC Special: Student Design Competition Finals Student Design Competition Elisa Giaccardi, Will Odom, Zhiyong Fu, Jung-Joo Lee

318BC C23: Conceptual Models: Core to Good Design 1/2 Conceptual Models: Core to Good Design Jeff A. Johnson

WIP Posters Rotation 2 Interactivity CHI 2015

List on page 59 List on page 62

Hall C2/C3 Hall C2/C3

15:50 – 16:30 Coffee Break Hall C2/C3

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 41

WEDNESDAY

As Light as your Footsteps: Altering Walking Sounds to Change Perceived Body Weight, Emotional State and Gait

Panel: 10 Years of alt.chi

WEDNESDAY 16:30 – 17:50 401

Papers: Using Random Body Parts for Input

E1/E2 Papers: HCI at Home

CHAIR: PATRICK BAUDISCH

CHAIR: DAVID GEERTS

iSkin: Flexible, Stretchable and Visually Customizable On-Body Touch Sensors for Mobile Computing

Investigating Genres and Perspectives in HCI Research on the Home

Martin Weigel, Tong Lu, Gilles Bailly, Antti Oulasvirta, Carmel Majidi, Jürgen Steimle

Audrey Desjardins, Ron Wakkary, William Odom

Building Change: Constructive Design of Smart Domestic Environments for Goal Achievement

Cyclops: Wearable and Single-Piece Full-Body Gesture Input Devices

Ryan Brotman, Winslow Burleson, Jodi Forlizzi, William Heywood, Jisoo Lee

Liwei Chan, Chi-Hao Hsieh,Yi-Ling Chen, Shuo Yang, Da-Yuan Huang, Rong-Hao Liang, Bing-Yu Chen

uCap: An Internet Data Management Tool for the Home Marshini Chetty, Hyojoon Kim, Srikanth Sundaresan, Sam Burnett, Nick Feamster, W. Keith Edwards

Bod print Biometric User dentification on o ile De ices Using the Capacitive Touchscreen to Scan Body Parts

Mediating Attention for Second Screen Companion Content

Christian Holz, Senaka Buthpitiya, Marius Knaust

NailO: Fingernails as an Input Surface Hsin-Liu (Cindy) Kao, Artem Dementyev, Joseph A. Paradiso, Chris Schmandt

Exploring Subtle Foot Plantar-based Gestures with Sock-placed Pressure Sensors

Timothy Neate, Matt Jones, Michael Evans

E3

Papers: Voting & Volunteerism CHAIR: ANDRES MONROY-HERNANDEZ

Koumei Fukahori, Daisuke Sakamoto, Takeo Igarashi

402

Social Media Effectiveness for Public Engagement: Example of Small Nonprofits

Papers: Brain & Physiological Data use for HCI CHAIR: JACOB ROBERT

Youyang Hou, Cliff Lampe

Exploring Barriers to the Adoption of Mobile Technologies for Volunteer Data Collection Campaigns

lassification ccurac from t e erspecti e of t e User Real-Time Interaction with Physiological Computing

Sunyoung Kim, Jennifer Mankoff, Eric Paulos

Stephen H. Fairclough, Alexander J. Karran, Kiel Gilleade

“Everyone Is Talking about It!”: A Distributed Approach to Urban Voting Technology and Visualisations

Measurable Decision Making with GSR and Pupillary Analysis for Intelligent User Interface

.

Lisa Koeman, Vaiva Kalnikaite,Yvonne Rogers

WEDNESDAY

Jianlong Zhou, Jinjun Sun, Fang Chen,Yang Wang, Ronnie Taib, Ahmad Khawaji, Zhidong Li

Design Challenges in Supporting Distributed Knowledge: An Examination of Organizing Elections

Designing Implicit Interfaces for Physiological Computing: Guidelines and Lessons Learned using fNIRS Erin Treacy Solovey, Daniel A. Afergan, Evan M. Peck, Samuel W. Hincks, Robert J.K. Jacob

Examining the Reliability of Using fNIRS in Realistic HCI Settings for Spatial and Verbal Tasks Horia A. Maior, Matthew Pike, Sarah Sharples, Max L. Wilson

403

Papers: Software Engineering Tools CHAIR: FENG TIAN

StructJumper: A Tool to Help Blind Programmers Navigate and Understand the Structure of Code Catherine M. Baker, Lauren R. Milne, Richard E. Ladner

OverCode: Visualizing Variation in Student Solutions to Programming Problems at Scale Elena L. Glassman, Jeremy Scott, Rishabh Singh, Philip J. Guo, Robert C. Miller

An Interactive System for Data Structure Development Jibin Ou, Martin Vechev, Otmar Hilliges

Nina Boulus-Rødje, Pernille Bjorn

E4

Papers: Socio-Political Interactions CHAIR: LIANG GOU

The Politics of Measurement and Action Kathleen H. Pine, Max Liboiron

Beyond Participatory Production: Digitally Supporting Grassroots Documentary avid Philip Green, Simon Bowen, hristopher Newell, Guy Schofield, Tom Bartindale, Clara Crivellaro, Alia Sheikh, Peter C. Wright, Patrick Olivier

Designing Political Deliberation Environments to Support Interactions in the Public Sphere Bryan Semaan, Heather Faucett, Scott P. Robertson, Misa Maruyama, Sara Douglas

Debating Poverty Porn on Twitter: Social Media as a Place for Everyday Socio-Political Talk Phil Brooker, John Vines, Selina Sutton, Julie Barnett, Tom Feltwell, Shaun Lawson

Polymorphic Blocks: Formalism-Inspired UI for Structured Connectors Sorin Lerner, Stephen R. Foster, William G. Griswold

42 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

WEDNESDAY 16:30 – 17:50 E5

Papers: Understanding Health through Online Behavior

E7

CHAIR: MARY P. CZERWINSKI

Recognizing Depression from Twitter Activity Sho Tsugawa,Yusuke Kikuchi, Fumio Kishino, Kosuke Nakajima, Yuichi Itoh, Hiroyuki Ohsaki

Rapid Design Labs—A Tool to Turbocharge Design-Led Innovation Jim E. Nieters, Carola Fellenz Thompson

307

Two-Level Personas for Nested Design Spaces

Sofiane Abbar, elena Mejova, ngmar Weber

Anke Dittmar, Maximilian Hensch

Rethinking the Mobile Food Journal: Exploring Opportunities for Lightweight Photo-Based Capture

The Work of Mad Men that Makes the Methods of Math Men Work: Practically Occasioned Segment Design

Felicia Cordeiro, Elizabeth Bales, Erin Cherry, James Fogarty

Michael F. Clarke

Collective Sensemaking in Online Health Forums

Flow of Competence in UX Design Practice

Lena Mamykina, Drashko Nakikj, Noemie Elhadad

Colin M. Gray, Austin L. Toombs, Shad D. Gross

Papers: Natural User Interfaces for InfoVis

Usees

CHAIR: BONGSHIN LEE

Opportunities and Challenges for Data Physicalization Yvonne Jansen, Pierre Dragicevic, Petra Isenberg, Jason Alexander, Abhijit Karnik, Johan Kildal, Sriram Subramanian, Kasper Hornbæk

Exploring Interactions with Physically Dynamic Bar Charts

Papers: UX Methods 4 CHAIR: BENJAMIN V. HANRAHAN

You Tweet What You Eat: Studying Food Consumption Through Twitter

E6

C22: Rapid Design Labs - Design-Led Innovation 2/2

Eric P. S. Baumer

308

C20: Designing Wearable Interfaces 2/2 The Glass Class: Designing Wearable Interfaces Mark Billinghurst, Dr. Thad Starner

317A C21: Experience Sampling to Collect Deep Data 2/2

Faisal Taher, John Hardy, Abhijit Karnik, Christian Weichel,Yvonne Jansen, Kasper Hornbæk, Jason Alexander

Using Experience Sampling Methodology to Collect Deep Data About Your Users

Evaluating the Memorability of Physical Visualizations

Kathy K. Baxter, Anna Avrekh, Bob Evans

Simon Stusak, Jeannette Schwarz, Andreas Butz

Personality as a Predictor of User Strategy: How Locus of Control Affects Search Strategies on Tree Visualizations Alvitta Ottley, Huahai Yang, Remco Chang

Theophanis Tsandilas, Anastasia Bezerianos, Thibaut Jacob

Student Game Competition Casper Harteveld, Peter Lee, Seth Cooper

318A SIG: Understanding Sports Understanding Sports-HCI by Going Jogging at CH Florian Mueller, Joe Marshall, Rohit Ashok Khot, Stina Nylander, Jakob Tholander

318BC C23: Conceptual Models: Core to Good Design 2/2 Conceptual Models: Core to Good Design Jeff A. Johnson

CHI 2015

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 43

WEDNESDAY

SketchSliders: Sketching Widgets for Visual Exploration on Wall Displays

317BC Special: Student Game Competition Finals

THURSDAY 9:30 – 10:50 Thursday Morning Keynote, ACM-W Athena Lecture 8:30 – 9:20 Susan T. Dumais, ACM Fellow Hall D1 Large-Scale Behavioral Data: Potential and Pitfalls 401

Papers: Augmented & Virtual Reality in the Real World

403

Papers: Programming Environments

CHAIR: MORTEN FJELD

CHAIR: JOONHWAN LEE

Substitutional Reality: Using the Physical Environment to Design Virtual Reality Experiences

onstructing onceptual no ledge rtefacts Activity Patterns in the Ontology Authoring Process

Adalberto L. Simeone, Eduardo Velloso, Hans Gellersen

Markel Vigo, Caroline Jay, Robert Stevens

The Semantic Paintbrush: Interactive 3D Mapping and Recognition in Large Outdoor Spaces

Helping Users Bootstrap Ontologies: An Empirical Investigation Yuhao Zhang, Tania Tudorache, Matthew Horridge, Mark A. Musen

Ondrej Miksik, Vibhav Vineet, Morten Lidegaard, Ram Prasaath, Matthias Niessner, Stuart Golodetz, Stephen L. Hicks, Patrick Perez, Shahram Izadi, Philip HS Torr

Spreads eet

odel for andling Streaming Data

Kerry Shih-Ping Chang, Brad A. Myers

User Defined ame nput for Smart lasses in u lic Space

e t li e ntegrated Design n ironment for inetic pograp

Ying-Chao Tung, Chun-Yen Hsu, Han-Yu Wang, Silvia Chyou, Jhe-Wei Lin, PEI-JUNG WU, Andries Valstar, Mike Y. Chen

Jun Kato, Tomoyasu Nakano, Masataka Goto

Retargeting Technical Documentation to Augmented Reality

Mikko Rajanen, Netta Iivari

Peter Mohr, Bernhard Kerbl, Michael Donoser, Dieter Schmalstieg, Denis Kalkofen

402

9:20 – 9:30 Break

o er mpo erment and

pen Source Usa ilit

E1/E2 Papers: Digital Collections, Practice & Legacy CHAIR: WILL ODOM

Papers: Gesture Elicitation & Recognition CHAIR: NIELS HENZE

Digital Collections and Digital Collecting Practices Rebecca D. Watkins, Abigail Sellen, Siân E. Lindley

Using Soft onstraints to Reduce egac and erformance Bias in esture licitation Studies

edium ccess and are asting ects

Jaime Ruiz, Daniel Vogel

Unistro e esture Recognition Approximation and Alignment

roug

at inds of

ol line

Jane Gruning, Julia Bullard, Melissa Ocepek

estures for ast ode

Doménique van Gennip, Elise van den Hoven, Panos Markopoulos

uratorial gents o S stems S ape ur Understanding of ersonal and amilial Digital nformation

Hao Lu,Yang Li

Rebecca Gulotta, Alex Sciuto, Aisling G. Kelliher, Jodi L. Forlizzi

ptimi ing ouc screen e oards for esture ping Brian A. Smith, Xiaojun Bi, Shumin Zhai

E3

Papers: Multilingual Communication R

Design and aluation of a Self orrecting esture nterface ased on rror otentials from Felix Putze, Christoph Amma, Tanja Schultz

ects

Things That Make Us Reminisce: Everyday Memory Cues as pportunities for nteraction Design

Vittorio Fuccella, Gennaro Costagliola

esture n na ling l a s n ouc o ile ccess from t e De ice Stand

solescence

U N

N

mpro ing ultilingual olla oration Displa ing o Non-native Speakers Use Automated Transcripts and Bilingual Dictionaries Ge Gao, Naomi Yamashita, Ari MJ Hautasaari, Susan R. Fussell

THURSDAY

ffect of ac ine ranslation in nterlingual on ersation essons from a ormati e Stud Kotaro Hara, Shamsi T. Iqbal

Supporting t e odern ol glot ultilingual Searc nterfaces

omparison of

Ben Steichen, Luanne Freund

Ne

nteraction ools for reser ing an

ld anguage

Beryl Plimmer, Liang He, Tariq Zaman, Kasun Karunanayaka, Alvin W.Yeo, Garen Jengan, Rachel Blagojevic, Ellen Yi-Luen Do

44 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

THURSDAY 9:30 – 10:50 E4

Papers: Empowering Users

E7

CHAIR: MAARTEN THISSEN

C25: Interaction Design for Reading Devices 1/1 nteraction Design for Reading De ices and pps Jennifer Pearson, Simon Robinson

Quantif ing t e reati it Support of Digital ools t roug the Creativity Support Index

307

o

Erin Cherry, Celine Latulipe

o ile De ices are Re olutioni ing User nteraction

Hwanyong Lee, Victor Erukhimov, Neil Trevett, Alon Oh-bach, Tom Olson

i ed nitiati e pproac es to lo al diting in Slide are Darren Edge, Sumit Gulwani, Natasa Milic-Frayling, Mohammad Raza, Reza Adhitya Saputra, Chao Wang, Koji Yatani

308

Case Studies: Observation & Interaction R

“For Telling” the Present: Using the Delphi Method to Understand ersonal nformation anagement ractices

R N RB N

e t inger ractical allenges in t e Design of a Multitouch Audio Appliance

William Jones, Robert Capra, Anne Diekema, Jaime Teevan, Manuel Pérez-Quiñones, Jesse David Dinneen, Bradley Hemminger

Wolfgang Beer, Christian Salomon, Mario Winterer, Karl Putzhammer, Bernhard Schauer, Thomas Rechberger

n t e enefits of pro iding ersioning support for end users: An empirical study

oto Based ser ation t e e a ior of t e user

Sandeep Kaur Kuttal, Anita Sarma, Gregg Rothermel

E5

Panel: Mobile Devices Revolutionizing UI

et od

o to uic l o ser e

Papers: Accessibility for Vision Impaired Users

HeeJeong Son, Hyunsoo Kim, Hyojung Kim

CHAIR: XIAOJUAN MA

Representation Strategies Adopted by Participants in a opulation Stereot pe unt ase Stud for con Design Avijit Sengupta, Klarissa T.T. Chang, Maffee Peng-Hui Wan, Wen Yong Chua

ri ac oncerns and Be a iors of eople it Visual Impairments

en alue is reater t an System in Uganda

Tousif Ahmed, Roberto Hoyle, Kay Connelly, David Crandall, Apu Kapadia

317BC C24: Vision-Driven: Beyond Tangible Bits 1/1 ision Dri en Be ond angi le Bits o ards Radical toms

olour D mpro ing olour dentification for eople it Impaired Colour Vision David R. Flatla, Alan R. Andrade, Ross D. Teviotdale, Dylan L. Knowles, Craig Stewart

icropa ment

Rasmus Prentow, Rasmus Steiniche, Simone D. Johansen, Jeni Paay, Ivan Aaen, Jesper Kjeldskov

articipator Design of erapeutic ideo ames for oung eople it Neurological ision mpairment Jonathan Waddington, Conor Linehan, Kathrin Gerling, Kieran Hicks, Timothy L. Hodgson

one

Hiroshi Ishii, Daniel Leithinger, Sean Follmer, Lining Yao, Jifei Ou

318BC C26: Introduction to Positive Computing 1/1

olorBless ugmenting isual nformation for olor lind eople it Binocular uster ffect

