Dear TUX Community,
Tomorrow there will be another HCI poster showcase (a similar event was held
last year) which I'd like to invite you to. This will be a presentation of
posters that the students in the Human-Computer Interaction course I am
teaching at U of T have prepared. The course is cross-listed as a
fourth-year undergraduate / graduate course. For their final term project,
they have been conducting a literature review and proposing new ideas on an
HCI topic of choice. Tomorrow they will be presenting their findings in the
format of a poster. This year the poster showcase will be held in the ground
floor atrium of the Bahen building (40 St George St). You are welcome to
come by and see the posters and meet the undergraduate and graduate students
that have been studying HCI at U of T this semester.
Date: Tuesday, November 26
Time: 3:15pm-5:00pm
Location: Bahen Ground Floor Atrium (40 St George St.)
Hope to see you there!
Thanks,
Tovi
Tovi Grossman, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Department of Computer Science
University of Toronto
40 St. George St, Toronto
Toronto, Ontario M5S 2E4
Canada
www.cs.toronto.edu <http://www.cs.toronto.edu>
_______________________________________________
tux-announce mailing list
tux-announce(a)dgp.toronto.edu
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FYI.
> Begin forwarded message:
>
> From: Joseph Jay Williams <williams(a)cs.toronto.edu>
> Subject: Academic job search Q & A for grad students & postdocs with Eyal & others: Tue 26 Nov 12:15
> Date: 24 November 2019 at 11:01:06 GMT-5
> To: faculty(a)cs.toronto.edu
> Cc: gradmetaskillschair(a)googlegroups.com
>
> You might consider forwarding this to your students who are interested in academic jobs or going on the market:
>
> Eyal de Lara (chair of U of T faculty search committee, who’s been involved in 30+ faculty hires in the last few years, and so can provide a unique perspective) generously agreed to do a Q & A with grad students to give advice on the process of academic job search.
>
> This Q & A is happening this Tue, 26 Nov, 12:15-1:30 in BA 5256.
>
> The agenda will include, for example, discussing how to prepare good research statements, how the application might be reviewed.
>
> Grad students can type questions into this Google Doc anonymously (Add any questions you have here <https://docs.google.com/document/d/1jSScWSdqQD4oX79yd9pp0EGVUX1h8J_8P3a4hki…>)
>
> They can also see existing resources compiled by grad student volunteers at tiny.cc/gmsajob - GradMetaSkills Academic Job - List of Advice, Resources, Examples for Academic Job Search <https://docs.google.com/document/d/1jSScWSdqQD4oX79yd9pp0EGVUX1h8J_8P3a4hki…>
> Grad MetaSkills Community (Grad Skills Seminar)
>
>
>
> Joseph Jay Williams
> www.josephjaywilliams.com <http://www.josephjaywilliams.com/>
> Assistant Professor
> Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto
> Intelligent Adaptive Interventions (IAI) research group
Hello folks,
Prof. Narges Mahyar <https://www.cics.umass.edu/people/mahyar-narges> from
University of Massachussets Amherst will be visiting DGP next week on
Tuesday, November 26 for a talk and demos. She has done really cool work
intersecting Data Vis, collaborative systems, interactive surfaces, urban
design/planning, and civic engagement, which should be of interest to many
of you. She's also a great person to chat about research, so I'd recommend
you to sign up for a slot even if your ideas are still in early stages and
you don't have much to show.
Please send me a message if you would like to sign up for a demo/chat slot
with Narges, with your availability; I should be able to accommodate slots
in the morning (10-12) and in the afternoon (2-4).
Thanks,
Nicole
Hello folks,
Prof. Narges Mahyar <https://www.cics.umass.edu/people/mahyar-narges> from
University of Massachussets Amherst will be visiting DGP next week on
Tuesday, November 26 for a talk and demos. She has done really cool work
intersecting Data Vis, collaborative systems, interactive surfaces, urban
design/planning, and civic engagement, which should be of interest to many
of you. She's also a great person to chat about research, so I'd recommend
you to sign up for a slot even if your ideas are still in early stages and
you don't have much to show.
