Ph.D. students who started in 2007:
Carrie Bruce Jill Dimond Betsy James DiSalvo Jennifer Stoll Kim Weaver TJ Yun |
Select a name to learn more. Carrie BruceGraduated 2014 Advisor Dr. Bruce Walker Lab Sonification Area Human-Computer Interaction Research Interests accessible design, assistive technology, augmentative and alternative communication (AAC), disability, environmental access, exhibit design, home modifications, informal learning environments, universal design, workplace accommodations Dissertation Title Facilitating Participation in Adults With and Without Vision Loss by Supporting Exhibit Motivations through Real-Time Descriptive Mediation Jill DimondGraduated 2012 Advisor Dr. Amy Bruckman Lab Electronic Learning Communities Area Social Computing Research Interests My research focuses on the role of citizen reported data in activist movements. Dissertation Title Feminist HCI for Real: Designing Technology in Support of a Social Movement Betsy James DiSalvoGraduated 2012 Advisor Dr. Amy Bruckman Lab Electronic Learning Communities Area Learning Sciences & Technology Research Interests Learning Sciences and Technology, Game Studies, Design Research Dissertation Title Glitch Game Testers: The Design and Study of a Learning Environment for Computational Production with Young African-American Men Jennifer StollGraduated 2012 Advisors Dr. Keith Edwards & Dr. Elizabeth Mynatt Area Social Computing Dissertation Title Information Sharing in a Nonprofit Network Kimberly “Kim” WeaverGraduated 2012 Advisor Dr. Thad Starner Area Learning Sciences & Technology Research Interests My interest in mobile HCI, assistive technology, and learning sciences combine in my thesis topic of mobile American Sign Language learning for hearing parents with deaf children. Dissertation Title Facilitating American Sign Language Learning for Hearing Parents of Deaf Children via Mobile Devices Tae-Jung “TJ” YunGraduated 2012 Advisors Dr. Gregory Abowd & Dr. Rosa Arriaga Area Human-Computer Interaction Contact Website Research Interests Designing Information & Communication Technologies for behavior change Dissertation Title Using Ubiquitous Communication Technology to Improve Pediatric Asthma Management |