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Additional Readings Sign-Up

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Saved by nitya.noronha@gatech.edu
on March 5, 2013 at 9:16:53 pm
 

You are required to sign up for at least two additional readings during the semester. Please do not wait until the end of the class to do this. The additional readings are part of your class participation grade. The additional readings will be posted on the Calendar, on the day that they are due. No more than four students can sign up for each additional reading.

 

Assignment:

  • Sign up for at least two additional readings during the semester.
  • Write a summary of the paper you read (due at the beginning of class) and upload it to T-Square under Assignments.
  • Lead a discussion in class about the paper.

 

Sign up for additional readings: 

 

Tue 3/12/13 (Field Studies II)

Activity sensing in the wild: a field trial of ubifit garden

1. Ceara Byrne

2. Nitya Noronha

3.

4.  

Farther Than You May Think: An Empirical Investigation of the Proximity of Users to Their Mobile Phones

1.

2.

3.

4.  

Sensors and Surveys: Collecting Qualitative and Quantitative Data on Human Attitudes, Behaviors, and Activities via Mobile Phones

1. Nisha Lad

2. Susmita Gorai

3.

4.  

Lessons learned from eClass: Assessing automated capture and access in the classroom 

1.

2.

3.

4.  

From the war room to the living room: decision support for home-based therapy teams 

1. Mason Foster

2.

3.

4.  

Getting Closer: An Empirical Investigation of the Proximity of User to Their Smart Phones

1.

2.

3.

4.  

Haptic Reassurance in the Pitch Black for an Immersive Theatre Experience

1.

2.

3.

4.  

Supporting the transition from hospital to home for premature infants using integrated mobile computing and sensor support

1.

2.

3.

4. 

 

Thu 3/14/13 (Ethnography)

Unremarkable Computing

1. Sundararajan Sarangan

2. Balasubramanyam Ganapathi

3.

4. 

Yesterday's Tomorrows 

1.

2.

3.

4.

 

Tue 3/26/13 (Challenges of Wearables)

Development of a Commercially Successful Wearable Data Collection System

1. Subrai Pai

2.  Celeste Mason

3. Erin Hennessy

4. Cameron Hord

5. Xiao "Nikita" Xiong

Effects of Functionality on Perceived Comfort of Wearables

1. Sruthi Padala

2. Erin Hennessy

3. Amrutha Krishnan

4. Xuwen Xie

5. Saagar Patel 

Design for Wearability

1. James Hallam

2. Xuwen Xie

3. Aman Parnami

4. Chia-Chi Lee

5. Minsik Bang 

Emotional Design

1. Abhishek Nandakumar

2. Sanat Rath

3. Amritha Arakali

4. Nate Osborne

5. Eric K Chiu

 

---

Previous Additional Readings (Completed)

 

Tue 1/29/13 (Sensors)

Physical Principles of Sensing

1. Vincent Martin

2. Giancarlo Valentin

 

Tue 1/22/13 (Textiles)

E-broidery

1. Sarah Eiring

2. Ceara Byrne

Textile Interfaces

1. Yash Kshirsagar

2. Atom Raiff

 

Tue 2/5/13 (Location I)

Location Systems for Ubiquitous Computing 

1. Yash Kshirsagar

2. Samrat Ambadekar

3. Yohanes Suliantoro

4. Sanat Rath

Location systems: An introduction to the technology behind location awareness

(Read Chapter 1, plus pick one of Chapters 2 through 9 and note the chapter next to your name below.)

1. Jinhyun Kim (Ch. 2)

2. Saad Ismail (Ch. 8)

3. Gabriel Reyes (Ch. 6)

4. Ketan Bhardwaj (Ch. 4)

 

Thu 2/7/13 (Location II)

When Recommendation Meets Mobile: Contextual and Personalized Recommendation On The Go

1. Anhong Guo

2. Xiaohui Luo

3. Haozhe (Stan) Li 

4. Se Hoon Shon

The Domestic Panopticon: Location Tracking in Families

1. Nate Osborne

2. Susmita Gorai

3. Xinyan Yan

4. Sahithya Baskaran

Exploring End User Preferences for Location Obfuscation, Location-Based Services, and the Value of Location

