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Papers/Notes: Privacy Awareness and Attitudes

Monday, April 12
11:30 AM - 1:00 PM

Independence and Interaction: Understanding Seniors' Privacy and Awareness Needs For Aging in Place
Jeremy Birnholtz, Cornell University, University of Toronto, Canada
McKenzie Jones-Rounds, Cornell University, USA

Designing for aging in place brings new twists to classic tensions between privacy and awareness. Interviews show that seniors mitigate these tensions via physical environments, temporal structures, and technology mediation.

ContraVision: Exploring Users' Reactions to FuturisticTechnology
Clara Mancini, Dept of Computing, The Open University, UK
Yvonne Rogers, Dept of Computing, The Open University, UK
Arosha K. Bandara, Dept of Computing, The Open University, UK
Tony Coe, Two Cats Can, UK
Lukasz Jedrzejczyk, Dept of Computing, The Open University, UK
Adam N. Joinson, School of Management, University of Bath, UK
Blaine A. Price, Dept of Computing, The Open University, UK
Keerthi Thomas, Dept of Computing, The Open , UK
Bashar Nuseibeh, Dept of Computing, The Open University & Lero, University of Limerick, UK, Ireland

Study illustrating a narrative method to represent futuristic technology. Can help designers elicit a wider spectrum of users' reactions and uncover more facets of the responses that technology might encounter.

I Don't Mind Being Logged, but Want to Remain in Control: A Field Study of Mobile Activity and Context Logging
Tuula Kärkkäinen, Tampere University of Technology, Unit of Human-Centered Technology, Finland
Tuomas Vaittinen, Nokia Research Center, Finland
Kaisa Väänänen-Vainio-Mattila, Tampere University of Technology, Unit of Human-Centered Technology, Nokia Research Center, Finland

We describe a UX study of a lifelogging system based on continuous mobile phone activity logging. The results can assist designers in understanding the user needs related to lifelogging systems.


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