CHI 2025

ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems Yokohama | April 26 – May 1, 2025

Human-Computer Interaction Research is Shaping How People Connect with AI

CHI annually brings together the world’s experts in human-computer interaction research, with 2025 being a showcase for new methods using AI + HCI. Research includes AI tools to improve critical thinking, test language models, and support education. The work also focuses on creating smoother user interfaces and more personalized experiences.

Georgia Tech is a leading contributor to CHI 2025. Explore the institute’s role in shaping the future of human experiences through computing. The “swarm chart” shows Tech experts and partners by team, including 29 teams with papers.

Human-Computer Interaction Research is Shaping How People Connect with AI

CHI annually brings together the world’s experts in human-computer interaction research, with 2025 being a showcase for new methods using AI + HCI. Research includes AI tools to improve critical thinking, test language models, and support education. The work also focuses on creating smoother user interfaces and more personalized experiences.

Georgia Tech is a leading contributor to CHI 2025. Explore the institute’s role in shaping the future of human experiences through computing.


Georgia Tech at CHI 2025

Partner Organizations

Adobe Research • AI Risk and Vulnerability Alliance • American University • Anhalt University of Applied Sciences • Apple Inc. • Beijing Forestry University • Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications • Birmingham City University • Carnegie Mellon University • Cornell University • CYENS Centre of Excellence • DataGénero • Duke University • Eindhoven University of Technology • Emory University • ETH Zurich • EY Consulting • George Mason University • Georgia State University • Georgia Tech • Google • Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology • Harvard University • IBM Research • IIIT Delhi • JAIST • Johns Hopkins University • KAIST • KTH Royal Institute of Technology • Lahore University of Management Sciences • Lau By Keha LLC • Malmö University • Massachusetts Institute of Technology • Microsoft Research • Monash University • National Tsing Hua University • NAVER AI Lab • New Jersey Institute of Technology • Noora Health • Northeastern University • Northwestern University • Pennsylvania State University • Purdue University • Qinghai University • Rochester Institute of Technology • Samsung Research America • Sichuan University • Simon Fraser University • Södertörn University • Stanford University • Stockholm University • Stony Brook University • Tampere University • The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology • The Oslo School of Architecture and Design • The Pennsylvania State University • The University of Melbourne • The University of Texas at Austin • The University of Tokyo • Tsinghua University • Umeå University • Underwood International College, Yonsei University • University of California, Berkeley • University of California, Irvine • University of California, Los Angeles • University of California, San Diego • University of California, Santa Cruz • University of Cape Town • University of Chicago • University of Colorado Boulder • University of Edinburgh • University of Florida • University of Massachusetts, Amherst • University of Michigan • University of Nottingham • University of Oulu • University of Rochester • University of Technology Sydney • University of Texas at Austin • University of Tokyo • University of Toronto • University of Virginia • University of Washington • University of Wisconsin-Madison • Vanderbilt University • Virginia Tech • Wellesley College • Yale University • Yonsei University

FUN FACTS:

🐝- Tech has the most experts 📈 across the entire CHI program in CS Education and Security 🧑‍💻.


🐝- The College of Computing has the largest cohort of Tech faculty with 26. All are from the School of Interactive Computing 💪🖱️.


🐝- Four experts have Honorable Mention Award🏅Papers: Congrats 🎉 to Heidi BiggsJasmine ForiestJennifer G. Kim, and Momin Siddiqui.


🐝- Zijie “Jay” Wang, Ph.D. ML 2024, recipient of the SIGCHI Outstanding Dissertation Award 📃, was recently named to Forbes 30 Under 30 in Science for 2025 🤖.

CHI 2025: Find your IkiCHI! 

The Human-Computer Interaction research landscape is constantly and rapidly evolving. I am delighted to invite you to learn about and engage with the latest breakthroughs in our field that advance computing technologies so that humans, and the society at large, can benefit in new and path-breaking ways. 

Today’s innovations compel us to rethink how we interact with digital interfaces as we integrate cutting-edge approaches to technology design with deep empathy and user engagement. We are increasingly seeing developments in areas such as AI-driven user interfaces, immersive virtual environments, and collaborative tools that seek to connect us in meaningful ways. These advancements are redefining workspaces, education, health, and daily life more broadly, making technology far more accessible and responsive to our needs than it has ever been.