Please send me a message if you would like to sign up for a demo/chat slot
with Narges, with your availability; I should be able to accommodate slots
in the morning (10-12) and in the afternoon (2-4).
Nicole
Hello TUX!
A reminder that today we have a Sanders Series Lecture by Prof. Michel Beaudouin at Autodesk.
We look forward to seeing you there!
Ali, Fraser, Daniel and Tovi
Sanders Series Invited Lecture - Prof. Michel Beaudouin-Lafon:
Towards Unified Principles of Interaction
November 19, 2019. Autodesk-Research @ 661 University Avenue #200, Toronto, ON.
Lunch reception begins at 12:30 pm. Presentation begins at 1:00 pm.
Abstract
Even though today’s computers are used for many different types of tasks, they still rely on user interfaces designed for office workers in the 1980s. HCI researchers have produced a slew of innovative interaction styles, from gestural interaction to mixed reality and tangible interfaces, but they have not replaced traditional GUIs. I argue that we must devise fundamental principles of interaction that unify, rather than separate, these interaction styles in order to support the diversity of uses and users. I describe ongoing work on my ERC advanced grant, ONE, which explores how the concepts of information substrates and interaction instruments can help us create digital environments that users can appropriate and (re)combine at will.
Bio
Michel Beaudouin-Lafon is Professor of Computer Science, Classe Exceptionnelle, at Université Paris-Sud and a senior fellow of Institut Universitaire de France. He has worked in human-computer interaction for over 30 years and is a member of the ACM SIGCHI Academy. His research interests include fundamental aspects of interaction, novel interaction techniques, computer-supported cooperative work and engineering of interactive systems. He has published over 180 papers and is an ACM Distinguished Speaker. He heads the 22M€ Digiscope project and is the laureate of an ERC Advanced Grant. Michel was director of LRI, the laboratory for computer science joint between Université Paris-Sud and CNRS and now heads the Human-Centered Computing lab at LRI. He is also chair of the department of Computer Science at Université Paris-Saclay (2400 faculty, staff and Ph.D. students). He founded AFIHM, the Francophone association for human-computer interaction and has been active in ACM and SIGCHI for over 20 years, including sitting on the editorial boards of ACM Books and ACM TOCHI, on the ACM Council and ACM Publications Board, as founder of ACM Europe and EUACM, and as vice-chair of the newly created ACM Technology Policy Council. He served as Technical Program Co-chair for CHI 2013 in Paris (3500 participants) and received the ACM SIGCHI Lifetime Service Award in 2015.
OUR SPONSORS:
TUX is made possible by the support of our sponsors, Steven Sanders, Autodesk,
University of Toronto Department of Computer Science, and Chatham Labs.
_______________________________________________
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Hello TUX!
A reminder that tomorrow we have a Sanders Series Lecture by Prof. Michel Beaudouin at Autodesk.
We look forward to seeing you there!
Ali, Fraser, Daniel and Tovi
Sanders Series Invited Lecture - Prof. Michel Beaudouin-Lafon:
Towards Unified Principles of Interaction
November 19, 2019. Autodesk-Research @ 661 University Avenue #200, Toronto, ON.
Lunch reception begins at 12:30 pm. Presentation begins at 1:00 pm.
Abstract
Even though today’s computers are used for many different types of tasks, they still rely on user interfaces designed for office workers in the 1980s. HCI researchers have produced a slew of innovative interaction styles, from gestural interaction to mixed reality and tangible interfaces, but they have not replaced traditional GUIs. I argue that we must devise fundamental principles of interaction that unify, rather than separate, these interaction styles in order to support the diversity of uses and users. I describe ongoing work on my ERC advanced grant, ONE, which explores how the concepts of information substrates and interaction instruments can help us create digital environments that users can appropriate and (re)combine at will.
