“Our ambition is to model engaged, relevant and responsive interdisciplinary scholarship, accountable to making a real and positive impact.” — Mimi Ito
Read the full story at DML Central.
“Our ambition is to model engaged, relevant and responsive interdisciplinary scholarship, accountable to making a real and positive impact.” — Mimi Ito
Read the full story at DML Central.
Daniel M. Russell, a senior research scientist at Google, said that as technology rapidly changes, “it’s tied to our ways of thinking. It affects us in the way we think, the way we frame and the way we reason. And, how we learn is highly dependent upon the technology we bring into the classroom or the technology you have in your pocket or you have at home.”
Read the full story at DML Central.
Gloria Mark, an informatics researcher at UC Irvine, studies workplace interruptions, multitasking, and procrastination. She has found that not all disruptions destroy productivity. You’re welcome.
Listen to the story at Bloomberg.
The 4th annual Queerness and Games Conference (QGCon 2017), organized by Assistant Professor of Informatics Bonnie Ruberg, will be held April 1-2, 2017 at the University of Southern California’s main campus.
“It’s a unique kind of event in that it is not just an academic conference, but a hybrid of the games industry, bringing artists, activists and players together with scholars to figure out this intersection of queerness and games,” said Ruberg.
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Assistant Professor of Informatics Bonnie Ruberg is releasing a new anthology titled Queer Game Studies on March 28 with co-editor Adrienne Shaw, assistant professor of media studies and production at Temple University, which offers readers an in-depth introduction to the vibrant realm of queer gaming culture. Queer Game Studies features 26 essays from a diverse range of perspectives, including game designer Naomi Clark, Assistant Professor in Women’s and Gender Studies Edmond Y. Chang, and Associate Professor of Media and Cultural Studies Derek A. Burrill, as well as chapters by Ruberg and Shaw.
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UC Irvine’s Master of Human-Computer Interaction and Design (MHCID) program has launched an online publication on Medium. The new publication brings together content from current MHCID students and faculty, including the program’s director Gillian Hayes, Robert A. and Barbara L. Kleist Professor in Informatics. Its blog-style articles inform prospective MHCID students and industry scholars about the program and its students’ projects, while also creating an active dialogue about designing, creating and understanding the future of UX. UCI’s MHCID program launched last fall as the first single-year master’s program in the world to offer low-residency, on-campus learning combined with online learning for the working UX professional.
To explore the concept of how to live healthily with tech, I’ve conducted hundreds of interviews to try and understand the habits and brains of people who manage to live well with technology. And I’m not the only one: Many other academic researchers are starting to parse out how technology can support well-being, rather than rely on the absence of it to restore peace. As Gloria Mark of the University of California, Irvine notes, “You see a lot of reports in the media about the negative impact of technology use…but there have been expanded efforts in the past decade to study what’s become known as positive computing.”
Read the full story at Quartz.
As Women’s History Month comes to a close, let’s turn our attention to 10 women scholars making their mark as champions of connected learning. (Connected learning calls for broadened access to learning that is socially embedded, interest-driven and oriented toward educational, economic or political opportunity. It is based on evidence that the most resilient, adaptive and effective learning involves individual interest as well as social support.) As connected learning advocates, these 10 scholars, among a number of others worldwide, argue that new media broadens access to opportunity and meaningful learning experiences that can happen anytime, anywhere.
Read the full story at DML Central.
A study from the University of California, Irvine said selfies make you happy. “Our research showed that practicing exercises that can promote happiness via smartphone picture taking and sharing can lead to increased positive feelings for those who engage in it,” said lead study author Yu Chen.
Read the full story at Vice.
Informatics Professor Geoffrey Bowker, director of UCI’s Vales in Design Laboratory, was a guest on the spring break edition (episode 61) of the“Cultures of Energy” podcast from the Center for Energy and Environmental Research in the Human Sciences (CENHS). Part of Rice University’s Energy and Environment Initiative, CENHS is the only research center in the world specifically designed to foster and incubate research on the energy/environment nexus across the arts, humanities and social sciences. The podcast hosts — Rice University Anthology Professors Dominic Boyer and Cymene Howe — spoke with Bowker about a number of topics, including infrastructure studies, data ethics, algorithms, AI, IoT, biodiversity and the impact of cybernetics on social theory. During the podcast, Bowker even discussed how he gained access to energy titan Schlumberger’s archives for his 1994 book, Science on the Run. He also spoke to Cymene about their graphic novel project, Unda, which they are working on with Laura Watts, and how media like comic books can offer scholars new opportunities to reach wider audiences.
Listen to the full “Cultures of Energy” podcast featuring Bowker’s interview online.