Introduction to Positive Computing – Technology that fosters ell eing Rafael A. Calvo, Dorian Peters

Soon Hau Chua, Haimo Zhang, Muhammad Hammad, Shengdong Zhao, Sahil Goyal, Karan Singh

E6

Papers: Interactive & Multi-Surface Maps CHAIR: BRENT HECHT

erra uide Design and aluation of a ulti Surface n ironment for errain isi ilit nal sis Matthew Oskamp, Christophe Bortolaso, Robin Harrap, T.C. Nicholas Graham

ig t eig t Relief S earing for n anced errain erception on Interactive Maps Wesley Willett, Bernhard Jenny, Tobias Isenberg, Pierre Dragicevic

aluation of nteracti e

THURSDAY

n

ap omparison ec ni ues

María-Jesús Lobo, Emmanuel Pietriga, Caroline Appert

Ethermap - Real-time Collaborative Map Editing Thore Fechner, Dennis Wilhelm, Christian Kray

Interactivity CHI 2015

List on page 62

Hall C2/C3

10:50 – 11:30 Coffee Break Hall C2/C3 COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 45

THURSDAY 11:30 – 12:50 401

Papers: Robot Personalities R

403

UN

CHAIR: JUHO KIM

oo uc umanness for uman Ro ot nteraction Exposure to Highly Humanlike Robots Elicits Aversive Responding in Observers

ro iding dapti e Support in an nteracti e Simulation for Learning: An Experimental Evaluation Samad Kardan, Cristina Conati

Megan Strait, Lara Vujovic, Victoria Floerke, Matthias Scheutz, Heather Urry

oo i e e atc ing Ro ot ersonalit Increase Motivation

nteracti e loud perimentation for Biolog An Online Education Case Study

ia a e to

Zahid Hossain, Xiaofan Jin, Engin W. Bumbacher, Alice M. Chung, Stephen Koo, Jordan D. Shapiro, Cynthia Y. Truong, Sean Choi, Nathan D. Orloff, Paulo Blikstein, Ingmar H. Riedel-Kruse

Sean Andrist, Bilge Mutlu, Adriana Tapus

e Social mpact of a Ro ot o Industrial Settings

ining emories Designing a latform to Support Social Media Based Writing

or er in

Allison Sauppé, Bilge Mutlu

John Sadauskas, Daragh Byrne, Robert K. Atkinson

Ro ots anca es and omputer ames Designing Serious ames for Ro ot mitation earning

ait earning e eraging Language Education

Benjamin Walther-Franks, Jan David Smeddinck, Peter Szmidt, Andrei Haidu, Michael Beetz, Rainer Malaka

402

Papers: MOOCS & e-Learning

Papers: Mid-Air Gestures and Interaction R

ait ime for Second

Carrie J. Cai, Philip J. Guo, James Glass, Robert C. Miller

E1/E2 Papers: Understanding Gamers CHAIR: TONI-JAN KEITH MONSERRAT

N

asters of ontrol Be a ioral atterns of Simultaneous Unit roup anipulation in Star raft

ccurate Ro ust and le i le Real time and rac ing Toby Sharp, Cem Keskin, Duncan Robertson, Jonathan Taylor, Jamie Shotton, David Kim, Christoph Rhemann, Ido Leichter, Alon Vinnikov,Yichen Wei, Daniel Freedman, Pushmeet Kohli, Eyal Krupka, Andrew Fitzgibbon, Shahram Izadi

Eddie Q.Yan, Jeff Huang, Gifford K. Cheung

n estigating t e De terit of Mid-Air Text Entry

Daniel Johnson, Peta Wyeth, Madison Clark, Christopher Watling

ooperati e ame la it atars and gents Differences in Brain cti it and t e perience of la

ulti inger nput for

amining ame

orld opolog

ersonali ation

Srinath Sridhar, Anna Maria Feit, Christian Theobalt, Antti Oulasvirta

Sauvik Das, Alexander E. Zook, Mark O. Riedl

Myopoint: Pointing and Clicking Using Forearm Mounted Electromyography and Inertial Motion Sensors

Chris Preist, Robert Jones

e Use of ames as

Faizan Haque, Mathieu Nancel, Daniel Vogel

Haewoon Kwak, Jeremy Blackburn, Seungyeop Han

Jie Song, Fabrizio Pece, Gábor Sörös, Marion Koelle, Otmar Hilliges

Anusha Withana, Roshan Peiris, Nipuna Samarasekara, Suranga Nanayakkara

oti ation in ducation

Exploring Cyberbullying and Other Toxic Behavior in Team ompetition nline ames

oint stimation of D and osition and estures from onocular ideo for o ile nteraction Sense na ling S allo Dept esture Recognition for reater nput pressi it on Smart eara les

trinisic

E3

Papers: Bridging Communities CHAIR: EDWARD CUTRELL

omputer na led ro ect Spaces onnecting it alestinian Refugees across amp Boundaries George Yerousis, Konstantin Aal, Thomas von Rekowski, David William Randall, Markus Rohde, Volker Wulf

ransnationalism ndigenous no ledge and ec nolog nsig ts from t e en an Diaspora

THURSDAY

Kagonya Awori, Wally Smith, Frank Vetere

Collective Intelligence in Computer-Mediated Collaboration merges in Different onte ts and ultures David Engel, Anita Williams Woolley, Ishani Aggarwal, Christopher F. Chabris, Masamichi Takahashi, Keiichi Nemoto, Carolin Kaiser,Young Ji Kim, Thomas W. Malone

oogle

ommunities as la as and opic Boards

Michael J. Brzozowski, Phil Adams, Ed H. Chi

46 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

THURSDAY 11:30 – 12:50 E4

Papers: Gender & Technology R

N

N

D

enefi fr

N

o

sin

O andards /

ou ould Benefit from Using S

Standards

Nigel Bevan

ender and enure Di ersit in it u

eams

307

Bogdan Vasilescu, Daryl Posnett, Baishakhi Ray, Mark G.J. van den Brand, Alexander Serebrenik, Prem Devanbu, Vladimir Filkov

ffline Strangers nline riends Bridging lassroom ender Segregation it ats pp Preeti Mudliar, Nimmi Rangaswamy

nline nspiration and

ploration for dentit Rein ention

Oliver L. Haimson, Anne E. Bowser, Edward F. Melcer, Elizabeth F. Churchill

Une ual Representation and ender Stereot pes in mage Searc Results for ccupations Matthew Kay, Cynthia Matuszek, Sean A. Munson

E5

Papers: Coping & Wellbeing Through HCI CHAIR: JINA HUH

inding t e dapti e S eet Spot Balancing ompliance and Achievement in Automated Stress Reduction Artie Konrad, Victoria Bellotti, Nicole Crenshaw, Simon Tucker, Les Nelson, Honglu Du, Peter Pirolli, Steve Whittaker

So erDiar one ased Support S stem for ssisting Reco er from lco ol Dependence Chuang-wen You, Kuo-Cheng Wang, Ming-Chyi Huang, Yen-Chang Chen, Cheng-Lin Lin, Po-Shiun Ho, Hao-Chuan Wang, Polly Huang, Hao-Hua Chu

Panel: Why Google Cannot Be the # 1 in Korea? oogle annot Be t e in orea n Searc for ritical Success actors from ocal User perience Jinsoo Kim, Sungwon Beck, Sungeon Kim, Kihyun Jung

308

alt.chi: Mindfulness and Care CHAIR: SILVIA LINDTNER

Being Reasona le anifesto for t e nclusion of Disa led eople in S onferences Reuben Kirkham, John Vines, Patrick Olivier

Crossing Cultural and Theoretical Borders: o ards indfulness t roug a igarette and a orii ate Yoko Akama, Ann Light

ommunication in t e Diverse Players

anging D adic nteraction of

Mark Rice, Hong Huei Tay, Jamie NG, Ranieri Koh

Captchat: A Messaging Tool to Frustrate U i uitous Sur eillance Paul Dunphy, Johannes Schöning, James Nicholson, Patrick Olivier

317BC C27: Designing with the Mind in Mind 1/1 Designing it t e ind in U Design uidelines

ind

e s c ological Basis for

Jeff A. Johnson

Solutionism t e ame Design ictions for ositi e ging Mark Blythe, Jamie Steane, Jenny Roe, Caroline Oliver

Design onsiderations for atient ortal doption o ncome lder dults Celine Latulipe, Amy Gatto, Ha T. Nguyen, David P. Miller, Sara A. Quandt, Alain G. Bertoni, Alden Smith, Thomas A. Arcury

E6

Papers: Interacting with Floors & Situated Displays R

D

Base ase

R N

n nteracti e ocus

S N

onte t aser loor

Jörg Müller, Dieter Eberle, Constantin Schmidt

rgonomic nteraction for ouc

loors

Dominik Schmidt, Johannes Frohnhofen, Sven Knebel, Florian Meinel, Mariya Perchyk, Julian Risch, Jonathan Striebel, Julia Wachtel, Patrick Baudisch

12:50 – 14:30 Lunch Break Restaurants, bars & cafés available nearby

THURSDAY

Displa Blindness oo ing gain at t e isi ilit of Situated Displays using Eye-tracking Nicholas S. Dalton, Emily Collins, Paul Marshall

Detecting User ntention at u lic Displa s from Foot Positions Bernd Huber, Joong Ho Lee, Ji-Hyung Park

CHI 2015

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 47

THURSDAY 14:30 – 15:50 401

Papers: Multi-Device Interaction R

N B

E1/E2 Papers: Understanding & Protecting Kids Tech Use

N

R

Diar Stud on om ining ultiple nformation De ices in Everyday Activities and Tasks

reser ation

eneration i e

omparati e

aracteristics in nstagram

Jin Yea Jang, Kyungsik Han, Patrick C. Shih, Dongwon Lee

Pei-Yu Chi,Yang Li

n estigating ig Sc ool Students erceptions of Digital Badges in ftersc ool earning

n and

Katie Davis, Eve Klein

Jens Grubert, Matthias Heinisch, Aaron Quigley, Dieter Schmalstieg

E3

Papers: Speech & Auditory Interfaces

Papers: Social Media & Citizen Science R

CHAIR: COSMIN MUNTEANU

N

SS

N

igg ac rotot ping Using isting arge Scale Social omputing S stems o rotot pe Ne nes

orm ollo s Sound Designing nteractions from Sonic Memories

Catherine Grevet, Eric Gilbert

Baptiste Caramiaux, Alessandro Altavilla, Scott G. Pobiner, Atau Tanaka

Situated Social Media Use: A Methodological Approach to ocating Social edia ractices and ra ectories

periments it t e

Thomas Hillman, Alexandra Weilenmann

Donald McMillan, Antoine Loriette, Barry Brown

Brea t Do n

Ne Resource for nclusi e

omparison of

acro and

icrotas s

Justin Cheng, Jaime Teevan, Shamsi T. Iqbal, Michael S. Bernstein

Designing for iti en Data nal sis ross Sectional ase Stud of a ulti Domain iti en Science latform

Maria K. Wolters, Jonathan Kilgour, Sarah E. MacPherson, Myroslava Dzikovska, Johanna D. Moore

Ramine Tinati, Max Van Kleek, Elena Simperl, Markus Luczak-Rösch, Robert Simpson, Nigel Shadbolt

mpirical idence for a Diminis ed Sense of genc in Speec nterfaces Hannah Limerick, James W. Moore, David Coyle

D

o Beep or Not to Beep omparing stract ersus Language-Based Multimodal Driver Displays

Stacey Kuznetsov, Carrie Doonan, Nathan Wilson, Swarna Mohan, Scott E. Hudson, Eric Paulos

Ioannis Politis, Stephen A. Brewster, Frank Pollick

403

ri ac

Pamela J. Wisniewski, Haiyan Jia, Na Wang, Saijing Zheng, Heng Xu, Mary Beth Rosson, John M. Carroll

Weave: Scripting Cross-Device Wearable Interaction

e D N orpus oice nterface Design

it

Resilience itigates t e Negati e ffects of dolescent Internet Addiction and Online Risk Exposure

Roman Rädle, Hans-Christian Jetter, Mario Schreiner, Zhihao Lu, Harald Reiterer,Yvonne Rogers

Repurposing on ersation Continuous Speech Stream

R S

Karen Renaud, Joseph Maguire

Spatiall a are or spatiall agnostic licitation and aluation of User Defined ross De ice nteractions

402

N

Regulating ccess to dult ontent

Tero Jokela, Jarno Ojala, Thomas Olsson

ulti i ulti idelit nteraction it Displa s Around the Body

S

s is o e ll Do t Butler ies and m iguit Through a Broader Lens

Papers: Email & Social Media at Work

Megan French, Madeline E. Smith, Jeremy Birnholtz, Jeff T. Hancock

CHAIR: PERNILLE BJORN

E4 ost in mail

io ings pen Source Biolog ools as latforms for rid no ledge roduction and Scientific articipation

Papers: Disasters & Humanitarian Events CHAIR: TAWANNA R. DILLAHUNT

ulling Users Do n a at of nteraction

Benjamin V. Hanrahan, Manuel A. Perez-Quinones

THURSDAY

Balancing Boundaries: Using Multiple Devices to Manage or ife Balance

ro d onitor o ile ro d Sensing for ssessing sical and Digital cti ities of iti ens during mergencies

Rowanne Fleck, Anna L. Cox, Rosalyn A V Robison

Thomas Ludwig, Christian Reuter, Tim Siebigteroth, Volkmar Pipek

or ing rofessional Differences in mail and Boundary Management Practices

Design of a ross latform Social edia Application to Support Volunteer Moderators in Disasters Christian Reuter, Thomas Ludwig, Marc-André Kaufhold, Volkmar Pipek

Marta E. Cecchinato, Anna L. Cox, Jon Bird

nferring mplo ee ngagement from Social

edia

N. Sadat Shami, Michael Muller, Aditya Pal, Mikhil Masli, Werner Geyer

ailing ists em and o

re e Still ere an e i em

at s

rong

Amy X. Zhang, Mark S. Ackerman, David R. Karger

it

Building a Birds e ie Disaster Response

olla orati e

or in

Joel E. Fischer, Stuart Reeves, Tom Rodden, Steve Reece, Sarvapali D. Ramchurn, David Jones

Success & Scale in a Data-Producing Organization: e Socio ec nical olution of penStreet ap in Response to Humanitarian Events Leysia Palen, Robert Soden, T. Jennings Anderson, Mario Barrenechea