1. Anhong Guo

2. Haozhe (Stan) Li

3. David Muñoz

4. Aditya Desai

Bridging the Gap Between Physical Location and Online Social Networks

1. Sruthi Padala

2. Ketan Bhardwaj

3. Amritha Arakali

4. Abhishek Nandakumar 

Route Classification Using Cellular Handoff Patterns

1. Xiaohui Luo

2. Amrutha Krishnan

3. Vipul Thakur

4. Subrai Pai

 

Tue 2/19/13 (Context II)

The Calendar as a Sensor: Analysis and Improvement Using Data Fusion with Social Networks and Location

1. Andrew Darrohn

2. John Bieniek

3. Chloe Hongyu Xie

Toolkit to Support Intelligibility in Context-Aware Computing Applications

1. Gabriel Reyes

2. Samrat Ambadekar

3. Aman Parnami

4. Andy Pruett 

Identifying the Activities Supported by Locations with Community-Authored Content

1. Nate Osborne

2. Joe Gonzales

3. Colin Gray

4. Ryan Fahsel 

Passive and In-situ Assessment of Mental and Physical Well-being  using Mobile Sensors

1. Nitya Noronha

2. Emily Keen 

3. Joe Gonzales

From Awareness to Connectedness: The Design and Deployment of Presence Displays

1. Simon Turgeon

2. Sundararajan Sarangan

3. David Muñoz

4. Graceline "Racel" Williams 

PreHeat: Controlling Home Heating Using Occupancy Prediction

1. Sarah Eiring

2. Alexander Martin

3. Adil Delawalla

4. Sneha Bharath

 

Thu 2/21 (Capture and Access)

Ubiquitous Computing for Capture and Access

Chapters 3 and 6

1. Celeste Mason

2. Eric K Chiu

Chapters 4 and 6

1.  "Brian" Tan Sun

Chapters 5 and 6

1. Ryan O'Shaughnessy

2. Cameron Hord

3. Sagar Savla 

 

Thu 2/28 (Privacy I)

Living in a Glass House: A Survey of Private Moments in the Home

1. Balasubramanyam Ganapathi

2. Nisha Lad

3. Miles Gantt

4.Cheng Zhang

Privately Querying Location-based Services with SybilQuery

1. Andy Pruett

2.

3.

4. 

On the Limitations of Query Obfuscation Techniques for Location Privacy

1.

2.

3.

4. 

From Spaces to Places: Emerging Contexts in Mobile Privacy 

1. Shashank Raghu

2. Chia-Chi Lee

3. Xinyan Yan

4. Joseph Simoneau

Whoʼs Your Best Friend? Targeted Privacy Attacks In Location-sharing Social Networks 

1. Sagar Savla

2. Chloe Hongyu Xie

3. 

4. Minsik Bang 

Understanding How Visual Representations of Location Feeds Affect End-User Privacy Concerns

1.

2. 

3. 

4. 

A Framework for Comparing Perspectives on Privacy and Pervasive Technologies

1. Wendy Blount

2. Ryan O'Shaughnessy

3. Miles Gantt

4. William Stuart Michelson

 

Tue 3/5/13 (Privacy II)

For the second day on privacy, we are going to apply Langheinrich's"Privacy by Design" principles (from the chapter in the textbook)to analyze and contrast current ubicomp products and services. This applies to the three additional readings below.

 

Read both The Locust Swarm: An environmentally-powered, networkless location and messaging system and GPS. (Be prepared to contrast GPS to the Olivetti ActiveBadge system we'vealready discussed in class.)

1. Mason Foster

2. Saagar Patel

3. Joseph Halton

4.

Chapter 4 of Life Patterns: structure from wearable sensors

1. Yohanes Suliantoro

2. Shashank Raghu

3.

4. 

Encountering SenseCam:  Personal Recording Technologies in Everyday Life

Be prepared to contrast SenseCam with other devices, such as Memoto and current smart phones.

1. Mudit Gupta

2. Sahithya Baskaran

3. Perron Jones

4. 

 

 

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