Recent Stories
- Unborn babies 'practise' facial expressions in the womb
- Lancaster leads the way in cyber security bursary scheme
- Physicists gain insight into the UK's biggest killer
- Engineering students make finals of national start-up business competition
- Social media plagued by privacy problems, say researchers
- Lancaster Environment Centre conducts roadside pollution research for BBC
- Lancaster set to receive funding boost to stimulate UK's economy
- Billion-year-old water could hold clues to life on Earth and Mars
- How do we find out about cyber criminals?
- First, carbon footprints... now you can calculate your 'nitrogen footprint'
Success for School of Computing and Communications at Top-Tier Conference
Photo by Ming Ki Chong
The School of Computing and Communications has achieved its highest ever success at ACM SIGCHI, the top international conference on Human Computer Interaction (HCI), with nine papers accepted for publication. Two proposals from the School to run interactive workshops at the event were also accepted.
The ACM SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI 2013) is widely recognised as the most prestigious venue for publication of research into HCI, attracting almost 2000 paper submissions this year.
Dr Jason Alexander who organised the School's CHI 2013 Author Support Group, said:
"The acceptance of nine papers into the most competitive conference in this field is a clear demonstration of the high-quality HCI research conducted at the School of Computing and Communications.
"With four papers accepted last year, the School has more than doubled its publications at this conference. In HCI, conference publications have greater impact than journals, meaning that this conference is of special significance to researchers in this field."
Lancaster will be represented by a large contingent of researchers attending CHI 2013 in Paris next spring.
The list of accepted papers from the School is as follows:
- Design for Forgetting: Disposing of Digital Possessions after a Breakup
Dr Corina Sas and Steve Whittaker (University of California, Santa Cruz) - Domestic Food and Sustainable Design: A Study of University Student Cooking and its Impacts
Dr Adrian Clear, Janine Morley, Dr Adrian Friday, Dr Mike Hazas, and Oliver Bates - Heartlink: Open Broadcast of Live Biometric Data to Social Networks
Franco Curmi, Maria Angela Ferrario, Jen Southern, Professor Jon Whittle - How groups of Users Associate Wireless Devices
Ming Ki Chong and Professor Hans Gellersen - Leaving the Wild: Lessons from Community Technology Handovers
Nick Taylor, Dr Keith Cheverst, Peter Wright (Newcastle University) and Patrick Olivier (Newcastle University) - MotionMA: Motion Modelling and Analysis by Demonstration
Eduardo Velloso, Dr Andreas Bulling (University of Cambridge) and Professor Hans Gellersen - Personal Clipboards for Individual Copy-and-Paste on Shared Multi-User Surfaces
Dominik Schmidt and Professor Hans Gellersen - SideWays: A Gaze Interface for Spontaneous Interaction with Public Displays
Yanxia Zhang, Dr Andreas Bulling (University of Cambridge) and Professor Hans Gellersen - EyeContext: Recognition of High-level Contextual Cues from Human Visual Behaviour
Dr Andreas Bulling (University of Cambridge), Christian Weichel and Professor Hans Gellersen [note]
Workshops
- Experiencing Interactivity In Public Spaces
Kaisa Väänänen-Vainio-Mattila (Tampere University of Technology), Alvaro Cassinelli (University of Tokyo), Jonna Häkkilä University of Oulu), Jörg Müller (Telekom Innovation Laboratories), Dr Enrico Rukzio and Albrecht Schmidt (University of Stuttgart) - Organic Experiences: (Re)shaping Interactions with Deformable Displays
Dr Jason Alexander, Ryan Brotman (Arizona State University), David Holman (Queen's University, Kingston), Audrey Younkin (Intel Corporation), Roel Vertegaal (Queen's University), Johan Kildal (Nokia Research Center), Andrés Lucero (Nokia Research Center), Sriram Subramanian University of Bristol)
Tue 18 December 2012
Latest News
Unborn babies 'practise' facial expressions in the womb
Researchers from Durham and Lancaster Universities suggest that a foetus's ability to show a "pain" facial expression is a developmental process which could potentially give doctors another index of the health of a foetus.
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Mon 17 June 2013
Lancaster leads the way in cyber security bursary scheme
Lancaster is one of four UK universities selected to take part in an 'industry first' sponsorship initiative encouraging students to take up Masters-level cyber security degrees.
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Mon 10 June 2013
Physicists gain insight into the UK's biggest killer
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in the UK, accounting for a third of all fatalities through illnesses such as stroke and heart disease.
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Wed 29 May 2013
Engineering students make finals of national start-up business competition
Engineering students Scott Nash, Daniel Richardson and Aaron Aboshio have won the northern heat of the Youth Entrepreneurs Scheme 'Engineering YES' competition for their spin-out renewable energy company Atlantis.
Thu 23 May 2013