48 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

THURSDAY 14:30 – 15:50 E5

Papers: Home Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation R

N

sio ome ec ni ues for

307

UN

CHAIR: DAVID R. FLATLA

ploring isual uidance and eed ac siot erap ercises

Mathieu Nancel, Daniel Vogel, Edward Lank

lutc ing s Not Necessaril t e nem

Richard Tang, Xing-Dong Yang, Scott Bateman, Joaquim Jorge, Anthony Tang

isual rouping in

Color Portraits : From Color Picking to Interacting it olor

Daniel Tetteroo, Paul Vreugdenhil, Ivor Grisel, Marc Michielsen, Els Kuppens, Diana Vanmulken, Panos Markopoulos

Ghita Jalal, Nolwenn Maudet, Wendy E. Mackay

ergames for siot erap and Re a ilitation edium term Situated Stud of oti ational Aspects and Impact on Functional Reach

e mergence of nteracti e Be a ior odel of Rational enu Searc Xiuli Chen, Gilles Bailly, Duncan P. Brumby, Antti Oulasvirta, Andrew Howes

Jan David Smeddinck, Marc Herrlich, Rainer Malaka

Selecti e Undo Support for ainting pplications

Resilience Ex Machina: Learning a Complex Medical Device for aemodial sis Self reatment

Brad A. Myers, Ashley Lai, Tam Minh Le,YoungSeok Yoon, Andrew R. Faulring, Joel R. Brandt

Paul Noble

Understanding Design radeoffs for ealt A Mixed-Methods Approach

ec nologies

Katie O’Leary, Jordan Eschler, Logan Kendall, Lisa M. Vizer, James D. Ralston, Wanda Pratt

Papers: Interaction Techniques for Tables & Walls CHAIR: TOM BARTINDALE

raff n le ating angi le Bloc for Spatial Tabletop Interaction Chang Min Kim, Tek-Jin Nam

odeling Distant ointing for ompensating Systematic Displacements Sven Mayer, Katrin Wolf, Stefan Schneegass, Niels Henze

s o ing mpro ing Some ffects of ocomotion in Wall-Display Interaction Mikkel R. Jakobsen, Kasper Hornbæk

a e RS ntegrating a e and Rotate-Scale-Translate Tasks

enu nterfaces

Duncan P. Brumby, Susan Zhuang

essons earnt from Deplo ing an nd User De elopment latform for sical Re a ilitation

E6

Papers: Interacting with GUIs

308

Case Studies: Special Environments CHAIR: FRANCESCA SAMSEL

oice or esture in t e

perating Room

Helena M. Mentis, Kenton P. O’Hara, Gerardo Gonzalez, Abigail Sellen, Robert Corish, Antonio Criminisi, Rikin Trivedi, Pierre Theodore

an ndroids Be Salespeople in t e Real

orld

Miki Watanabe, Kohei Ogawa, Hiroshi Ishiguro

n utloo for ontent U in Augmented Content

e mergence of

Sung Woo Kim, Eun Hye Park,Yae Eun Lee, Jong Sung Lee, Da Hee Lee, Eun Jin Kim

consensual and non am iguous set of gestures to interact it U in infantr men Florent Taralle, Alexis Paljic, Sotiris Manitsaris, Jordane Grenier, Christophe Guettier

ultitouc for Remote

Jayson Turner, Jason Alexander, Andreas Bulling, Hans Gellersen

Designing for

plorator Searc on ouc De ices

Khalil Klouche, Tuukka Ruotsalo, Diogo Cabral, Salvatore Andolina, Andrea Bellucci, Giulio Jacucci

15:50 – 16:30 Coffee Break Level 300/400 Foyers

CHI 2015

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 49

THURSDAY

Closing Plenary Keynote 16:30 – 17:50 PSY Hall D1 Cultural Crossing from Local to Global through Music: Technology, Media, and Future

NOTES

50 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

WORKSHOPS  WORKSHOPS CHI 2015 workshops take place on Level 300 at the Convention Center. Workshops are accessible only to pre-registered attendees. Saturday 18 April – Sunday 19 April (2 days) W01 Art.CHI

David England, Linda Candy, Celine Latulipe,Thecla Schiphorst, Ernest a Edmonds,Younghui Kim, Sean Clark, Andruid Kerne

W02 Designing Alternative Systems for local Communities

Vasillis Vlachokyriakos, Rob Comber, Clara Crivellaro, Nick Taylor, Stacey Kuznetsov, Andrea Kavanaugh, Christopher A. Le Dantec, Joon Kim

Saturday 18 April (1 day) W03 Between the Lines: Reevaluating the nline ffline Binar

Room 310AB 311

Konstantinos Kazakos, David Kirk, Abigail Durrant, David Chatting, Paulina Yurman, Jo-Anne Bichard, Jaemin Paik

Room 312

W18 Developing Skills for Social and Emotional Wellbeing

314

W19 Ecological Perspectives in HCI: Promise, Problems, and Potential

313

W20 End-User Development in the Internet of Things Era

315

W21 Everyday Telepresence: Emerging Practices and Future Research

320

Petr Slovák, Greg Wadley, David Coyle, Anja Thieme, Naomi Yamashita, Reeva M Lederman, Stefan schutt, Mia Doces

Eli Blevis, Susanne Bødker, John Flach, Jodi Forlizzi, Heekyoung Jung, Victor Kaptelinin, Bonnie Nardi, Antonio Rizzo

Room 312

Sarah Vieweg, Oliver L. Haimson, Michael Massimi, Kenton O’Hara, Elizabeth F. Churchill

W04 Beyond Personal Informatics: Designing for Experiences with Data

Sunday 19 April (1 day) W17 Design-Led Inquiry for Mobile Lives

317A

Daniel Tetteroo, Panos Markopoulos, Stefano Valtolina, Fabio Paternò, Volkmar Pipek, Margaret Burnett

Irene Rae, Bilge Mutlu, Gary M. Olson, Judith S. Olson, Leila A.Takayama, Gina Venolia

320

W22 Experiencing Autonomous Vehicles: Crossing the Boundaries between a Drive and a Ride

316

W05 Collaborating with Intelligent Machines: Interfaces for Creative Sound W06 Crossing Domains: Diverse Perspectives on Players

313

W23 Exploring the Challenges of Making Data Physical

321

W07 Crossing HCI and Health: Advancing Health and Wellness Technology Research in Home and Community Settings

314

W24 Gamifying Research: Strategies, Opportunities, Challenges, Ethics

322

315

W25 How WEIRD is HCI? Extending HCI Principles to Other Countries and Cultures

323

W08 Designing for Sharing in Local Communities W09 Developing HCI Education Crossing Asia

316

W26 Knowledge Production in Interaction Design

W10 Embarrassing Interactions

321

W11 Ethical Encounters in HCI: Research in Sensitive Settings

324

Chris Elsden, David Kirk, Mark Selby, Chris Speed

Florian Grote, Kristina Andersen, Peter Knees

Gareth R. White, Joonhwan Lee, Daniel Johnson, Peta Wyeth, Pejman Mirza-Babaei

Anind K. Dey,Yuanchun Shi, Feng Tian, Shiwei Cheng Sebastian Deterding, Andrés Lucero, Jussi Holopainen, Chulhong Min, Adrian Cheok, Annika Waern, Steffen Walz Jenny Waycott, Hilary Davis, Anja Thieme, Stacy Branham, John Vines, Cosmin Munteanu

W12 Expanding the Boundaries: A SIGCHI HCI & Sustainability Workshop

322

Adrian K. Clear, Chris Preist, Somya Joshi, Lisa P. Nathan, Samuel Mann, Bonnie A. Nardi

W13 Smart for Life: Designing Smart Home Technologies that Evolve with Users

323

W14 Text Entry on the Edge

325

W15 What to Study in HCI?

326

Sarah Mennicken, Amy Hwang, Rayoung Yang, Jesse Hoey, Alex Mihailidis, Elaine M. Huang

James Clawson, Ahmed Sabbir Arif, Stephen Brewster, Mark Dunlop, Per Ola Kristensson, Antti Oulasvirta Kasper Hornbæk, Antti Oulasvirta, Stuart Reeves, Susanne Bødker

CHI 2015

Jason Alexander,Yvonne Jansen, Kasper Hornbæk, Johan Kildal, Abhijit Karnik

Sebastian Deterding, Seth Cooper, Alessandro Canossa, Lennart E. Nacke, Casper Harteveld, Jennifer R. Whitson

Marilyn R. Lennon, Lynne Baillie, Jettie Hoonhout, Judy Robertson, Geraldine Fitzpatrick Lone Malmborg, Ann Light, Geraldine Fitzpatrick, Victoria Bellotti, Margot Brereton

Alexander Meschtscherjakov, Manfred Tscheligi, Dalila Szostak, Rabindra Ratan, Roderick McCall, Ioannis Politis, Sven Krome

Christian Sturm, Alice Oh, Sebastian Linxen, Jose Abdelnour Nocera, Susan M. Dray, Katharina Reinecke

Kristina Höök, Peter Dalsgaard, Stuart Reeves, Jeffrey Bardzell, Jonas Löwgren, Erik Stolterman,Yvonne Rogers

W27 Leveraging and Integrating Eastern and Western Insights for Human Engagement Studies in HCI

317A 326

fie ai hong aw, haklam Silpasuwanchai, iangshi Ren, Jeffrey Bardzell,Torkil Clemmensen,Yan Liu

W28 Mobile Collocated Interactions: From Smartphones to Wearables

317B

Andrés Lucero, James Clawson, Kent Lyons, Joel E. Fischer, Daniel Ashbrook, Simon Robinson

W29 Principles,Techniques and Perspectives on Optimization and HCI

324

W30 Supporting Children to Engage in Play for Wellbeing

325

Per la ristensson, iaojun Bi, Andrew Howes, Antti ulasvirta, Roderick Murray-Smith, Harold Thimbleby, John Williamson, Shumin Zhai

Kevin Marshall, Gavin Wood, Janet C. Read, Svetlana (Lana) Yarosh, Madeline Balaam, Jung-Joo Lee

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 51

ASIAN CHI SYMPOSIA & VIDEO SHOWCASE  ASIAN CHI SYMPOSIA

 VIDEO SHOWCASE

CHI 2015 is offering a series of special symposia for topics pertinent to HCI communities across Asia. These symposia may contain content in English or in a regional language. Participants include both presenters and audience members. The symposia descriptions appear in the CHI 2015 Extended Abstracts.

Video Showcase features engaging videos that offer a variety of perspectives on human-computer interaction, including novel interfaces, reflecti e pieces and future en isionments ome and en o t e ideos during Monday morning break followed by the Golden Mouse award ceremony.

S01

S02

Saturday 18 April – Sunday 19 April (2 days) Chinese CHI Symposium in CHI 2015

Hao huan Wang, Gary Hsieh, iaojun Bi, Henry uh, ihsiu hen

Room 318AB

Sunday 19 April (1 day) Room ASEAN CHI Symposium: Crossing HCI for Development 319 in sia acific

Eunice Sari, Bimlesh Wadhwa, Adi Tedjasaputra, Masitah Ghazali, Anirudha N Joshi

S03

Japanese CHI Symposium 1: Emerging Japanese HCI Research Collection Japanese CHI Symposium: Japanese Culture and Kansei

Hisao Shiizuka, Masaaki Kurosu, Michiko Ohkura

udith Amores, avier Benavides, Pattie Maes

VS02

Cyclops: Wearable and Single-Piece Full-Body Gesture Input Devices

Liwei Chan, Chi-Hao Hsieh,Yi-Ling Chen, Shuo Yang, Da-Yuan Huang, Rong-Hao Liang, Bing-Yu Chen

VS03 309

Room 401

Videos VS01 TagMe: An Easy-to-Use Toolkit for Turning the Personal Environment into an Extended Communications Interface

317B

Jun Kato, Hiromi Nakamura,Yuta Sugiura,Taku Hachisu, Daisuke Sakamoto, Koji Yatani,Yoshifumi Kitamura

S04

Monday 10:00 – 11:30 Video Showcase

VS04 VS05

TakeTwo: Using Google Glass for Augmented Memory

Scott W. Greenwald, Christian D. Vazquez, Pattie Maes

MagCubes: Magnetically Driven Tangible Widgets for Children

Sungjae Hwang, Kwangyun Wohn

Touch+: Expanding Touch Input Vocabulary using a Smartphone and a Smartwatch

Sungjae Hwang, Junghyeon Gim

VS06

Contextual Drag: Context-based Dynamic Friction for Dragging Interaction

Sungjae Hwang, Junghyeon Gim, Junwoo Yoo, Andrea Bianchi

VS07

The Smart Steering Wheel Cover: Motivating Safe and fficient Dri ing

Eleonora Ibragimova, Nick Mueller, Arnold Vermeeren, Peter Vink

VS08

G-raff: An Elevating Tangible Block for Spatial Tabletop Interaction

Chang Min Kim,Tek-Jin Nam

VS09

Remnance of Form: Interactive Narratives with Augmented Shadows

Sang-won Leigh, Asta Roseway, Ann Paradiso

VS10

Proprioceptive Interaction

VS11

A Dose of Reality: Overcoming Usability Challenges in VR Head-Mounted Displays

Pedro Lopes, Alexandra Ion, Willi M Daniel Hoffmann, Patrik Jonell, Patrick Baudisch

Mark McGill, Daniel Boland, Roderick Murray-Smith, Stephen A Brewster

VS12

“Hello World”: A Digital Quandary And The Apotheosis Of The Human

Kyle Overton

VS13

Bendi: Shape-Changing Mobile Device for a Tactile-Visual Phone Conversation

Young-Woo Park, Joohee Park,Tek-Jin Nam

VS14 VS15

TRANSFORM as Adaptive and Dynamic Furniture

Luke Vink, Viirj Kan, Ken Nakagaki, Daniel Leithinger, Sean Follmer, Philipp Schoessler, Amit Zoran, Hiroshi Ishii

Cutting Edge Vision: Metal Embedded Optics for Smart Knives

Amit Zoran, Nan-Wei Gong, Roy Shilkrot, Shuo Yan, Pattie Maes

52 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

COURSES  COURSES Courses allow CHI attendees to extend their knowledge beyond their current community and their current areas of expertise. Courses are taught in one to three 80-minute units. Pre-registration is required. The Course Notes you receive at registration serve as your entry ticket. You may register for courses t at a e not et een filled at t e Registration Des in t e lo area on the ground level. C01

Monday Courses, 20 April Designing Websites for Adults 55+: Toward Universal Design

Room 317A

Design and Adaptation for Cross-Device, Context-dependent User Interfaces

317BC

Body, Whys & Videotape: Somatic Approaches to Experience in HCI

318BC

C05 C06 C07 C08

C09

Design for Searching & Finding

Daniel M Russell, Jaime Teevan, Meredith Ringel Morris, Marti Hearst, Ed H. Chi

Introduction to Human-Computer Interaction

Jonathan Lazar, Simone D. J. Barbosa

C20

317BC

C24

Interaction Design for Online Video and Television

318BC

C26

Tuesday Courses, 21 April Designing and Assessing Interactive Systems Using Task Models

