More than 60 Googlers descended on Austin, TX May 5-10 for CHI—probably the best CHI I’ve attended in the last 12 years! Each year, it’s exciting to see Google continuing to offer contributions to the CHI community through research and volunteer efforts. In addition to the 10 papers, notes and case studies presented by Googlers, we also participated in panels, contributed to workshops and supported the conference itself as a Platinum-level sponsor.
- Google’s Ed Chi, Staff Research Scientist, spent the past year working tirelessly as the 2012 Technical Program Co-Chair. He did an outstanding job! He also made time to present papers and participate in the special interest group (SIG), “RepliCHI SIG – from a panel to a new submission venue for replication,” along with Max Wilson (University of Nottingham, U.K.), Wendy Mackay (INRIA, France), Michael S Bernstein (MIT CSAIL), and Jeffrey Nichols (IBM Research - Almaden). For CHI2013, they proposed a new forum that focuses on replicating, confirming and challenging published HCI findings.
- I was honored to be on a panel with illustrious women UX Leaders like Janaki Kumar (Sr. UX Director @SAP), Janice Rohn (VP of UX @Experian), Lisa Anderson (UX Dir. @Microsoft), & Apala Lahiri Chavan (Chief Oracle & Innovator @Human Factors International). We discussed what we have learned over the years as women and managers in the tech industry, and UX specifically.
- Googlers Anne Aula, Staff UX Researcher, and Jhilmil Jain, Senior UX Researcher, led an SIG on “Designing for the living room TV experience.”
- In addition to leading an invited SIG and presenting a paper, Jhilmil Jain also facilitated a workshop with Evangelos Karapanos (Madeira Interactive Technologies Institute, Portugal) and Marc Hassenzahl (Folkwang University of Arts, Germany) on Theories, Methods and Case Studies of Longitudinal HCI Research.
For the second year in a row, we sponsored the MatriarCHI event, which was a luncheon this year. MatriarCHI is the organizing committee for a set of meetings at CHI related to the challenges women face in HCI. We are excited to report that we had even more attendees this year than last. At the luncheon, we discussed common challenges learned from each other’s experiences, and honored the women that have received awards not only at CHI, but other CS/HCI forums.
Googlers hanging out in the booth before the Expo Hall opened |
There was also a lot of fun to be had at the Google booth. Thanks to Dan Russell, UX Researcher at Google, attendees could play “a CHI-A-Day” (it was “A Google a Day” the CHI way, featuring great questions about HCI and research at Google) to win great prizes and learn how to search more effectively! We also put on a Ph.D. Forum event at Moonshine: Ph.D. candidates heard from a panel of Googlers with Ph.D.s, and got to speak with them about research and publishing opportunities at Google—plus get some fun Google swag. We met so many brilliant individuals throughout the conference and I’m hopeful some of them will be joining the ranks of Google.
CHI2013 will be held in Paris, France next April. We’re all already thinking of papers, panels, SIGs and other contributions to submit. We can’t wait to see what's in store for the next CHI!
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