Bio
Michel Beaudouin-Lafon is Professor of Computer Science, Classe Exceptionnelle, at Université Paris-Sud and a senior fellow of Institut Universitaire de France. He has worked in human-computer interaction for over 30 years and is a member of the ACM SIGCHI Academy. His research interests include fundamental aspects of interaction, novel interaction techniques, computer-supported cooperative work and engineering of interactive systems. He has published over 180 papers and is an ACM Distinguished Speaker. He heads the 22M€ Digiscope project and is the laureate of an ERC Advanced Grant. Michel was director of LRI, the laboratory for computer science joint between Université Paris-Sud and CNRS and now heads the Human-Centered Computing lab at LRI. He is also chair of the department of Computer Science at Université Paris-Saclay (2400 faculty, staff and Ph.D. students). He founded AFIHM, the Francophone association for human-computer interaction and has been active in ACM and SIGCHI for over 20 years, including sitting on the editorial boards of ACM Books and ACM TOCHI, on the ACM Council and ACM Publications Board, as founder of ACM Europe and EUACM, and as vice-chair of the newly created ACM Technology Policy Council. He served as Technical Program Co-chair for CHI 2013 in Paris (3500 participants) and received the ACM SIGCHI Lifetime Service Award in 2015.
OUR SPONSORS:
TUX is made possible by the support of our sponsors, Steven Sanders, Autodesk,
University of Toronto Department of Computer Science, and Chatham Labs.
_______________________________________________
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Hi everyone, I'm going to send this email out today to
grad-students(a)cs.toronto.edu. I welcome any feedback/suggestions on the
email or planned activities, or if you know people want want to volunteer.
And i'm not just spamming you, you will all see this soon anyway so think
of it as a secret advance look :D.
You can make comments/suggested edits at this URL:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1JJpLV61vh0Aq-Np5LY0Cj6KmFLHI7BjmisKn6t9…
******
Subject line:
Community/Seminar for Learning Grad "MetaSkills", such as coming up with
research questions, finding jobs, project management, collaboration,
managing stress:
Hi Everyone!
I am chairing the Grad MetaSkills Community, which is a novel take on
previous years' Grad Skills Seminar. The kickoff meeting is Tue 1215-1:30
in BA 5256.
1.Goal & Examples of Grad MetaSkills.
The goal is to speed up your learning and practicing of the MetaSkills that
are only implicitly acquired (or not acquired at all) from your typical
course and research/internship activities.
Examples of questions this community can help you improve your answers to:
> How do I come up with better research ideas?
> How do I maximize chances of getting an academic/industry job I want?
> How do I collaborate more effectively?
> How do I manage & get help in managing stress & improving well-being?
2. Current Plan & How you can improve on it. Discussion Forum & Online
Resources in Wiki/Google Drive
I'm very open as to what form this takes, and anyone with ideas and energy
should step in and start making them happen.
As a prototype – something concrete to make *something* happen and provide
something people can complain about and try to improve :D – here is the
current plan. The community will start with:
> A Google drive of resources. tiny.cc/gmsfolder Grad MetaSkills
Folder-editable
<https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1CxlcuYrx7zfklKqsJVxm7mLBACkXOCIs>
> A discussion forum that acts as opt-in mailing list,and in person seminar
meetings. (need someone to set up a Google Group Q & A forum and get people
added)
But now's your time to make suggestions or requests or say what you think
should happen (and better yet, take some actions to make it happen!).
Feel free to reach out with questions or unsolicited advice, either in the
Gdoc or emailing gradmetaskillschair(a)googlegroups.com.
3. Action item: Add requests for topics, links to resources, ideas to Gdoc
at URL tiny.cc/gmsinput
Can you set a time to go to this Google doc and add some information?
tiny.cc/gmsinput Resources, Advice, Questions for Grad MetaSkills Community
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1jKOiIGsqeQDFFpdK_ryB7PlO_KtpGNWbxIzwdv0…>
It could be: (a) any requests (topics or questions you want discussed), (b)
links to resources (e.g. Blog posts,tweets, papers with good advice), or
(c) ideas for what this community should do.