Room 317A

C27

Learn to Sketch (Even if You Can t Draw): Hands-on Sketching Course

317BC

David Geerts, Pablo Cesar

Designing Surveys for HCI Research

318BC

Hendrik Müller, Aaron Sedley

The Glass Class: Designing Wearable Interfaces

Mark Billinghurst, Dr.Thad Starner

Using Experience Sampling Methodology to Collect Deep Data About Your Users

308ABC 317A

Rapid Design LabsA Tool to Turbocharge Design-Led Innovation

E7

Conceptual Models: Core to Good Design

318BC

Thursday Courses, 23 April Vision-Driven: Beyond Tangible Bits,Towards Radical Atoms

Room 317BC

Jeff A. Johnson

Hiroshi Ishii, Daniel Leithinger, Sean Follmer, Lining Yao, Jifei Ou

E7

Actionable Inexpensive Games User Research

E7

Jim E. Nieters, Carola Fellenz Thompson

C25

Lennart E. Nacke, Steve Engels, Pejman Mirza-Babaei

Speech-based Interaction: Myths, Challenges, and Opportunities

Kathy K. Baxter, Anna Avrekh, Bob Evans

317A

Interaction Design for Reading Devices and Apps

Jennifer Pearson, Simon Robinson

E7

Introduction to Positive Computing Technology That Fosters Wellbeing

318BC

Designing with the Mind in Mind: The Psychological Basis for UI Design Guidelines

317BC

Rafael A. Calvo, Dorian Peters

Jeff A. Johnson

Philippe Palanque, Célia Martinie

C10

C19

C23

Thecla Schiphorst, Lian Loke

Michael J. Lyons, Sidney S. Fels

Room 317A

Cosmin Munteanu, Gerald Penn

C22

Fabio Paternò

C04

C18

C21

Jeff A. Johnson

C02

C17

Wednesday Courses, 22 April Introduction to Creating Musical Interfaces

o

ou ould Benefit from Using S

Nigel Bevan

Standards

Stephanie Foehrenbach

C11 C12 C13 C14 C15 C16

Research Methods for Child Computer Interaction

Janet C. Read, Shuli Gilutz

Practical UX Research Methodologies

Sarah E. Garcia

Methods for Human-Computer Interaction Research

Sandy J. J. Gould, Duncan P. Brumby, Anna L. Cox, Geraldine Fit patrick, ettie Hoonhout, avid amas, fie aw

Mobile Human-Computer Interaction

Niels Henze, Enrico Rukzio

HCI Lessons: From Earth to Outer Space... and Back

Guy André Boy, Jeffrey M Bradshaw, Soyeon Yi

Sketching User Experiences: The Hands-on Course

Nicolai Marquardt, Saul Greenberg

CHI 2015

E7 318BC 317A 317BC E7 318BC

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 53

STUDENT EVENTS  DOCTORAL CONSORTIUM

 STUDENT RESEARCH COMPETITION

Selected doctoral students present and explore their research topics with senior researchers and other students in a two-day interdisciplinary workshop. Doctoral Consortium posters are displayed in Exhibit Hall E and brief descriptions appear in the CHI 2015 Extended Abstracts.

The Student Research Competition (SRC) is a forum for undergraduate and graduate students to showcase their research, exchange ideas, and improve their communication skills while competing for prizes. Sponsored by Microsoft Research, the SRC is a branch of the ACM SRC. Winners are announced at the Closing Plenary.

Saturday – Sunday Doctoral Consortium

(Room 308AB)

Tuesday 10:50 – 11:30 Meet the poster authors

(Hall C2/C3)

Tuesday – Thursday Posters on display during opening hours

(Hall C2/C3)

Doctoral Consortium Faculty Gregory Abowd, Georgia Tech Mark Blythe, Northumbria University Susan Fussell (Co-Chair), Cornell University Darren Gergle, Northwestern University Jim Hollan, University of California, San Diego S.J. Kim (Co-Chair), University of Nevada, Las Vegas Alice Oh, KAIST Jaime Teevan (Co-Chair), Microsoft Research

Tuesday 15:50 – 16:30 Posters highlighted during the afternoon break

(Hall C2/C3)

Wednesday 11:30 – 12:50 Posters presentations open to all conference attendees

(Room 317BC)

Jury

Thad Starner, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA John Tang, Microsoft Research, USA Xiangshi Ren, Kochi University of Technology, Japan Regan Mandryk, University of Saskatchewan, Canada Tilde Bekker, Eindhoven University of Technology,The Netherlands

Finalists SRC01 GAZE: Using Mobile Devices to Promote Discovery and Data Collection

Participants DC01 Transmigrant Saudi Arabian Youth and Social Media: Privacy, Intimacy and Freedom of Expression

Zachary Allen

SRC02 Blowatch: Blowable and Hands-free Interaction for Smartwatches

Norah Abokhodair

Wei-Hung Chen

DC02 Apps with Habits: Adaptive Interfaces for News Apps

SRC03 Cyrafour: How Two Human Avatars Communicate With Each Other

Marios Constantinides

DC03 Technology at Mealtime: Beyond the Ordinary

Enrique Encinas

Hasan Shahid Ferdous

SRC04 Realism in Interactive Tutors

DC04 Aligning the Social Interaction Spaces of Intergenerational Family Members

Nicholas Hynes

SRC05 Libero: On-the-go Crowdsourcing for Package Delivery

Francisco J. Gutierrez

Yongsung Kim

DC05 Social Equity and Ecological Sustainability in HCI: An Ecofeminist Perspective

SRC06 Can Specialised Electronic Musical Instruments Aid Stroke Rehabilitation?

Gopinaath Kannabiran

Pedro Kirk

DC06 Engage People in Pro-Environmental Behaviors through Online Prosocial Interaction and Pro-Health Intervention

SRC07 QuizCram: A Question-Driven Video Studying Interface

DC07 Practical Sensory Substitution In Real and Virtual Worlds: Development, Accessibility And Neuroscience

SRC08 Challenges for Wearable Camera: Understanding of the Meaning behind Photo-taking

DC08 Designing Self-care Technologies for Everyday Life: A Practice Approach

SRC09 Pull-To-Refresh and Learn: Leveraging Mobile Email Load Time for Education

DC09 Scalable Webcam Eye Tracking by Learning from User Interactions

SRC10 Assessing the Supportiveness of Gift Emoticons in Care Scenarios

Pei-Yi Kuo

Geza Kovacs

Ahreum Lee

Shachar Maidenbaum

Anji Ren

Francisco Nunes

Alexandra Papoutsaki

Kirsten A. Smith

DC10 Casual Interaction: Scaling Interaction for Multiple Levels of Engagement Henning Pohl

DC11 Addressing Obsolescence of Consumer Electronics through Sustainable Interaction Design Christian Remy

DC12 Support Environment for Co-designing Micro Tasks in Suburban Communities Tomoyo Sasao

DC13 Whole Body Interaction with Public Displays Robert Walter

D

n ancing User

Nan Wang

perience to Design n o a le

i ition

ents

DC15 Designing with Emerging Publics: The Case of Physician-Assisted Suicide Daisy Yoo

DC16 Retention in MOOCs: Understanding Users Motivations, erceptions and cti it ra ectories Saijing Zheng

54 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

STUDENT EVENTS  STUDENT DESIGN COMPETITION

 STUDENT GAME COMPETITION

This is the 13th year of the CHI Student Design Competition. The Student Design Competition continues to grow each year with increased international representation. The competition always draws a large audience at and as also ecome a ma or recruiting opportunit for identifying talented students. The CHI 2015’s theme is “crossings” which focuses on crossing the boundaries for meaningful new creations and possibilities. In this year’s Student Design Competition, we adapt this theme of “crossings” and open up the opportunities for students in the areas of HCI and Design from all over the world to show their visions and competence on enabling people from different cultures to be connected and to be heard and appreciated. In the last few years, smart devices have become more or less standardized in their physical and graphical forms. While new groups of users are constantly emerging, uite a fe people still sta a a from t e enefits of tec nolog e theme of this year’s Student Design Competition is “Appropriating ec nologies for Ne ultures e a e finalist student teams o have succeeded to proceed the competition at CHI 2015 out of 69 submissions from 11 different countries.

The Games and Entertainment Special Community created this competition to showcase student work in areas of game design and development that connect strongly to the CHI community of research and practice. Students submitted games as well as extended abstracts clarif ing inno ati e aspects of t eir or e ur selected t ree finalist games in eac categor ames for a urpose nno ati e Interface and Innovative Game Design. Winners are announced at the Closing Plenary.

Monday 10:00 – 11:30 Judging (Closed Jury session)

(Room 327ABC)

Tuesday 15:50 – 16:30 Meet the poster authors Wednesday 14:30 – 15:50 Open Finalist presentations

(Hall C2/C3) (Room 317BC)

Tuesday-Thursday Posters on display during opening hours Jury

(Hall C2/C3)

Zhiyong Fu, Tsinghua University, China Elisa Giarccardi, TU Delft, Netherlands Jung-Joo Lee, National University of Singapore, Singapore Will Odom, Simon Fraser University, Canada

Finalists SDC02 Am I Native Enough? Exploring American Indian Identity Through Language Learning Jumana Almahmoud, Mallory Anderson, Abhishek Dewan, Sofia Gutierre , Ram umarasubramanian

SDC03 Lantern: Empowering Refugees Through CommunityGenerated Guidance Using Near Field Communication

Jennifer Baranoff, R. Israel Gonzales, Jay Liu, Heidi Yang, Jimin Zheng

SDC05 FamCom: a Communication Service Enhancing Conversation Quality Between Elders Residing in Care Hospital and Their Family Member Mingu Kang,Taewan Kim,Youngjae Kim, Junghwan Ahn

SDC06 BlindNavi: A Navigation App for the Visually Impaired Smartphone User Yi-Ying Lin, Hsuan-Eng Chen, Chien-Hsing Chen, I-Fang Wang

SDC07 inSight: Kick-Starting Communications for Elderlies Ageing In Place Zhide Loh, Edmund Zhang, Lim Zhi Ying

SDC08 Sleepstellar: A Safety Kit and Digital Storyteller for Sleepwalkers

Jashanjit Kaur, Nehal Molasaria, Niyati Gupta, Shengjie Zhang, Wei Wang

SDC09 Bikon: Warm-Hearted Movements

Yunmo Park, Hoejoon Lee, Gu Lee, Myeongguk Cho, Soyoung Kim

SDC10 CityMockUp Co-Creating the Urban Space Jonas Frich Pedersen, Marie Louise Juul Sgaard

SDC11 Enabling Context for Traditional Chinese Paintings with “Rice Paper”

Hariharan Subramonyam,Yuncheng Shen, Samantha Lauren Jones

SDC12 GoodGuide: Reconnecting The Homeless and Others

CHI attendees can play the games on Monday morning in Hall E Foyer. The SGC winners are announced at the Closing Plenary. Games for a Purpose: Games submitted to this category are designed not ust to entertain ut also to accomplis some end goal amples include games for ealt learning games ournalistic games Innovative Interface: Games submitted to this category push the boundaries of current interface practice. Examples include the use of gesture, multi-touch, or haptics; voice input; use of sensors such as breathing or heart rate; and augmented reality games for mobile platforms. Innovative Game Design: Games submitted to this category push the boundaries of current game mechanics and/or design. Examples include games that add novel mechanics that have not been used before, add new visual or audio themes/dynamics, explore new mixes of mechanics, story and character elements, automated techniques for adaptive designs, or explore new forms of interaction that are thought provoking. Wednesday 16:30 – 17:50 Presentations and awards Jury

(Room 317BC)

Casper Harteveld, Northeastern University Seth Cooper, Northeastern University Peter Lee, Nolgong Sebastian Deterding, Northeastern University

Finalists SGC01 Keyewai: Looking at Cooperation in a Holographic ro ection Screen

Paulo Bala, Lucilia Nóbrega, Guilherme Neves, Laís Lopes, Joana Morna, Cristina Freitas, João Camacho

SGC02 Fighting Gulliver: An Experiment with Cross-Platform Players Fighting a Body-Controlled Giant Kuan-Ting Chou, Min-Chieh Hsiu, Chiuan Wang

SGC03 Crystallize: Simulating Language Immersion through Gameplay Gabriel Culbertson

SGC04 TranSection: Hand-Based Interaction for Playing a Game within a Virtual Reality Game Po-Wei Lee, Han-Yu Wang,Ying-Chao Tung, Jhe-Wei Lin, Andries Valstar

SGC05 Atomatic: An Inclusive Game to Learn Concepts of Atoms and Elements Sylvan Lobo

SGC06 Get Creative With Learning: Word Out! A Full Body Interactive Game Felicia Clare Paul, Christabel Goh, Kelly Yap

SGC07 Jelly Polo: True Sport-Like Competition Using Small-Scale Exertion Mike Sheinin, Carl Gutwin

SGC08 Towering Defense - An Augmented Reality Multi-Device Game Paul Tolstoi, Andreas Dippon

SGC09 Purrfect Crime: Exploring Animal Computer Interaction through a Digital Game for Humans and Cats

Rui Trindade, Micaela Sousa, Cristina Hart, Roberto Rodrigues, Ndia Vieira, Joo Frana

Chien-Chun Wu, Shih-Min Hong,Yu-Han Huang

CHI 2015

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 55

WORKS IN PROGRESS  WORKS IN PROGRESS Authors are scheduled to stand by their posters during “meet the author” sessions indicated below. Please visit both rotations to see all of the exciting work being done and discuss new ideas with Poster authors. Authors present their posters during the morning and afternoon breaks. The following poster collections are on display: First Rotation: Tuesday all day Accessibility AI and HCI Augmented Reality Children and Teens Cognition in HCI Communities Displays Gaming Gesture and Multimodal Interactions Healthcare and Wellbeing Learning Lifestyle Mobile Interactions

10101 – 10106 10201 – 10204 10301 – 10309 10401 – 10404 10501 – 10505 10601 – 10611 10701 – 10709 10801 – 10809 10901 – 10925 11001 – 11013 11101 – 11106 11201 – 11207 11301 – 11312

Second Rotation: Wednesday all day Novel Interfaces and Interaction Techniques Productivity and Awareness Search and InfoViz Social Computing Trust, Privacy, and Emotions Ubicomp, Robots, and Wearables Users and UI Design

20101 – 20126 20201 – 20206 20301 – 20314 20401 – 20413 20501 – 20515 20601 – 20621 20701 – 20724

 FIRST ROTATION – TUESDAY 21 APRIL ACCESSIBILITY

10101 – 10106

wip10101 Understanding Interactive Interface Design Requirements for the Visually Impaired

