karthik

Envisioning Technology-Mediated Futures of Care Work


Speaker: Karthik Seetharama Bhat, 2023 PhD Foley Scholar Award Winner
Human Centered Computing
Advisor: Neha Kumar 

Date: 2024-3-07 12:30 pm

Location: 
Technology Square Research Building (TSRB, 1st Floor Ballroom)
85 Fifth Street NW
Atlanta, GA 30308

ABSTRACT
Caregiving is a universal activity that is receiving increasing attention among technologists and researchers in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Emerging technologies like conversational AI, augmented and virtual reality, and smart homes have all been described as potentially revolutionary technologies in care work, intended to automate and transform the overall care experience for caregivers and care recipients. However, such promises have yet to translate to successful deployments as these technological innovations come up against socioculturally situated traditions of care work that prioritize human connection and interaction. In this talk, I will share empirical studies looking into how formal care workers (in clinical settings) and informal care workers (in home settings) reconcile technology utilization in care work with sociocultural expectations and norms that dissuade them. I will then discuss possible technology-mediated futures of care work by positing how emerging technologies could best be designed for and integrated into activities of care in ways that unburden care workers while ensuring quality care. 

BIO
Karthik Bhat is a PhD Candidate in Human-Centered Computing at Georgia Tech, advised by Neha Kumar. His research lies at the intersections of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), Health, and Information and Communication Technologies and Development (ICTD), specifically focusing on technologies and care work in urban India. His research has been published at premier HCI venues like CHI and CSCW, winning Best Paper and Honorable Mention awards at CSCW. He is the winner of the Foley Scholar Award 2023. His research has been supported by the Mozilla Foundation, Microsoft Research, Google Research, and the National Science Foundation. 

arpit

Choropleth Maps: How They Can Trick You and What You Can Do About It


Speaker: Arpit Narechania, 2023 PhD Foley Scholar Award Finalist 
Computer Science 
Advisor: Alex Endert

Date: 2024-3-07 12:30 pm

Location: 
Technology Square Research Building (TSRB, 1st Floor Ballroom)
85 Fifth Street NW
Atlanta, GA 30308

ABSTRACT
When creating choropleth maps, mapmakers often bin (or group) quantitative data values into bins (or groups) to help show that certain areas fall within a similar range of values. For instance, a mapmaker may divide counties into high, middle, and low life expectancy. Yet, different binning methods (e.g., natural breaks, quantile) yield different groupings, wherein the same data can be presented differently depending on how it is split into bins. This flexibility can sometimes be (mis)used by journalists to present (false) narratives or by fund managers to (inappropriately) seek additional funding. To mitigate against these dangers, we built a new geospatial visualization tool, Exploropleth. This system lets users upload their own data and interact with the outputs of 18+ established data binning methods, and subsequently compare, customize, and export custom maps. Feedback from cartographers and geographic information system experts highlighted the system’s potential to educate students as well as mapmakers. 

BIO
Arpit is a Computer Science PhD candidate in the School of Interactive Computing, advised by Alex Endert. His research is centered on enhancing human-data analysis experiences by building mixed-initiative, guidance-enriched user interfaces. These interfaces facilitate appropriate and timely guidance from the system (for the user) as well as the user (for the system) to accomplish the task. Arpit has also led many interdisciplinary collaborations with automobile engineers, database engineers, data scientists, and most recently cartographers and geographic information system experts, resulting in many open-sourced tools and product integrations. 

sachin pendse

Computing for Mental Health Equity: Centering Identity and Power in Technology-Mediated Support


Speaker: Sachin Pendse, 2023 PhD Foley Scholar Award Finalist 
Human Centered Computing 
Advisors: Munmun De Choudhury and Neha Kumar    

Date: 2024-3-07 12:30 pm

Location: 
Technology Square Research Building (TSRB, 1st Floor Ballroom)
85 Fifth Street NW
Atlanta, GA 30308

ABSTRACT
Online platforms and AI-based tools increasingly play a core role in how people create meaning from experiences of distress and engage with care. For example, large language model chatbots, online support communities, and personalized resources from search engines may all help an individual to contextualize their experiences of distress and find life-saving support. Technology-mediated support is thus often framed as a powerful means to reduce widespread mental health disparities and close care gaps. However, my research has demonstrated that offline inequities are paralleled in online contexts, further making it difficult for marginalized people to access care. The ability to meet diverse needs with technology-mediated support requires a deep understanding of how social inequities and technology design may together impact lived experiences with distress and care. In this talk, I present my work leveraging computational and qualitative approaches to understand these sociotechnical inequities, across diverse geographic contexts and online platforms. Building on this research, I outline my research vision for how we may consider identity and power in mental health intervention and technology design, towards acceptable and effective care for all people.  

BIO
Sachin Pendse is a PhD candidate in Human-Centered Computing at Georgia Tech. His research investigates the role of marginalization and technology design in how people engage with mental health technologies, towards digital interventions that center cultural validity and user autonomy by design. Sachin's work has been published in top-tier venues in human-computer interaction (ACM CHI and CSCW) and digital health (JMIR Mental Health). His work is done in close collaboration with clinicians, lived experience advocacy organizations, and technology companies. Prior to his time at Georgia Tech, Sachin spent time as a Research Fellow at Microsoft Research India. Sachin holds a Master's degree in Computer Science and Bachelor's degrees in International Relations and Computer Science, all from Brown University. 

allie riggs

Designing with Ephemera: Queering Tangible Interaction in Archival Experiences


Speaker: Allie Riggs, 2023 PhD Foley Scholar Award Finalist 
Digital Media
Advisor: Anne Sullivan 

Date: 2024-3-07 12:30 pm

Location: 
Technology Square Research Building (TSRB, 1st Floor Ballroom)
85 Fifth Street NW
Atlanta, GA 30308

ABSTRACT
Amidst widespread efforts to diminish queer existence from public society, access to stories of queer identities, communities, and histories is vital. Particularly, understanding queer archives provides a lens through which we can critically reflect on what “counts” as recorded knowledge or data and how it holds weight in our conceptions of history. In queer archives scholarship, ephemera—or, material traces not traditionally collected in institutions—can provide powerful, affective links to gaps in the historical record. In this talk, I discuss my work in tangible interaction design with archival ephemera that speak to marginalized, queer histories. I ask how designing with ephemeral materials in tangible embodied experiences can prompt critical reflections on the past, inspiring alternative configurations of bodies, feelings, and histories. Further, I ask how designing with ephemeral materials contributes to queering human computer interaction (Queer HCI), deepening our understandings of tangible embodied interaction, and inspiring alternative interpretations of history.  

BIO
Alexandra (Allie) Teixeira Riggs (she/they) is a PhD student in Digital Media at Georgia Tech, working at the intersection of Queer HCI, queer theory, critical archives, and tangible embodied interaction. Their current work focuses on queering technology design through attention to historicism and affective, embodied experiences.