« Back to Advance Program

Papers/Notes: At Home With Computing

Tuesday, April 13
9:00 AM - 10:30 AM

Access Control for Home Data Sharing: Attitudes, Needs and Practices
Michelle L. Mazurek, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
J.P. Arsenault, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Joanna Bresee, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Nitin Gupta, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Iulia Ion, ETH-Zurich, Switzerland
Christina Johns, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Daniel Jonggyu Lee, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Yuan Liang, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Jennifer Olsen, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Brandon Salmon, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Rich Shay, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Kami Vaniea, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Lujo Bauer, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Lorrie Faith Cranor, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Gregory R. Ganger, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Michael K. Reiter, University of North Carolina, USA

Presents results from interviews with non-expert households concerning attitudes and practices regarding controlling access to home-centered data. Provides guidelines for designing usable access-control systems for home environments.

Sharing Conversation and Sharing Life: Video Conferencing in the Home
Tejinder K. Judge, Virginia Tech, USA
Carman Neustaedter, Kodak Research Labs, USA

A study of video conferencing practices in the home. Findings will inform the design of future domestic communication technologies.

Who's Hogging the Bandwidth: The Consequences of Revealing the Invisible in the Home
Marshini Chetty, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Richard Banks, Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK
Richard Harper, Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK
Tim Regan, Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK
Abigail Sellen, Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK
Christos Gkantsidis, Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK
Thomas Karagiannis, Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK
Peter Key, Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK

Created and evaluated a home bandwidth management tool which showed revealing resource usage surfaces household politics and that personal representation and access control are important design considerations for such systems.

 Investigating Narrative Structure in Mobile Games for Seniors
Sharon Lynn Chu Yew Yee, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Henry Been-Lirn Duh, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Francis Quek, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, USA

Exposes the value of narrative structure on self-reported game enjoyment among senior adults through a controlled study with nineteen elderly, regardless of their gameplay style.


« Back to Advance Program