Joongsin Park, Beomtaek Jeong, Seungjai Jeon, Sehyung Han, Jundong Cho, JeongGil Ko

wip10102 DOWELL: Dwell-time Based Smartphone Control Solution for People with Upper Limb Disabilities Hyunjin Ahn, JaeseokYoon, Gulji Chung, Kibum Kim, Jiyeon Ma, Hyunbin Choi, Donguk Jung, Joongseek Lee

wip10103 Touchology: Towards Interactive Plant Design for Children with Autism and Older Adults in Senior Housing Jinsil Hwaryoung Seo,Annie Sungkajun, Jinkyo Suh

wip10104 The Elders Preference for Skeuomorphism as App Icon Style Minji Cho, Soyoung Kwon, Nooree Na, KunPyo Lee, Hyeon-Jeong Suk

wip10105 First Insights with a Vibrotactile Interface for Children with Multiple Disabilities Cristina Manresa-Yee,Ann Morrison, Joan Jordi Muntaner

wip10106 TopoTiles: Storytelling in Care Homes with Topographic Tangibles

Arisa Ema, Hirotaka Osawa, Hiromitsu Hattori, Naonari Akiya

AUGMENTED REALITY

10201 – 10204

10301 – 10309

wip10301 AfterMath: Visualizing Consequences of Actions through Augmented Reality Sang-won Leigh, Pattie Maes

wip10302 Largibles: Large Tangible Interaction in Mobile Augmented Reality Asier Marzo

wip10303 Parallel Web Browsing in Tangible Augmented Reality Environments Mohammed AlSada,Tatsuo Nakajima

ip

User Defined estures for ugmented irtual irrors A Guessability Study Gun Lee, Jonathan Wong, Hye Sun Park, Jin Sung Choi, Chang Joon Park, Mark Billinghurst

wip10305 OutsideMe: Augmenting Dancer’s External Self-Image by Using A Mixed Reality System Shuo Yan, Gangyi Ding, Zheng Guan, Ningxiao Sun, Hongsong Li, Longfei Zhang

wip10306 Development of an Inexpensive Augmented Reality (AR) Headset Daniela De Angeli, Eamonn J. O’Neill

wip10307 Augmenting Affect from Speech with Generative Music Gerhard Johann Hagerer, Michael Lux, Stefan Ehrlich, Gordon Cheng

wip10308 On the Spot Information in Augmented Reality for Teams in the Security Domain Stephan Lukosch, Heide Lukosch, Dragos Datcu, Marina Cidota

wip10309 Augmenting Indirect Multi-Touch Interaction with 3D Hand Contours and Skeletons Ilya Efanov, Joel Lanir

CHILDREN AND TEENS

10401 – 10404

wip10401 GNomon: Enabling Dynamic One-Switch Games for Children with Severe Motor Disabilities Sebastian Aced Lopez, Fulvio Corno, Luigi De Russis

wip10402 TanProStory: A Tangible Programming System for Children’s Storytelling Yunfeng Qi, Danli Wang, Lan Zhang,Yining Shi

wip10403 Kids in Fairytales: Experiential and Interactive Storytelling in Children’s Libraries Seokbin Kang,Youngwoon Lee, Suwoong Lee

wip10404 Supporting the Disney Method with an Interactive Feedback System Sarah Tausch, Fabian Nußberger, Heinrich Hussmann

COGNITION IN HCI

Peter Bennett, Heidi Hinder, Seana Kozar, Christopher Bowdler, Elaine Massung,Tim Cole, Helen Manchester, Kirsten Cater

AI AND HCI

wip10204 Ethics and Social Responsibility: Case Study of a Journal Cover Design Under Fire

ip

ogni ouse n Detecting Users as through Computer Mouse Interaction

10501 – 10505 ompletion Difficult

Marios Belk, David Portugal, Eleni Christodoulou, George Samaras

wip10201 Deploying AI Methods to Support Collaborative Writing: a Preliminary Investigation

wip10502 Interactive Mouse Stream as Real-Time Indicator of User’s Cognitive Load

wip10202 Be Informed and Be Involved: Effects of Uncertainty and orrelation on Users onfidence in Decision a ing

wip10503 Working Memory and the Detection of Different Error Types – Novel Predictions for Error Detection

Sebastian Gehrmann, Lauren Urke, Ofra Amir, Barbara J. Grosz

Jianlong Zhou, Constant Bridon, Fang Chen,Ahmad Khawaji,Yang Wang

wip10203 Effects of Agent Appearance on Customer Buying Motivations on Online Shopping Sites Kazunori Terada, Jing Liang, SeijiYamada

Syed Arshad,Yang Wang, Fang Chen

Sze-yuen Yau, Simon Y.W. Li

wip10504 So,Who Exactly IS The HCI Professional? Ann Austin, Jose Abdelnour Nocera

wip10505 Utilizing the Effects of Priming to Facilitate Text Comprehension Katrin Angerbauer,Tilman Dingler, Dagmar Kern,Albrecht Schmidt

56 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

WORKS IN PROGRESS

COMMUNITIES

10601 – 10611

wip10601 The Gauntlet: The Design of a Community Challenge Platform Daniel Hawkins, Clarissa Ishak, MaoYang Li, Jason Procyk, Carman Neustaedter, Serena Hillman

wip10602 BeWell: A Sentiment Aggregator for Proactive Community Management

wip10802 Toward Telemetry-driven Analytics for Understanding Players and their Avatars in Videogames Chong-U Lim, D. Fox Harrell

wip10803 How to Measure the Game Experience? Analysis of the Factor Structure of Two Questionnaires Florian Brühlmann, Gian-Marco Schmid

Andreas Lindner, Margeret Hall, Claudia Niemeyer, Simon Caton

wip10603 Testing in the Field: Voice Based Interaction for Citizen Reporting in Uganda Asreen Rostami,Valeriy Savinov, Louise Barkhuus

wip10604 Bringing the Farmer Perspective to Agricultural Robots

Fiona Redhead, Stephen Snow, Dhaval Vyas, Owen Bawden, Ray Russell, Tristan Perez, Margot Brereton

wip10605 Passing On: Reader-Sourcing Gender Diversity in Wikipedia

wip10804 Having Fun Over a Distance: Supporting Multiplayer Online Ball Passing Using Multiple Sets of Kinect Tiffany Y. Tang, Pinata Winoto, Relic Yongfu Wang

ip

Myeong Lee, Luis S. Santos,Wei Zhao, Preeti Lakhole, Brian S. Butler

ip

ercei ed Ris and Self fficac Regarding nternet Securit in a Marginalized Community Eunjin Jung, EvelynY. Ho, Hyewon Chung, Mark Sinclair

wip10608 Towards a Gender HCI Curriculum wip10609 BudgetMap: Issue-Driven Navigation for a Government Budget Nam Wook Kim, Chang Won Lee, Jonghyuk Jung, Eun-Young Ko, Juho Kim, Jihee Kim

wip10610 Every Little Helps: Understanding Donor Behavior in a ro dfunding latform for Non profits

wip10806 Designing Games with Procedural Content Generation -An Authorial Approach Rui Craveirinha, Licinio Roque

wip10807 KidCraft: Co-Design within a Game Environment Greg Walsh, Craig Donahue, Emily E. Rhodes

wip10808 Mind Reader: Designing for More Intimate Social Play in Video Games Ryan Courtney, Lori L. Scarlatos

wip10809 Leaderboard Position Psychology: Counterfactual Thinking GESTURE AND MULTIMODAL INTERACTIONS 10901 – 10925 wip10901 Cutting Edge Vision: Metal Embedded Optics for Smart Knives Amit Zoran, Nan-Wei Gong, Roy Shilkrot, Shuo Yan, Pattie Maes

wip10902 Marionette: a Multi-Finger Tilt Feedback Device for Curvatures and Haptic Images Perception Diana Krusteva, Deepak Sahoo, Asier Marzo, Sriram Subramanian, David Coyle

Aejin Song, Hong-in Lee, Minsam Ko, Uichin Lee

wip10611 Understanding the Needs of Pakistani Farmers and the Prospects of an ICT Intervention

Omar Mubin, Joshua Tubb, Mauricio Novoa, Mustafa Naseem, Samia Razaq

10701 – 10709

wip10701 HoVerTable: Dual-sided Vertical Mid-air Images on Horizontal Tabletop Display Hanyuool Kim, HirokiYamamoto, Naoya Koizumi, Satoshi Maekawa, Takeshi Naemura

wip10702 Shape Display Shader Language (SDSL): A New Programming Model for Shape Changing Displays Christian Weichel, John Hardy, Jason Alexander

wip10703 StackTop: Hybrid Physical-Digital Stacking on Interactive Tabletops

wip10704 The Tickler: A Compliant Wearable Tactile Display for Stroking and Tickling Espen Knoop, Jonathan Rossiter

wip10705 Biogotchi! An Exploration of Plant-Based Information Displays Jacqueline T. Chien, François V. Guimbretière,Tauhidur Rahman, Geri Gay, Mark Matthews

wip10706 Atypical Visual Display for Monitoring Multiple CCTV Feeds Serge Pelletier, Joel Suss, Francois Vachon, Sebastien Tremblay

wip10707 Finding Satisfactory Transparency: An Empirical Study on Public Transparent Displays in a Shop Context Heesun Kim, Bo Kyung Huh, Seung Hyen Im, Hae Youn Joung, Gyu Hyun Kwon, Ji-Hyung Park

wip10708 Enabling Human Micro-Presence through Small-Screen Head-up Display Devices Scott Greenwald, Mina Khan, Pattie Maes

wip10709 A Concept for 3D Interaction on a Curved Touch Display Henri Palleis, Mirjam Mickisch, Heinrich Hussmann

10801 – 10809

wip10801 Therapeutic Gaming in Context: Observing Game Use for Brain n ur Re a ilitation Jinghui Cheng, Cynthia Putnam

CHI 2015

ip

ulti finger R ping nterface for o ile De ices Using High-Speed Hand Motion Recognition Masakazu Higuchi, Takashi Komuro

wip10904 Single-Pixel Eye Tracking via Patterned Contact Lenses: Design and Evaluation in HCI Domain Ioannis Rigas, Oleg Komogortsev

wip10905 StreetSauce: Taste Interaction and Empathy with Homeless People Marketa olejsova, Tere a iskov

wip10906 Shop-i: Gaze based Interaction in the Physical World for In-Store Social Shopping Experience Mirae Kim, Min Kyung Lee, Laura A. Dabbish

Jan Riemann, Mohammadreza Khalilbeigi, Niloofar Dezfuli, Max Mühlhäuser

GAMING

o ing

Emily Sun, Brooke Jones, Stefano Traca, Maarten W. Bos

Samantha Breslin, Bimlesh Wadhwa

DISPLAYS

ratifications of motionall

Julia Ayumi Bopp, Elisa D. Mekler, Klaus Opwis

J. Nathan Matias, Sophie Diehl, Ethan Zuckerman

wip10606 What Makes a Place More Familiar?: Implications of Geospatial Information Format and Content

t as Sad But Still ood Game Experiences

wip10907 Pretty Pelvis: A Virtual Pet Application That Breaks Sedentary Time by Promoting Gestural Interaction

Deedee A. Min,Yaejin Kim, Sung A. Jang, Keun Young Kim, Su-Eun Jung, Ji-Hyun Lee

wip10908 User Eye Fatigue Detection via Eye Movement Behavior Evgeniy Abdulin, Oleg Komogortsev

wip10909 Glance Awareness and Gaze Interaction in Smartwatches

Deepak Akkil, Jari Kangas, Jussi Rantala, Poika Isokoski, Oleg Spakov, Roope Raisamo

wip10910 Use of Sound to Provide Occluded Visual Information in Touch Gestural Interface BoYu Gao, HyungSeok Kim, Hasup Lee, Jooyoung Lee, Jee-In Kim

wip10911 BESIDE: Body Experience and Sense of Immersion in Digital paleontological Environment Ryuichi Yoshida, Ryohei Egusa, Machi Saito, Miki Namatame, Masanori Sugimoto, Fusako Kusunoki, Etsuji Yamaguchi, Shigenori Inagaki,Yoshiaki Takeda, Hiroshi Mizoguchi

wip10912 InTouch Tactile Tales: Haptic Feedback and Long-Distance Storytelling

Elaine Massung, Victoria Bates, Sarah Dickins, James Torbett, James Holmes, Kirsten Cater

wip10913 Transture: Continuing a Touch Gesture on a Small Screen into the Air Jaehyun Han, Sunggeun Ahn, Geehyuk Lee

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 57

WORKS IN PROGRESS

wip10914 Express Driver’s Emotion with Emoticons in Driving Contexts Haechan Kim, KunPyo Lee

wip11009 Exploring Physical Activities in an Employer-Sponsored Health Program

Dhaval Vyas, Zachary Fitz-walter, Erica Mealy, Alessandro Soro, Jinglan Zhang, Margot Brereton

wip10915 Multimodal Frustration Detection on Smartphones Esther Vasiete, Tom Yeh

wip10916 ViLimbs: Improving Phantom Limb Treatment Through Multisensory Feedback

Esteban Correa-Agudelo, Andres M Hernandez, Carlos Ferrin, Juan D Gomez

wip10917 An Open Catalog of Hand Gestures from Sci-Fi Movies ucas S Figueiredo, Mariana G M Pinheiro, dvar Veronica Teichrieb

ip

Vilar Neto,

o ards traction of Su ecti e Reading ncompre ension Analysis of Eye Gaze Features

Ayano Okoso, Joachim Folz, Takumi Toyama, Marcus Liwicki, Kai Kunze, Koichi Kise

wip10919 Using Cr-Y Components to Detect Tongue Protrusion Gestures Chris S. Crawford, Carmen Badea, Stephen W. Bailey, Juan E. Gilbert

wip10920 Towards Accurate Automatic Segmentation of IMU-Tracked Motion Gestures Sven Kratz, Maribeth Back

wip10921 ShowMe: A Remote Collaboration System that Supports Immersive Gestural Communication udith Amores, avier Benavides, Pattie Maes

wip10922 A Crowdsourced Alternative to Eye-tracking for Visualization Understanding

Nam Wook Kim, Zoya Bylinskii, Michelle A. Borkin, Aude Oliva, r ys to Z Gajos, Hanspeter Pfister

wip10923 Illusion of Surface Changes induced by Tactile and Visual Touch Feedback Katrin Wolf, Timm Bäder

wip10924 3D Virtual Hand Selection with EMS and Vibration Feedback Max Pfeiffer, Wolfgang Stuerzlinger

wip10925 Same-side Hand Interactions with Arm-placed Devices Using EMG Frederic Kerber, Pascal Lessel, Antonio Krüger

HEALTHCARE AND WELLBEING

11001 – 11013

wip11001 Detecting and Characterizing Mental Health Related Self-Disclosure in Social Media Sairam Balani, Munmun De Choudhury

wip11002 Designing a Music-controlled Running Application: A Sports Science and Psychological Perspective Christine Bauer, Anna Kratschmar

wip11003 NLG-Based Moderator Response Generator to Support Mental Health Mohammed Sazzad Hussain, Juchen Li, Rafael A. Calvo, Laura Ospina-Pinillos, Louise Ellis, Tracey Davenport, Ian Hickie

wip11004 EdiPulse: Supporting Physical Activity with Chocolate Printed Messages Rohit Ashok Khot, Ryan Pennings, Florian ‘Floyd’ Mueller

wip11005 Using Accelerometer Data to Estimate Surface Incline and Its Walking App Potential

Ilyas Uyanik, Ashik Khatri, Dinesh Majeti, Muhsin Ugur, Dvijesh J. Shastri, Ioannis T. Pavlidis

wip11006 Forget Me Not: Connecting Palliative Patients and Their Loved Ones

Torben Wallbaum, Janko Timmermann, Wilko Heuten, Susanne Boll

wip11007 Exploring Motivations of Young Adults to Participate in Physical Activities

