CS547 Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (Seminar on People, Computers, and Design)
Fridays 12:50-2:05 · Gates B01 · Open to the public Previous | Next
Archive
- 20 years of speakers
- By year
- By speaker
- Videos: iTunesU · YouTube
|
February 10, 2012 You need Flash player 8+ and JavaScript enabled to view this video.
Visionaries in Computer Science have long seen the computer as a tool to augment our intellect. However, while it is relatively straightforward to measure the impact of a tool or technique on task efficiency for well-defined tasks, it is much more difficult to measure a digital tool's impact on higher-level cognitive processes, such as creativity. In my own research in Human-Computer Interaction, I create novel interaction techniques, but run up against the problem of trying to evaluate how these tools impact creativity, expressiveness and exploration. In this talk, I briefly present a variety of interaction techniques that I have developed, and I then describe a survey metric that we have developed, the Creativity Support Index (CSI), to help researchers and designers evaluate the level of creativity support provided by these types of systems, tools or interfaces. I also present some current results using EEG and machine learning to classify the creative experience with more specific, temporal granularity. I present this work within the context of my long term goal to develop a suite of tools that provide both stronger analytical power and a general framework for evaluating computational support for creative activities, engagement and aesthetic experience.
|
|