CS547 Human-Computer Interaction Seminar   (Seminar on People, Computers, and Design)

Fridays 11:30am-12:30pm PT · Gates B3 · Open to the public
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Eunice Jun


UCLA
Data analysis tools for statistical non-experts
March 15, 2024

Human Computer Interaction is increasingly engaged with the social-cultural context that people live in everyday. The city, in all its grit and glory, provides a complex and rich context in which to understand the challenges technologies face when they are adopted by people in the real world. In this presentation, I discuss three on-going research initiatives from my group at Cornell Tech in New York City which grapple with interaction in the urban context: Trashbots in the City, Urban Fingerprinting, and Communal eXtended Reality. These projects highlight different aspects of urban interaction--culture, scale, engagement--which demand new approaches from researchers and practitioners in HCI. In this talk, I will also champion the perspectives that HCI brings to the already crowded urban landscape.




Eunice Jun is an incoming Assistant Professor of Computer Science at UCLA. She is currently visiting the EPIC Data Lab at UC Berkeley. Her research mission is to enhance how people understand and use data for discovery and decision-making. Close collaborations with scientists and other researchers outside of computer science inspire her work. She obtained her PhD from the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering at the University of Washington. She has received an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship, paper awards at ACM CHI and ACM CSCW, and an honorable mention from the Barry Goldwater Foundation.