Tara Capel, Johanna Frederike Schnittert, Stephen Snow, Dhaval Vyas

wip11008 HHeal: A Personalized Health App for Flu Tracking and Prevention Na Li, Changkun Zhao, Eun Kyoung Choe, Frank Ritter

58 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

wip11010 Personal Counseling on Smart Phones For Smoking Cessation Jeni Paay, Jesper Kjeldskov, Mikael B. Skov, Nirojan Srikandarajah, Umachanger Brinthaparan

wip11011 Design Self-Diagnosis Applications for Non-Patients

Jason Chen Zhao, Ngai-Man Cheung, Ricardo Sosa, Dawn Chin-Ing Koh

ip

ction ealt Self fficac ssessment ool De elopment for Online Cancer Support Groups Elisabeth Joyce

wip11013 Designing a Motivational Agent for Behavior Change in Physical Activity Toshikazu Kanaoka, Bilge Mutlu

LEARNING ip

utomaticall

11101 – 11106 d usting t e Speed of

earning ideos

Sunghyun Song, Jeong-ki Hong, Ian Oakley, Jun Dong Cho, Andrea Bianchi

wip11102 Explanation Activities with a Pedagogical Agent in an Online Task: Lexical Network Analysis Yugo Hayashi

wip11103 FeedLearn: Using Facebook Feeds for Microlearning Geza Kovacs

wip11104 Playful Sounds From The Classroom: What Can Designers of Digital Music Games Learn From Formal Educators? PIeter Duysburgh, Karin Slegers, Karen Mouws, Marije Nouwen

wip11105 CourseMIRROR: Enhancing Large Classroom Instructor-Student Interactions via Mobile Interfaces and Natural Language Processing iangmin Fan, Wencan uo, Muhsin Menekse, iane itman, Jingtao Wang

wip11106 Designing Interactive Query Interfaces to Teach Database Systems in the Classroom Lilong Jiang, Arnab Nandi

LIFESTYLE

11201 – 11207

wip11201 Supporting Energy Management as a Cooperative Amateur Activity

Hanna Hasselqvist, Cristian Bogdan, Mario Romero, Omar Shafqat

wip11202 HabitStar: An Interactive Ambient Lighting to Help Users Improve Habits

Jinsu Eun,Yeonjoo Lee, Joonhwan Lee, Joohyeon Lee, Woon Seong Lee, Zune Lee

wip11203 ‘Close the Loop’ An iBeacon App to Foster Recycling Through Just-in-Time Feedback

Diego Casado-Mansilla, Derek Foster, Shaun Lawson, Pablo Garaizar, Diego López-de-Ipiña

wip11204 Promote Energy Conservation in Automatic Environment Control: A Comfort-Energy Trade-off Perspective Pei-Luen Patrick Rau,Yun Gong,YiBo Dai, Chieh Cheng

wip11205 Travel Q: Questifying Micro Activities Using Travel Photos to Enhance Travel Experience

Yoojung Kim, Changhoon Oh, Taeyoung Lee, Donghun Lee, Joongseek Lee, Bongwon Suh

wip11206 Towards an Interactive Dance Visualization for Inspiring Coordination Between Dancers Carla F. Griggio, Mario Romero, Germán Leiva

wip11207 ‘Electric City’: Uncovering Social Dimensions and Values of Sharing Renewable Energy through Gaming Abhigyan Singh, Hylke W. van Dijk, Bard O. Wartena, Natalia Romero Herrera, David Keyson

MOBILE INTERACTIONS

11301 – 11312

wip11301 Motorcycle Ride Care Using Android Phone Bo-Han Chen, Sai-Keung Wong, Wei Che Chang

CHI 2015

WORKS IN PROGRESS

wip11302 The Heroes’ Problems: Exploring the Potentials of Google Glass for Biohazard Handling Professionals

ip

Jack Shen-Kuen Chang, Michael Henry, Russ Burtner, Oriana Love, Courtney Corley

wip11303 CrowdFound: A Mobile Crowdsourcing System to Find Lost Items On-the-Go Emily Harburg,Yongsung Kim, Elizabeth Gerber, Haoqi Zhang

wip11304 Dwelling and Fleeting Encounters: Exploring Why People Use WeChat - A Mobile Instant Messenger

Graham Wilson, Stephen Brewster, Hector Caltenco, Charlotte Magnusson, Sara Finocchietti, Gabriel Baud-Bovy, Monica Gori

wip20110 HoverLink: Joint Interactions using Hover Sensing Capability Takuro Kuribara, Buntarou Shizuki, Jiro Tanaka

wip20111 Sounds Like it Works: Music-based Navigation to Improve the Cleanroom Experience

Ilhan Aslan, Barbara Weixelbaumer, Bernhard Maurer, Daniela Wurhofer, Alexander Meschtscherjakov, Manfred Tscheligi

Yang Wang,Yao Li, Jian Tang

wip11305 Personal Photo Preservation for the Smartphone Generation Maria K. Wolters, Elaine Niven, Mari Runardotter, Francesco Gallo, Heiko Maus, Robert H. Logie

ip

ro ectagami olda le o ile De ice it S ape Interactive Applications

Dominique Tan, Maciej Kumorek, Andres A. Garcia, Adam Mooney, Derek Bekoe

wip11307 Lock n’ LoL: Mitigating Smartphone Disturbance in Co-located Social Interactions Minsam Ko, Chayanin Wong, Sunmin Son, Euigon Jung, Uichin Lee, Seungwoo Choi, Sungho Jo, Min H. Kim

wip11308 Mobile System Design for Scratch Recognition

Jongin Lee, Dae-ki Cho, Seokwoo Song, Seungho Kim, Eunji Im, John Kim

wip11309 Face Me! Head-Tracker Interface Evaluation on Mobile Devices

wip20112 Toward Designing a New Virtual Keyboard When All Finger Movements Are Known Daewoong Choi, Hyeonjoong Cho, Joono Cheong

wip20113 Automatically Freezing Live Video for Annotation during Remote Collaboration

Seungwon Kim, Gun Lee, Sangtae Ha, Nobuchika Sakata, Mark Billinghurst

wip20114 Jorro Beat: Shower Tactile Stimulation Device in the Bathroom Keisuke Hoshino, Masahiro Koge,Taku Hachisu, Ryo Kodama, Hiroyuki Kajimoto

wip20115 Beyond Command & Control: Sketching Embodied Interaction Cumhur Erkut, Anu Rajala-Erkut

wip20116 The Cage: A 6-DoF Remote Control with Force Feedback for Advanced UAV Interaction

Charlie Anderson, Benji Barash, Charlie McNeill, Denis Ogun, Michael Wray, Jarrod Knibbe, Christopher H. Morris, Sue Ann Seah

Maria Francesca Roig-Maimó, Javier Varona Gómez, Cristina Manresa-Yee

wip11310 TUIs in the Large: Using Paper Tangibles with Mobile Devices

Katrin Wolf, Stefan Schneegass, Niels Henze, Dominik Weber,Valentin Schwind, Pascal Knierim, Sven Mayer,Tilman Dingler,Yomna Abdelrahman, Thomas Kubitza, Markus Funk,Anja Mebus,Albrecht Schmidt

wip11311 Initiating Moderation in Problematic Smartphone Usage Patterns Hancheol Park, Gahgene Gweon

wip11312 SocialKeyboard: Proofreading Everyday Writings in Mobile Phones Jin-woo Lee, Joohyun Kim, Uichin Lee, Jae-Gil Lee

ffects of Sound pe on Recreating t e ra ector of a Moving Source

wip20117 TellTale: Adding a Polygraph to Everyday Life

Thomas Charlesworth, Helena Ford, Luke Milton, Thomas Mortensson, James Pedlingham, Jarrod Knibbe, Sue Ann Seah

wip20118 SIGCHI: Magic Mirror - Embodied Interactions for the Quantified Self Hariharan Subramonyam

wip20119 PicLight: User-Centered Lighting Control Interface for Residential Space Jeongmin Lee, Kyungah Choi, Hyeon-Jeong Suk

 SECOND ROTATION – WEDNESDAY 22 APRIL

wip20120 Embodied Technology: Unraveling Bodily Action with Normative Types

NOVEL INTERFACES AND INTERACTION TECHNIQUES 20101 – 20126

wip20121 Evaluating Stereoscopic 3D for Automotive User Interfaces in a Real-World Driving Study

wip20101 Palette: Enhancing E-Commerce Product Description by Leveraging Spectrophotometry to Represent Garment Color and Airiness Shogo Yamashita, Adiyan Mujibiya

wip20102 Transporters: Vision & Touch Transitive Widgets for Capacitive Screens

Florian Heller, Simon Voelker, Chat Wacharamanotham, Jan Borchers

wip20103 Linked-Stick: Conveying a Physical Experience using a Shape-Shifting Stick

Ken Nakagaki, Chikara Inamura, Pasquale Totaro, Thariq Shihipar, Chantine Akikyama,Yin Shuang, Hiroshi Ishii

wip20104 Enhanced Depth Discrimination Using Dynamic Stereoscopic 3D Parameters Arun Kulshreshth, Joseph J. LaViola Jr.

ip

a letop ro ector camera S stem for Remote and Near Pointing Operation Shun Sekiguchi, Takashi Komuro

wip20106 AtmoSPHERE: Representing Space and Movement Using Sand Traces in an Interactive Zen Garden Ruofei Du, Kent R. Wills, Max Potasznik, Jon E. Froehlich

wip20107 Tilting the Tablet: The Effect of Tablet Tilt on Hand Occlusion Emily B. Moore

ip

le Beam ersatile ideo ro ection nterface for Digital Performance Dae gun Jang,Yi-Kyung Kim, Seunghun Kim

CHI 2015

Laurens Boer, Robb Mitchell, Agnese Caglio, Andrés Lucero

Nora Broy, Stefan Schneegass, Mengbing Guo, Florian Alt, Albrecht Schmidt

wip20122 Hover Cursor: Improving Touchscreen Acquisition Of Small Targets With Hover-enabled Pre-selection Anna Ostberg, Nada Matic

wip20123 Delegation Impossible? - Towards Novel Interfaces for Camera Motion Axel Hoesl, Julie Wagner, Andreas Butz

wip20124 Director: A Remote Guidance Mechanism Liam Betsworth, Matt Jones

ip

e ppropriation arado Benefits and Burdens of Appropriating Collaboration Technologies Sangseok You, Lionel P. Robert, Soo Young Rieh

wip20126 Beyond Binary Gestures: Exploring Documents using Touch Interfaces

Ziqi Huang, Juan Felipe Beltran, Azza Abouzied, Arnab Nandi

PRODUCTIVITY AND AWARENESS ip

e Do Not Distur

Martin Pielot, Luz Rello

allenge

20201 – 20206 Da

it out Notifications

wip20202 Beyond “Geofencing: Specifying Location in Location-Based Reminder Applications Yao Wang, Manuel A. Perez-Quinones

wip20203 Tipper: Contextual Tooltips that Provide Seniors with Clear, Reliable Help for Web Tasks Saba Kawas,Yibo Dai, George Karalis, Chris Olsen

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 59

WORKS IN PROGRESS

wip20204 Automatic Delivery Timing Control of Incoming Email based on User Interruptibility

wip20407 Understanding Perceived Social Support through Communication Time, Frequency, and Media Multiplexity

wip20205 Task Lockouts Induce Crowdworkers to Switch to Other Activities

wip20408 From the Deposit to the Exhibit Floor: An Exploration on i ing useum ects ersonalit and Social ife

Yasumasa Kobayashi, Takahiro Tanaka, Kazuaki Aoki, Kinya Fujita Sandy J. J. Gould, Anna L. Cox, Duncan P Brumby

wip20206 Tag & Link: Supporting Regional and Relational Tagging in Images with Direct Annotation Hsing-Lin Tsai, Cheng-Hsien Han, En-Hsin Wu, Chi-Lan Yang, Hao-Chuan Wang

SEARCH AND INFOVIZ

20301 – 20314

wip20301 TaskAmbient: A Study in Personal Task Management Visualization

Donghee Yvette Wohn, Wei Peng

Mark T. Marshall, nick dulake, Daniela Petrelli, Hub Kockelkorn

wip20409 Collaborative Video Challenges: a Playful Concept of Proximity-Based Social Interaction

Susanna Paasovaara, Ekaterina Olshannikova, Thomas Olsson

wip20410 “I Like This Shirt”: Exploring the Translation of Social Mechanisms in the Virtual World into Physical Experiences adan Najafi adeh, Seokbin ang, on

Sheriff Jolaoso, Manuel A. Perez-Quinones

wip20302 Usable Transparency with the Data Track -- A Tool for Visualizing Data Disclosures Julio Angulo, Simone Fischer-Hübner, Tobias Pulls, Erik Wästlund

Froehlich

wip20411 Frustrations with Pursuing Casual Encounters through Online Dating Douglas Zytko, Sukeshini A. Grandhi, Quentin Jones

wip20412 Exploring Tag-based Like Networks

Kyungsik Han, Jin Yea Jang, Dongwon Lee

wip20303 Towards a Novel Issue Tracking System for “Industry 4.0 Environments

wip20413 A Taxonomy for Classifying Questions Asked in Social Question and Answering

Pascal Lessel, Marc Müller, Antonio Krüger

Zhe Liu, Bernard J. Jansen

wip20304 Bicentric Diagrams: Design of a Graph-Based Relational Set Visualization Technique

TRUST, PRIVACY, AND EMOTIONS

wip20305 Towards Text Search for Information Visualization Retrieval

wip20501 SmileTracker: Automatically and Unobtrusively Recording Smiles and their Context

wip20306 Exploring the Effect of Word-Scale Visualizations on Reading Behavior

wip20502 Laughin’Cam: Active Camera System To Induce Natural Smiles

Hyunwoo Park, Rahul C. Basole

Romain Vuillemot, Mali Akmanalp

Pascal Go fin, Wesley Willett, Anastasia Be erianos, Petra senberg

wip20307 Ariadne’s Thread - Interactive Navigation in a World of Networked Information

Rob Koopman, Shenghui Wang, Andrea Scharnhorst, Gwenn Englebienne

wip20308 Design Implications of Casual Health Visualization on Tangible Displays

Sandy Claes, Jorgos Coenen, Karin Slegers, Andrew Vande Moere

wip20309 Using Space: Effect of Display Size on Users’ Search Performance

Lars Lischke, Sven Mayer, Katrin Wolf, Niels Henze, Albrecht Schmidt, Svenja Leifert, Harald Reiterer

wip20310 Detecting and Visualizing Filter Bubbles in Google and Bing

Natasha Jaques, Weixuan ‘Vincent’ Chen, Rosalind Picard Ryohei Fushimi, Shogo Fukushima, Takeshi Naemura

wip20503 Factors Related to Privacy Concerns and Protection Behaviors Regarding Behavioral Advertising Donghee Yvette Wohn, Jacob Solomon, Dan Sarkar, Kami E. Vaniea

wip20504 Somebody Is Peeking! A Proximity and Privacy Aware Tablet Interface

Huiyuan Zhou,Vinicius Ferreira,Thamara Alves, Kirstie Hawkey, Derek Reilly

wip20505 A Study Relating Computational Textile Textural Expression to Emotion Felecia Davis

wip20506 Lexical Representation of Emotions for High Functioning Autism (HFA) via Emotional Story Intervention using Smart Media Min Kyeong Jeong,YoungTae Kim, Dongsun Yim, SeokJeong Yeon, Seokwoo Song, John Kim

