Auflistung nach Autor:in "Wilson, Max L."
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- ZeitschriftenartikelBroadening the mind: how emerging neurotechnology is reshaping HCI and interactive system design(i-com: Vol. 23, No. 2, 2024) Schneegass, Christina; Wilson, Max L.; Shaban, Jwan; Niess, Jasmin; Chiossi, Francesco; Mitrevska, Teodora; Woźniak, Paweł W.People are increasingly eager to know more about themselves through technology. To date, technology has primarily provided information on our physiology. Yet, with advances in wearable technology and artificial intelligence, the current advent of consumer neurotechnology will enable users to measure their cognitive activity. We see an opportunity for research in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) in the development of these devices. Neurotechnology offers new insights into user experiences and facilitates the development of novel methods in HCI. Researchers will be able to create innovative interactive systems based on the ability to measure cognitive activity at scale in real-world settings. In this paper, we contribute a vision of how neurotechnology will transform HCI research and practice. We discuss how neurotechnology prompts a discussion about ethics, privacy, and trust. This trend highlights HCI’s crucial role in ensuring that neurotechnology is developed and utilised in ways that truly benefit people.
- KonferenzbeitragGiving Files Behaviours(Interaktive Kulturen : Workshop-Band : Proceedings der Workshops der Mensch & Computer 2010 - 10. Fachübergreifende Konferenz für Interaktive und Kooperative Medien, DeLFI 2010 - die 8. E-Learning Fachtagung Informatik der Gesellschaft für Informatik e.V. und der Entertainment Interfaces 2010, 2010) Crawford, Timothy J.; Laramee, Robert S.; Wilson, Max L.To improve Personal Information Management (PIM), we propose to extend static files in static file systems by augmenting documents with controllable and programmable behavioural properties. Files with behaviours may aid the user by reacting to their actions, common tasks, and other files; e.g. the document dances when a report reaches the word-limit; when a document is added to a directory, the files investigate each other, to establish their own new relationships. We propose potential file behaviours and identify key research questions, such as maintaining effective user control, and finding the right level of file autonomy.