Hi Everyone,
Leila Takayama (http://www.leilatakayama.org) will be visiting the DGP before her TUX talk on Tuesday the 24th. I'll be arranging demos from 10am-12pm. Please let me know if you'd like to meet with her. This is a great opportunity to show off your work!
-Peter Hamilton
Abstract:
Have you ever wondered what its like to be a robot? While others are wildly speculating about what the future of robots will look like, we actually already know quite a bit about what its like to live and work around robots. We also know a lot about what its like to telecommute to work everyday via telepresence robot. Coming from a human-robot interaction perspective, Ill be sharing some of those experiences and lessons with you. Over the past several years, Ive collaborated with remote colleagues via robotic telepresence systems that enabled them to drive themselves around the office, join in those impromptu hallway meetings, pounce on us when we didnt respond to emails, and ultimately build stronger working relationships. Ill present the research lessons learned from several years of fielding prototype telepresence robots in multiple companies and running quantitative user studies in the lab to figure out how to better support remote collaboration.
Bio:
Leila Takayama is a senior user experience researcher at Google[x], a lab that aims for moonshots in science and technology. Prior to joining Google[x] in 2013, Leila was a research scientist and area manager for human-robot interaction at Willow Garage. She is also a World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council Member for the area of AI & Robotics. This year, she was awarded the IEEE Robotics & Automation Society Early Career Aware. In 2012, she was named a TR35 winner and one of the 100 most creative people in business by Fast Company. With a background in cognitive Science, psychology, and human-computer Interaction, she examines human encounters with new technologies. Dr. Takayama completed her PhD in communication at Stanford University in June 2008, advised by Professor Clifford Nass. She also holds a PhD minor in psychology from Stanford, a masters degree in communication from Stanford, and bachelors of arts in psychology and cognitive science from UC Berkeley (2003). During her graduate studies, she was a research assistant in the User Interface Research (UIR) group at Palo Alto Research Center (PARC).