Tawanna R. Dillahunt, Christopher A. Brooks, Samarth Gulati

wip20311 Understanding Requirements of Place in Local Search Karen Church, Henriette Cramer

wip20313 Visual characteristics’ inherent impact on people’s strategic orientation

Therese Dries-Tönnies, Axel Platz, Michael Burmester, Magdalena Laib, Nathalie Blanc

wip20314 Quarry: Picking From Examples to Explore Big Data Rhema Linder, Eunyee Koh

SOCIAL COMPUTING

20501 – 20515

wip20507 Using Galvanic Skin Response (GSR) to Measure Trust and Cognitive Load in the Text-Chat Environment Ahmad Khawaji, Jianlong Zhou, Fang Chen, Nadine Marcus

wip20508 Emotion Evoked by Texture and Application to Emotional Communication Yurika Ebe, Hiroyuki Umemuro

wip20509 Creating the Mood: Design for a Cognitive Meeting Room Maryam Ashoori, Rachel K. E. Bellamy, Justin D. Weisz

20401 – 20413

wip20401 Generating Narratives from Personal Digital Data: Triptychs

Matthew P. Aylett, Elaine Farrow, Larissa Pschetz, Thomas Dickinson

wip20402 PicThru: a Mobile Application to Foster Creative Thinking with Pictures and Social Mechanics.

wip20510 CoSense: Creating Shared Emotional Experiences

Sudhanshu S. D. P. Ayyagari, Kunal Gupta, Matt tait, Mark Billinghurst

ip

Biplab Deka, HaiziYu, Devin Ho, Zifeng Huang, Jerry O.Talton, Ranjitha Kumar

wip20404 The Price of the Priceless: Understanding Estimated Costs of Work in Friendsourcing

Joey Chiao-Yin Hsiao, Mei-Hua Pan, Hao-Chuan Wang, Jane Yung-Jen Hsu

wip20405 Exploring Embedded Haptics for Social Networking and Interactions Ali Israr, Siyan Zhao, Oliver Schneider

wip20406 Using Socio-ecological Model to Inform the Design of Persuasive Applications Hazwani Mohd Mohadis, Nazlena Mohamad Ali

60 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

ues

reati e

pression and

Corina Sas, Scott Challioner, Christopher Clarke, Ross Wilson, Alina Coman, Sarah Clinch, Mike Harding, Nigel Davies

Oscar Ardaiz, Oleh Kudinov, Asier Marzo

wip20403 Ranking Designs and Users in Online Social Networks

Self Defining emor Emotional Meaning

wip20512 Seamless And Always-on Security in a Bring-Your-Own-Application World Paulo Hecht, Sidney Fels, Junia Anacleto

ip

motional nteraction and Nofitication of le i le Handheld Devices Jung Min Lee, So Yon Jeong, Da Young Ju

wip20514 Understanding User’s Behavior for Developing Webtoon Rating System Based on Laugh Reaction Sensing through Smartphone SungHyuk Yoon, Soyoung Kwon, KunPyo Lee

wip20515 Growth, Change & Decay: Plants & Interaction Possibilities Cameron Steer, Simon Robinson, Matt Jones

CHI 2015

WORKS IN PROGRESS

UBICOMP, ROBOTS, AND WEARABLES

20601 – 20621

wip20601 ApplianceReader: A Wearable, Crowdsourced,Vision-based System to Make Appliances Accessible Anhong Guo, iang Anthony hen, e rey P Bigham

wip20602 Ethnographic Design Research With Wearable Cameras Katja C. Thoring, Roland M Mueller, Petra Badke-Schaub

wip20603 Listen to Your Footsteps: Wearable Device for Measuring Walking Quality Sungjae Hwang, Junghyeon Gim

wip20604 EM Package: Augmenting Robotic Intimate Space Interaction Using EM Field Fluctuation Sensing Ryo Kodama, Hiroyuki Kajimoto

wip20605 Understanding the Elders’ Interaction with Smart Home in Korea Hyang Sook Kim, Hyo Chang Kim,Yong Gu Ji

wip20606 Wearable Health Information: Effects of Comparative Feedback and Presentation Mode Hoyoun Cho, Hongsuk Yoon, Ki Joon Kim, Dong-Hee Shin

ip

Super ision Spatial ontrol of onnected Smart Home

ects in a

Sarthak Ghosh, Gilles Bailly, Robin Despouys, Eric Lecolinet, Rémi Sharrock

wip20608 Interactive Radio: A New Platform for Calm Computing Matthew P. Aylett,Yolanda Vazquez-Alvarez, Lynne Baillie

wip20609 WatchMe: A Novel Input Method Combining a Smartwatch and Bimanual Interaction Wouter Van Vlaenderen, Jens Brulmans, Jo Vermeulen, Johannes Schöning Lionel P. Robert, Sangseok You

wip20611 Exploring the Use of Google Glass in Wet Laboratories Grace Hu, Lily Chen, Johanna Okerlund, Orit Shaer

wip20612 HomeRules: A Tangible End-User Programming Interface for Smart Homes Luigi De Russis, Fulvio Corno

wip20613 Vi-Bros: Tactile Feedback for Indoor Navigation with a Smartphone and a Smartwatch

Hyunchul Lim,YoonKyong Cho, Wonjong Rhee, Bongwon Suh

Sn u

ploring t e roduction of Sensor

ects

Ankur Agrawal,Wenvi Hidayat, Aravind Ravi , Mark Stamnes, Meishen Yin, Daniela Rosner

wip20615 CueSense: a Wearable Proximity-Aware Display Enhancing Encounters

Pradthana Jarusriboonchai, Thomas Olsson, Vikas Prabhu, Kaisa Väänänen-Vainio-Mattila

wip20616 Smartwatches: the Good, the Bad and the Ugly? Marta E. Cecchinato, Anna L. Cox, Jon Bird

wip20617 Minimal Requirements Of Realism In Social Robots – Designing or atients it c uired Brain n ur

Robert A. Paauwe, David V. Keyson, Johan F. Hoorn, Elly A. Konijn

wip20618 Exploring the Design of a Wearable Device to Turn Everyday ects into la ful periences udith Amores, avier Benavides, Roger Boldu, Pattie Maes

wip20619 “It’s Kind of Like an Extra Screen for My Phone”: Understanding Everyday Uses of Consumer Smart Watches Steven Schirra, Frank R. Bentley

wip20620 Design of a Smart TV Logging System Using Beacons and Smartphones Jehwan Seo, Daesik Kim, Bongwon Suh, Joongseek Lee

wip20621 Connichiwa – A Framework for Cross-Device Web Applications

20701 – 20724

wip20701 Exploring the Potential for Cross Disciplinary Working with Archives and Records Management Jenny Bunn

CHI 2015

Takanori Komatsu, Rui Prada, Kazuki Kobayashi, Seiji Yamada, Kotaro Funakoshi, Mikio Nakano

wip20703 A Noticeboard in “Both Worlds Unsurprising Interfaces Supporting Easy Bi-Cultural Content Publication

Alessandro Soro, Anita Lee Hong, Grace Shaw, Paul Roe, Margot Brereton

wip20704 DinerRouge – Bringing Wealth and Income Inequality to the Table through a Provocative UX

Adrian Holzer, Samuel Bendahan, Bruno Kocher, Boris Fritscher, Denis Gillet

wip20705 Taking into Account User Appropriation and Development to Design Energy Consumption Feedback Myriam Frejus, Dominique Martini

wip20706 Using Digital Watch Practices to Inform Smartwatch Design Kent Lyons

wip20707 Real Time Detection and Intervention of Poorly Phrased Questions

Igor A. Podgorny, Chris Gielow, Matthew Cannon, Todd Goodyear

wip20708 A User Interface for Encoding Space Usage Rules Expressed in Natural Language Pavel Andreevich Samsonov, Johannes Schöning, Brent Hecht

wip20709 SNAP: Sensor Aid Prototyping Tool for Designers Tony Kim, Sungjae Hwang, Junghyeon Gim

wip20710 Video-Recording Your Life: User Perception and Experiences wip20711 Augmented Miniature Prototyping Toolkit for UX in Interactive Space Han-Jong Kim, Tek-Jin Nam

wip20712 iHIP: Towards a User Centric Individual Human Interaction Proof Framework

Christos Fidas, Heinrich Hussmann, Marios Belk, George Samaras

wip20713 Personality Traits Predict Music Taxonomy Preferences Bruce Ferwerda, Emily Yang, Markus Schedl, Marko Tkalcic

wip20714 Evaluating the Effects of Interface Feedback in MT-embedded Interactive Translation Hsing-Lin Tsai, Hao-Chuan Wang

wip20715 Interaction Design Processes to Facilitate Changing Business Models in the Newspaper Industry: A Case Study of vk.se

Thomas Mejtoft, Sara Mejtoft, Anna Palmér, Viktor Östin, Anna Viklund, Sofia Papworth, Mikaela Berg, Robert ohansson

wip20716 Craft Consciousness: The Powerlessness of Traditional Embroidery

Yu-Shin Wang,Yuan-Yao Hsu,Wei-Lin Chen, Han Chen, Rung-Huei Liang

wip20717 Text Mining Emergent Human Behaviors for Interactive Systems Ethan Fast, Pranav Rajpurkar, Michael S. Bernstein

wip20718 Fixing the Alignment: An exploration of Budgeting Practices in the Home Stephen Snow, Dhaval Vyas

wip20719 Designing for User and Brand Experience via Company-wide Experience Goals Virpi Roto,Yichen Lu, Harri Nieminen, Erdem Tutal

wip20720 Facets In HCI: Towards Understanding Eudaimonic UX – Preliminary Findings Livia J. Müller, Elisa D. Mekler, Klaus Opwis

wip20721 Evaluation for Evaluation: Usability Work duringTendering Process Kimmo Tarkkanen, Ville Harkke

wip20722 GiantSteps: Semi-Structured Conversations with Musicians Kristina Andersen, Florian Grote

Mario Schreiner, Roman Rädle, Hans-Christian Jetter, Harald Reiterer

USERS AND UI DESIGN

s nterpretation of rtificial Su tle pressions Language-Independent?: Comparison among Japanese, German, Portuguese, and Mandarin Chinese

Daniel Buschek, Michael Spitzer, Florian Alt

wip20610 Subgroup Formation in Teams Working with Robots

ip

ip

wip20723 Understanding Users’ Creation of Behavior Change Plans with Theory-Based Support Jisoo Lee, Erin Walker, Winslow Burleson, Eric B. Hekler

wip20724 Circuit Eraser: A Tool for Iterative Design with Conductive Ink oya Narumi, inyang Shi, Steve Hodges, oshihiro awahara, Shinya Shimizu, Tohru Asami

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 61

INTERACTIVITY  INTERACTIVITY Interactivity offers hands-on demonstrations that let you see, hear andtouch interactive visions of the future. They take the form of prototypes, demonstrations, artworks, design experiences and inspirational technologies. Interactivity offers an alternative to s traditional te t format to disseminate ad ances in t e field Interactivity promotes and provokes discussion about the role of technology by actively engaging attendees one-on-one. Interactivity demonstrations are available from the Monday evening Conference Reception through the Thursday morning break. Presenters will be stationed at their exhibits throughout the Monday evening session and during coffee breaks on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday morning. Monday 18:00 – 19:30 Grand opening Tuesday – Wednesday 10:50 – 11:30 Presenters available during the morning break 15:50 – 16:30 Presenters available during the afternoon break Thursday 10:50 – 11:30 Presenters available during the morning break 11:30

i139 Wearable Solution for Industrial Maintenance

Sam Zheng, Patrik Matos, Cedric Foucault, Siddharth Dasari, Meng Yuan, Stuart Goose

i143 Development of Realistic Digital Expression of Human Avatars through Pupillary Responses based on Heart Rate Myoung Ju Won, Sangin Park, SungTeac Hwang, Mincheol Whang

i144 Waving Authentication:Your Smartphone Authenticate You on Motion Gesture Feng Hong, Meiyu Wei, Shujuan You,Yuan Feng, Zhongwen Guo

i145 Data Transmission Method for Mobile Phone Using Groove Scan Code Junbong Song, Hyunwoo Bang

i147 NOISA: A Novel Intelligent System Facilitating Smart Interaction oray Tahiroglu,Thomas Svedstr m, Valtteri Wikstr m

i148 Multi-Player Gaming on Spherical Displays

Julie R. Williamson, John Williamson, Daniel Sundén, Jay Bradley

i149 Sustainable Transport System: A Wheel Based Interactive Information Installation Geon Dong Kim, Juhyun Eune

i150 Smart Eyewear for Interaction and Activity Recognition

Shoya Ishimaru, Kai Kunze, Katsuma Tanaka,Yuji Uema, Koichi Kise, Masahiko Inami

Interactivity closes

i102 Wrist Compression Feedback by Pneumatic Actuation

i

Henning Pohl, Dennis Becke, Eugen Wagner, Maximilian Schrapel, Michael Rohs

i105 Harmonious Haptics: Enhanced Tactile Feedback Using a Mobile and a Wearable Device Sungjae Hwang, John Song, Junghyeon Gim

i108 Low-Fidelity Fabrication: Speeding up Design Iteration of D ects

Ste anie Mueller, ustin Beyer,Tobias Mohr, Serafima Gurevich, Ale ander Teibrich, isa Pfisterer, erstin Guenther, ohannes Frohnho en, Hsiang-Ting Chen, Patrick Baudisch, Sangha Im, François V Guimbretière

i109 PaperPulse: An Integrated Approach to Fabricating Interactive Paper Raf Ramakers, Kashyap Todi, Kris Luyten

Data ear Self reflection on t e o or o to t icall Use Wearable Cameras for Research Anya Skatova, Victoria E. Shipp, Lee Spacagna, Benjamin Bedwell, Ahmad Beltagui,Tom Rodden

i152 TESSA - Toolkit for Experimentation with Multimodal Sensory Substitution and Augmentation Carlos Sainz Martinez, Faustina Hwang

i154 WoBo: Multisensorial Travels Through Oculus Rift

Stefano Fibbi, Fabio Sorrentino, Lucio Davide Spano, Riccardo Scateni

i155 Canvas Dance: An Interactive Dance Visualization for Large-Group Interaction Carla F. Griggio, Mario Romero

i158 Nebula: An Interactive Garment Designed for Functional Aesthetics

Ludvig Elblaus, Vasiliki Tsaknaki, Vincent Lewandowski, Roberto Bresin

i110 Level-Ups: Motorized Stilts that Simulate Stair Steps in Virtual Reality

i

i115 Designing Engaging Data in Communities

i164 The Art.CHI Gallery: An Embodied Iterative Curation Experience

Dominik Schmidt, Robert Kovacs, Vikram Mehta, Udayan Umapathi, Sven Köhler, Lung-Pan Cheng, Patrick Baudisch Tim Regan, David Sweeney, John Helmes, Vasillis Vlachokyriakos, Siân Lindley, Alex Taylor

i116 The EmotiveModeler: An Emotive Form Design CAD Tool Philippa Mothersill, V. Michael Bove Jr.

i117 Remnance of Form: Interactive Narratives through Unexpected Behaviors of a Shadow