Join us in celebrating Georgia Tech’s 2025 HCI advancements, and discover how our innovations not only enhance functionality in our relationship with computing technology but also enrich our interactions and experiences with each other and the world at large. At CHI, we are constantly envisioning futures where technology serves as a bridge—connecting people with ideas and possibilities. I invite you to join me on this journey, learn together, and help shape the future of HCI.

Neha Kumar
President, SIGCHI;
School of Interactive Computing, Georgia Tech

CHI 2025: Find your IkiCHI! 

Neha Kumar
President, SIGCHI;
School of Interactive Computing, Georgia Tech

The Human-Computer Interaction research landscape is constantly and rapidly evolving. I am delighted to invite you to learn about and engage with the latest breakthroughs in our field that advance computing technologies so that humans, and the society at large, can benefit in new and path-breaking ways. 

Today’s innovations compel us to rethink how we interact with digital interfaces as we integrate cutting-edge approaches to technology design with deep empathy and user engagement. We are increasingly seeing developments in areas such as AI-driven user interfaces, immersive virtual environments, and collaborative tools that seek to connect us in meaningful ways. These advancements are redefining workspaces, education, health, and daily life more broadly, making technology far more accessible and responsive to our needs than it has ever been.

Join us in celebrating Georgia Tech’s 2025 HCI advancements, and discover how our innovations not only enhance functionality in our relationship with computing technology but also enrich our interactions and experiences with each other and the world at large. At CHI, we are constantly envisioning futures where technology serves as a bridge—connecting people with ideas and possibilities. I invite you to join me on this journey, learn together, and help shape the future of HCI.


Yokohama, Japan | April 26 – May 1, 2025

Explore Connections in HCI Research Through the ‘Road to CHI 2025’ Data Story Series

What is the quintessential nature of human-computer interaction (HCI) research? What countries and organizations are contributing to advancements in the field in 2025?

Explore these and other questions in the data story series, “Road to CHI 2025,” focusing on the connections within teams and global collaborations.

Also, take a deep dive and explore the many organizations involved in the 184 Paper Sessions at CHI.

BONUS: Discover the people and work from Georgia Tech’s CHI cohort. Tech is a leading contributor with nearly 100 contributors across the CHI 2025 program.


Where are the world’s 🌎 experts working together across countries in human-computer interaction (HCI) research? You have a front row seat to explore those connections right now in the ACM SIGCHI CHI 2025 papers program. Using the CHI program data, Georgia Tech developed an interactive visualization 💻 that lets you pick any country in the program and discover the number of experts from all its partner countries. BONUS 🙌: Change the view in the data viz, then, in the footer, download an image of the selected country to share!

Georgia Institute of Technology is a leading contributor to CHI 2025, with nearly 100 experts across the program. #RoadtoCHI2025

Gregory Abowd
Dean, College of Engineering, Northeastern University (Georgia Tech professor 1994-2021)

SIGCHI Special Recognition

Carl DiSalvo

Professor, Interactive Computing

SIGCHI Academy


Anupriya Tuli
Postdoctoral Fellow, KTH Royal Institute of Technology (IIIT–Delhi Ph.D. 2023; Co-advised by Neha Kumar, Georgia Tech, Interactive Computing)

SIGCHI Outstanding Dissertation Award


Zijie “Jay” Wang

Safety Researcher, OpenAI (Georgia Tech Ph.D. 2024; Advised by Polo Chau, Computational Science and Engineering)

SIGCHI Outstanding Dissertation Award



HONORABLE MENTION PAPERS

Heidi Biggs
Asst. Professor, Literature, Media, and Communication
Paper

Jasmine C. Foriest

Ph.D. Student, Human-Centered Computing
Paper

Jennifer G. Kim
Asst. Professor, Interactive Computing
Paper

Momin Siddiqui

M.S. Computer Science Student
Paper


   NEWS   

Wang Earns SIGCHI 2025 Outstanding Dissertation Award for Impact in Democratizing Human-Centered AI 🔗

By Bryant Wine, School of Computational Science and Engineering

A Georgia Tech alum’s dissertation introduced ways to make artificial intelligence (AI) more accessible, interpretable, and accountable. Although it’s been a year since his doctoral defense, Zijie (Jay) Wang’s (Ph.D. ML-CSE 2024) work continues to resonate with researchers.

Wang is a recipient of the 2025 Outstanding Dissertation Award from the Association for Computing Machinery Special Interest Group on Computer-Human Interaction (ACM SIGCHI). The award recognizes Wang for his lifelong work on democratizing human-centered AI.