We will crowdsource this, and iteratively try things out.
4. Kickoff meeting Tue 26 Nov, 12:15-1:30 in BA 5256. Want to volunteer to
help?
We also need some volunteers to help with different parts of the community,
like setting up discussion forum, organizing online resources, recording
talks. it could be anywhere from 2-10 hours a month (negotiable with you).
We might be able to look into you being paid for this time.
The kickoff meeting is Tue 1215-1:30 in BA 5256. (we can pay for lunch if
someone volunteers to organize it).
Look forward to talking more!
Joseph (& rest of Grad MetaSkills committee: Florian Skhurti, Amir Massoud
Farahmand, Steve Easterbrook)
Joseph
Joseph Jay Williams
www.josephjaywilliams.com
Assistant Professor
Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto
Intelligent Adaptive Interventions (IAI) research group
Hi HCI folks,
We will have our first HCI reading group today at 3 pm in the seminar
room.
NICOLE (the best!) will be leading the discussion on the paper "_Data
Changes Everything: Challenges and Opportunities in Data Visualization
Design Handoff_"
Coffee will be served, come join us to make the HCI reading group great
again!
Please try to READ THE PAPER, if even just a skim read, and take note of
your thoughts to share in our open discussion.
The presentation video link is below, but it doesn't cover much of the
findings, so not really a substitute for reading the paper.
The paper is here: https://arxiv.org/abs/1908.00192 [1]
The conference presentation video is here: https://vimeo.com/368703151
[2]
Best,
Bryan
Links:
------
[1]
https://slack-redir.net/link?url=https%3A%2F%2Farxiv.org%2Fabs%2F1908.00192
[2] https://slack-redir.net/link?url=https%3A%2F%2Fvimeo.com%2F368703151
Hello all,
Prof. Michel Beaudouin-Lafon from the Université Paris-Sud will be
giving a Tux talk on Tuesday November 19th and visit the lab Wednesday
afternoon, November 20th. We will host him with demos from 1pm to
2:45pm. Please sign up in this google sheet by tomorrow night if you
want a slot. Students signed up for demo are invited to lunch with
Michel at 12:00pm at Rm5256.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/19sumRDO9STIpckAbabVOxphDIDqPL7_deo1…
Cheers,
Haijun
Hello all,
We will have our bi-weekly HCI group meeting at 12.30pm on Tuesday Nov 5
in the DGP seminar room. Caleb (Zhicong) Lu will be giving a practice
talk. Food will be served.
Additionally, if we have time left, we will take a look at UIST video
preview.
Title
Vicariously Experiencing it all without Going Outside: A Study of
Outdoor Live Streaming in China
Abstract:
The livestreaming industry in China is gaining greater traction than its
European and North American counterparts and has a profound impact on
the stakeholders' online and offline lives. An emerging genre of
livestreaming that has become increasingly popular in China is outdoor
livestreaming. With outdoor livestreams, streamers broadcast outdoor
activities, travel, or socialize with passersby in outdoor settings,
often for 6 or more hours, and viewers watch such streams for hours each
day. However, given that professionally produced content about travel
and outdoor activities are not very popular, it is currently unknown
what makes this category of livestreams so engaging and how these
techniques can be applied to other content or genres. Thus, we conducted
a mixed methods study consisting of a survey (N=287) and interviews (N =
20) to understand how viewers watch and engage with outdoor livestreams
in China. The data revealed that outdoor livestreams encompass many
categories of content, environments and passersby behaviors create
challenges and uncertainty for viewers and streamers, and viewers watch
livestreams for surprising lengths of time (e.g., sometimes more than 5
continuous hours). We also gained insights into how live commenting and
virtual gifting encourage engagement. Lastly, we detail how the
behaviors of dedicated fans and casual viewers differ and provide
implications for the design of livestreaming services that support
outdoor activities.
The preprint of the paper can be found here:
http://www.dgp.toronto.edu/~luzhc/media/cscw025-lu-new.pdf
Kind regards,
Eric Lu