Digiti Sonus Ne using Hand Motion

nterface for ingerprint Data Sonification

Yoon Chung Han, Byeong-jun Han

Nic Lupfer, Bill Hamilton, Andrew Webb, Rhema Linder, Ernest Edmonds, Andruid Kerne

i165 Filteryedping: A Dwell-Free Eye Typing Technique Diogo Pedrosa, Maria da Graça Pimentel, Khai N.Truong

i166 VoroGraph:Visualization Tools for Epidemic Analysis Cody Dunne, Michael Muller, Nicola Perra, Mauro Martino

Sang-won Leigh, Asta Roseway, Ann Paradiso, Pattie Maes

i123 Wearable Devices for Enhancing Communications and Activities between the Blind and Ordinary People through a Waltz

i167

i124 EdiPulse:Turning Physical Activity Into Chocolates

i170 “KIST Smart Wall” and its Media Art Application: The Scenery Series

Yoonji Song, Jiye Kim

Rohit Ashok Khot, Ryan Pennings, Florian ‘Floyd’ Mueller

i128 ListenTree: Audio-Haptic Display In The Natural Environment Edwina Portocarrero, Gershon Dublon, Joseph Paradiso, V. Michael Bove Jr.

i131 Know Yourself: Self-portrait with Emotion Expressed in the EEG Data Hyo-jin Kim, Su-yeon Kim

i132 Researcher: A Reading Application Helping the Flow of Research in Tablet and Mobile Phone Minjeong Kang, Juhyun Eune

i138 BandSense: Pressure-sensitive Multi-touch Interaction on a Wristband Youngseok Ahn, Sungjae Hwang, Hyungook Yoon, Jung-hee Ryu

62 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

(“Salm”, “To Live”): Gaze Reactive Typography Inspired by Ahn Sang-Soo Monchu Chen, Bongkeum Jeong,Yoram I. Chisik

Joong Ho Lee, Hyun Jhin Lee, Sanghwa Hong, Chungyo Ha, Ji-Hyung Park

i171 Comfort Zone Todd Holoubek

i172 Psychophysics Machines Adam Donovan

i173 Big Screen: mood.cloud

Younghui Kim, Geri Gay, Lindsay Reynolds, Hyuns Hong

i174 RGB Color Bits Sanghwa Hong

i175 Visual Liquidizer or Virtual Merge Tatsuo Unemi, Daniel Bisig

CHI 2015

EXHIBITORS  HERO SPONSOR EXHIBITORS Samsung

See the map on page 65 for the location of each booth

1, 2 & 3

Design and software are the critical types of soft power that will lead future businesses. In light of this, Samsung Electronics operates talent-fostering programs called the Samsung Design Membership and the Samsung Software Membership.These programs help aspiring students pursue their creative interests through academic-industrial cooperation and many other research activities. Come and visit us.

 CHAMPION SPONSOR EXHIBITORS Golfzon

17

We’re presenting golf in a way never seen before. Golfzon’s product combine the best of golf and IT to offer new levels of fun and unforgettable experiences. Our golf simulators utilize numerous innovative technologies such as sensors, networks, and 3D vision to pro ide an immersi e and en o a le e perience to impro ing our golf game. Our goal is to establish a new golf culture to share with customers and build global relationships not only in the golf industry but also in even other industries. We are recruiting, so please visit our booth and recruiting board.

Google

21 & 22

Google’s mission is to organize the world’s information, making it universally accessible and useful. Every day, we bring our spirit of innovation and entrepreneurship to work. Come by our booth, meet our engineers and researchers, demo some new products and learn about some of the great opportunities we have at Google.

SK Planet

23

Based on its open platform, SK Planet creates values in diverse business areas. Shop kick is a mobile shopping companion that delights customers it re ards and promotions to dri e foot traffic for retailers, and build in-store engagement for brands. Syrup’s Mall Guide is a mo ile guide t at informs and deli ers enefits t roug B to support customers to a e an en o a le s opping e perience

 CONTRIBUTING SPONSOR EXHIBITORS Facebook

16

We want to understand the world.Why? Because we believe that’s the only way to move toward a world that’s more open and connected, which is our mission. From studying the impact of technology on society, to building systems that can connect billions of people, Research at Facebook is focused on solving some of the hardest global and engineering challenges of our time. Stop by to learn more.

FuturePlay

6

FuturePlay is a company-building company, strongly focused in creating tech-centric startups. By combining incubator, accelerator and investor, e a e created a sanctuar for ou to find necessar elements to launch and grow your tech into a successful business. Join our Inventor Program to receive hands-on support along with work space, salary, biz consultation, and even seed-funding.

 ADDITIONAL EXHIBITORS Apropose

9

Spun out of the Stanford computer science department in 2013, Apropose brings data to the design process. Our analytics platform helps designers search, aggregate, and operationalize design data from the millions of sites on the Web. Apropose empowers designers to ma e etter design decisions more uic l it greater confidence

CHI Information Desk

18

Elsevier

7

Elsevier will be presenting key titles across Human-Computer Interaction. Please stop by and visit the booth, meet the publishers and editors in person, and take the opportunity to ask any questions you ma a e a out su mitting researc to our ournals n addition learn more about our author services, open access options and content innovation. Visit: www.elsevier.com/computerscience.

EyeTracking, Inc.

26

IUEditor

10

John Wiley & Sons

24

Letsee

31

Morgan & Claypool Publishers

20

NEOFECT

14

Neo smartpen N2

32

EyeTracking, Inc. is the leading provider of eye tracking services, software and expertise. For over a decade we have been at the forefront of innovation in virtually every area of visual behavior and cognitive workload research. Visit our booth to learn about our software: EyeWorks for eye tracking, Quad Server for physiological sensor integration, Workload RT for cognitive workload measurement. IUEditor is a world top class web editor, which realized the concept of visual language in life. It can embody HTML, CSS, Javascript without any coding. Moreover, It supports Python, Wordpress of Backend, and is able to synchronize with cloud server like Heroku. Plus, you can con ert to e site for mo ile ta let ust one clic ll of t ese ill be supported by gorgeous GUI. Wiley is a global provider of knowledge and knowledge-enabled services that improve outcomes in areas of research, professional practice and education it online tools ournals oo s data ases reference works and laboratory protocols. With strengths in every ma or academic scientific and professional field e partners it over 800 prestigious societies representing two million members. Letsee’s web-based augmented reality (AR) technology lets users augment e isting e contents it o ects and places around us Our unique AR content structure enables users to augment contents instantly with real-time interaction with other users. With our platform, anyone can contribute their own contents creating a healthy ecos stem filled it user created digital assets Morgan & Claypool publishes the Synthesis digital library, including the HCI series edited by Jack Carroll and the Assistive Technology Series edited by Ron Baecker. NEOFECT has dreamed of being a leading company in rehabilitation market. We hope that our products can help a lot of patients recover their lost abilities and improve the quality of life. The Neo smartpen N2 is a small and stylish digital pen that also has an ordinary ballpoint pen tip. With the N2 smartpen, users can write on paper that contains microscopic patterns. Whatever has been written is digitized and sent to a digital device, where it then can be easily organized and shared.

Nexon Computer Museum

4&5

ocated in e u Ne on omputer useum is t e first permanent museum in East Asia dedicated to the history of computer and video games. Currently the museum archives 6,300 computers, applications, game consoles and other historically important digital inventions to preserve the history of computers that drastically changed human life. The museum also offers interactive experiences to visitors.

The CHI Info Booth in the exhibit hall is staffed by Student Volunteers. The Info Booth can help with directions, room location, and schedule questions. It is also the place you may bring your resume with a completed co er s eet if ou respond to a o position posted on a recruiting board.

CHI 2015

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 63

EXHIBITORS  ADDITIONAL EXHIBITORS (CONTINUED)

 INTERACTIVITY BY BOOTH NUMBER

now publishers

33

now publishers publishes high quality reference, research and review ournals in usiness and tec nolog e oundations and rends ournals pu lis state of t e art re ie articles ritten leading researc ers in t e field isit our oot to meet t e pu lis er ames Finlay. Our new editor-in-chief, Desney Tan, will also be available.

Oxford University Press

15

Oxford University Press is pleased to publish Interacting with Computers on behalf of BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT and Interaction, a specialist group from BCS. Visit the Oxford University ress stand for free ournal copies and discounted oo s or more information isit i c o ford ournals org and loo at our related books at http://www.oup.com.

Samsung SDS, CX Team

11

Samsung SDS believes smart technology can make the world happier. We are growing to be a global ICT company with a competitive edge offering di erse ser ices including manufacturing office medical IT and so on. We innovate our customers’ experiences to provide them new business opportunities. Come see how our CX experts create smarter future and start the innovation here.

SAP

34 & 35

SAP helps companies of all sizes run better. With over 282,000 customers in 190 countries, over 74% of the world’s transactions touch SAP systems. Come see how our UX professionals are changing t e a our customers do usiness oo ing to oin our S famil Bring your resume and talk to our team about positions available in Korea and throughout SAP.

Smart Eye

19

SMART EYE provides ROBUST 3D Binocular Eye Tracking systems for research in applications such as multiple screens, long range or measurements on tablets or single screens. The systems provide a person’s 3D information on gaze direction, head position and angles, eyelid opening, pupil size and many more - in real time! Welcome to our oot to find out more a out our solutions

Seoul Tourism Organization (STO)

27 & 28

i102 Wrist Compression Feedback by Pneumatic Actuation i105 Harmonious Haptics: Enhanced Tactile Feedback.... i108 Low-Fidelity Fabrication: Speeding up Design Iteration of... i109 PaperPulse: An Integrated Approach to Fabricating... i110 Level-Ups: Motorized Stilts that Simulate Stair Steps in... i115 Designing Engaging Data in Communities i116 The EmotiveModeler: An Emotive Form Design CAD Tool i117 Remnance of Form: Interactive Narratives through... i123 Wearable Devices for Enhancing Communications... i124 EdiPulse: Turning Physical Activity Into Chocolates i128 ListenTree: Audio-Haptic Display In The Natural Environment (Located by registration) i131 Know Yourself: Self-portrait with Emotion Expressed... i132 Researcher: A Reading Application Helping the Flow of... i138 BandSense: Pressure-sensitive Multi-touch Interaction... i139 Wearable Solution for Industrial Maintenance i143 Development of Realistic Digital Expression of Human Avatars... i144 Waving Authentication:Your Smartphone Authenticate You... i145 Data Transmission Method for Mobile Phone Using Groove... i147 NOISA: A Novel Intelligent System Facilitating Smart Interaction i148 Multi-Player Gaming on Spherical Displays i149

Sustainable Transport System: A Wheel Based Interactive...

i150 Smart Eyewear for Interaction and Activity Recognition i

Data ear Self reflection on t e o or o to t icall

i152

TESSA - Toolkit for Experimentation with Multimodal Sensory...

i154 WoBo: Multisensorial Travels Through Oculus Rift i155

Canvas Dance: An Interactive Dance Visualization for...

Stop by the STO booth to learn more about the fascinating city of Seoul. At the booth, you may also send a postcard home and dress up in traditional Korean clothing for a picture.

i158 Nebula: An Interactive Garment Designed for...

Springer

i165 Filteryedping: A Dwell-Free Eye Typing Technique

12 & 13

Springer is the publisher of the Human-Computer Interaction Series and man cutting edge ournals isit our oot to e plore our ide range of pu lications pen ccess portfolio including t e ust published book by CHI co-Chair, Jinwoo Kim - Design for Experience. Get 20% discount, and don’t miss the chance to discuss any writing plans you may have with Beverley Ford & Helen Desmond.

Tobii Pro

25

Tobii Pro, being a world leader in eye tracking products and services, helps business and science professionals gain valuable insights into human behavior. Our innovative and high-quality eye tracking solutions capture human behavior in a natural way, ultimately affording users access to alua le o ecti e data a out real responses to stimuli

Vtouch

i159

Digiti Sonus v2: New Interface for Fingerprint Data...

i164 The Art.CHI Gallery: An Embodied Iterative Curation... i166 VoroGraph: Visualization Tools for Epidemic Analysis i167

(“Salm”, “To Live”): Gaze Reactive Typography Inspired...

i170 “KIST Smart Wall” and its Media Art Application... i171 Comfort Zone i172 Psychophysics Machines i173 Big Screen: mood.cloud i174 RGB Color Bits i175 Visual Liquidizer or Virtual Merge

8

Vtouch provides the most natural way of interacting with devices and things such as TV, light, thermostat, photo album, etc. The Vtouch interface or s from a distance trac ing users e es and fingers with camera, which enables the users to directly click what they see without any delay or preparation, as tapping a smartphone app.

64 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

THE COMMONS – EXHIBIT HALL C2/C3 MAP

Level 3F (3rd Floor) Halls C2/C3 *Installation i128 located at Registration Desk

i170 Smart Wall

Posters:

i147 i158

i116 i167 i124

i108 i151

i145 i102

i138 i166

i143 i171 i105

i154 i165

i150 i139

Student Design Competition Student Research Competition Doctoral Consortium Workshops

Interactivity 16 i115 i109

H1 H2

i152 i144

H3 H4

Hot Desks

15

13

14

12

11

17

10

18

9

19

8

20

7

21 22

Internet Cafe

Recruiting Boards

Posters:

23

Exhibits

24

Food & Beverages Area

6

25

Work in Progress

5 4 i148 i110 i159 i155

i123 Art Displays

Interactivity i131 i149 i132 i117

i164

i175

26

3

i174

27

2

i173

28

1

i172

30

31

32

33

34

35

 EXHIBITORS BY BOOTH NUMBER Samsung

Booth 1, 2 & 3

CHI Information Desk

Booth 18

Nexon Computer Museum

Booth 4 & 5

Smart Eye

Booth 19

FuturePlay

Booth 6

Morgan & Claypool Publishers

Booth 20

Elsevier

Booth 7

Google

Booth 21 & 22

Vtouch

Booth 8

SK Planet

Booth 23

Apropose

Booth 9

John Wiley & Sons

Booth 24

IUEditor

Booth 10

Tobii Pro

Booth 25

Samsung SDS, CX Team

Booth 11

EyeTracking, Inc.

Booth 26

Springer

Booth 12 & 13

Seoul Tourism Organization (STO)

Booth 27 & 28

NEOFECT

Booth 14

Letsee

Booth 31

Oxford University Press

Booth 15

Neo smartpen N2

Booth 32

Facebook

Booth 16

now publishers

Booth 33

Golfzon

Booth 17

SAP

Booth 34 & 35

CHI 2015

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 65

66 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

COEX CONVENTION & EXHIBITION CENTER MAPS

Level 3F (3rd Floor) Halls C, D, E

CHI 2015

COEX Convention & Exhibition Center | Seoul, Korea | 67

COEX CONVENTION & EXHIBITION CENTER MAPS

Level 4F (4rd Floor) Rooms 401, 402, 403

68 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

CHI 2015

CHI 2016 Ad IBC3.pdf

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4/9/15

2:10:00 PM

CHI 2015 Back Cover OBC_Sponsors3.pdf

4/9/15

2:13:22 PM

Special thanks for the financial support provided by the following sponsors:

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[PDF] Full Schedule  - CHI 2015 - Free Download PDF (2024)
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