“Throughout my Ph.D. and industry internships, I observed a gap in existing research: there is a strong need for practical tools for applying human-centered approaches when designing AI systems,” said Wang, now a safety researcher at OpenAI.

“My work not only helps people understand AI and guide its behavior but also provides user-friendly tools that fit into existing workflows.”

Wang’s dissertation presented techniques in visual explanation and interactive guidance to align AI models with user knowledge and values. The work culminated from years of research, fellowship support, and internships.

Wang’s most influential projects formed the core of his dissertation. These included:

  • CNN Explainer: an open-source tool developed for deep-learning beginners. Since its release in July 2020, more than 436,000 global visitors have used the tool.
  • DiffusionDB: a first-of-its-kind large-scale dataset that lays a foundation to help people better understand generative AI. This work could lead to new research in detecting deepfakes and designing human-AI interaction tools to help people more easily use these models.
  • GAM Changer: an interface that empowers users in healthcare, finance, or other domains to edit ML models to include knowledge and values specific to their domain, which improves reliability.
  • GAM Coach: an interactive ML tool that could help people who have been rejected for a loan by automatically letting an applicant know what is needed for them to receive loan approval. 
  • Farsight: a tool that alerts developers when they write prompts in large language models that could be harmful and misused.  

“I feel extremely honored and lucky to receive this award, and I am deeply grateful to many who have supported me along the way, including Polo, mentors, collaborators, and friends,” said Wang, who was advised by School of Computational Science and Engineering (CSE) Professor Polo Chau.

“This recognition also inspired me to continue striving to design and develop easy-to-use tools that help everyone to easily interact with AI systems.”

WANG’S WORLD: My research focuses on making AI more accessible, interpretable, and accountable, by designing and developing novel interactive interfaces for people to easily and enjoyably interact with machine learning systems at scale.

Like Wang, Chau advised Georgia Tech alumnus Fred Hohman (Ph.D. CSE 2020). Hohman won the ACM SIGCHI Outstanding Dissertation Award in 2022.

Chau’s group synthesizes machine learning (ML) and visualization techniques into scalable, interactive, and trustworthy tools. These tools increase understanding and interaction with large-scale data and ML models. 

Chau is the associate director of corporate relations for the Machine Learning Center at Georgia Tech. Wang called the School of CSE his home unit while a student in the ML program under Chau.

Wang is one of five recipients of this year’s award to be presented at the 2025 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI 2025). The conference occurs April 25-May 1 in Yokohama, Japan. 

SIGCHI is the world’s largest association of human-computer interaction professionals and practitioners. The group sponsors or co-sponsors 26 conferences, including CHI.

Wang’s outstanding dissertation award is the latest recognition of a career decorated with achievement.

“Georgia Tech attracts many great minds, and I’m glad that some, like Jay, chose to join our group. It has been a joy to work alongside them and witness the many wonderful things they have accomplished, and with many more to come in their careers.”

Polo Chau, Wang’s advisor and School of Computational Science and Engineering (CSE) Professor 

Months after graduating from Georgia Tech, Forbes named Wang to its 30 Under 30 in Science for 2025 for his dissertation. Wang was one of 15 Yellow Jackets included in nine different 30 Under 30 lists and the only Georgia Tech-affiliated individual on the 30 Under 30 in Science list.

While a Georgia Tech student, Wang earned recognition from big names in business and technology. He received the Apple Scholars in AI/ML Ph.D. Fellowship in 2023 and was in the 2022 cohort of the J.P. Morgan AI Ph.D. Fellowships Program.

Along with the CHI award, Wang’s dissertation earned him awards this year at banquets across campus. The Georgia Tech chapter of Sigma Xi presented Wang with the Best Ph.D. Thesis Award. He also received the College of Computing’s Outstanding Dissertation Award.

“Georgia Tech attracts many great minds, and I’m glad that some, like Jay, chose to join our group,” Chau said. “It has been a joy to work alongside them and witness the many wonderful things they have accomplished, and with many more to come in their careers.”


PAPERS by Session


3D Design and Fabrication
CompAct: Designing Interconnected Compliant Mechanisms with Targeted Actuation Transmissions
Humphrey Yang, I-Chao Shen, Nikolas Martelaro, Bo Zhu, Haoran Xie, Takeo Igarashi, Lining Yao

AR, VR, and Social VR
Modeling the Impact of Visual Stimuli on Redirection Noticeability with Gaze Behavior in Virtual Reality
Zhipeng Li, Yishu Ji, Ruijia Chen, Tianqi Liu, Yuntao Wang, Yuanchun Shi, Yukang Yan

Biosensing for Interactions
BallistoBud: Heart Rate Variability Monitoring using Earbud Accelerometry for Stress Assessment
Md Saiful Islam, Md Mahbubur Rahman, Mehrab Bin Morshed, David J Lin, Yunzhi Li, Hao Zhou, Wendy Berry Mendes, Jilong Kuang

Children and Youth
Escape or D13: Understanding Youth Perspectives of AI through Educational Game Co-design
Jared Lim, Grace Barkhuff, Jane Awuah, Sophie Clyde, Riya Sogani, Christina Gardner-McCune, David Touretzky, Judith Uchidiuno

CS Education and Security
Playing Dumb to Get Smart: Creating and Evaluating an LLM-based Teachable Agent within University Computer Science Classes
Kantwon Rogers, Michael Davis, Mallesh Maharana, Peter Etheredge, Sonia Chernova

CS Education and Security
Tangible-MakeCode: Bridging Physical Coding Blocks with a Web-Based Programming Interface for Collaborative and Extensible Learning
Jin Yu, Poojita Garg, DoangJoo Synn, HyunJoo Oh

Data Interpretation and Storytelling
Data Bias Recognition in Museum Settings: Framework Development and Contributing Factors
Stella Quinto Lima, Gabriela Buraglia, Wong Kam-Kwai, Jessica Roberts

Design for Diverse Physical Interactions
ProxiCycle : Passively Mapping Cyclist Safety Using Smart Handlebars for Near-Miss Detection
Joseph Breda, Keyu Chen, Thomas Ploetz, Shwetak Patel

Digital Health and Well-being
ExploreSelf: Fostering User-driven Exploration and Reflection on Personal Challenges with Adaptive Guidance by Large Language Models
Inhwa Song, SoHyun Park, Sachin Pendse, Jessica Schleider, Munmun De Choudhury, Young-Ho Kim

Digital Matters
Digital Legacy Systems for Young Adults: Emphasizing Relationship-Oriented Perspectives and Physical Artifacts in Death Preparation
Soonho Kwon, Hyunah Jo, Sohee Ryu, Jihwan Do, HwaJung Lee, JooHyun Lee, Keeheon Lee, Younah Kang

Future of HCI and Research Practices
Translating HCI Research to Broader Audiences: Motivation, Inspiration, and Critical Factors on Alternative Research Outcomes
MinYoung Yoo, Sophia Ppali, William Odom, Yumeng Zhuang, Kritika Kritika, Wyatt Olson, Catherine Wieczorek, Heidi Biggs, Arne Berger, Audrey Desjardins, Ron Wakkary, Kathryn Ringland

Human-AI Collaboration
HONORABLE MENTION
Script&Shift: A Layered Interface Paradigm for Integrating Content Development and Rhetorical Strategy with LLM Writing Assistants
Momin Siddiqui, Roy Pea, Hariharan Subramonyam

Innovative Learning Approaches
Embracing Social Justice within a Computing Curriculum to Foster Social Change
Gabriella Thompson, Lynn Dombrowski, Angela D. R. Smith

LLM for Health
HONORABLE MENTION
Private Yet Social: How LLM Chatbots Support and Challenge Eating Disorder Recovery
Ryuhaerang Choi, Taehan Kim, Subin Park, Jennifer Kim, Sung-Ju Lee

Make it Visible
Exploratory Visual Analysis of Transcripts for Interaction Analysis in Human-Computer Interaction
Ben Shapiro, Rogers Hall, Arpit Mathur, Edwin Zhao

Malleable and Adaptive Interface
XR-penter: Material-Aware and In Situ Design of Scrap Wood Assemblies
Ramya Iyer, Mustafa Doga Dogan, Maria Larsson, Takeo Igarashi

Mediated Social Interactions
Virtual Solidarity, Concrete Care: A Review of Mutual Aid Online
Darley Sackitey, Hiya Ashish Sachdev, Andrea Parker

Mobile Health
“We Have to Be Advocates for Ourselves”: A Social-Ecological Approach to Mobile Health Design with Black Older Adults Living with Diabetes
Cynthia Baseman, Seka Dembure, Rosa Arriaga

Mobile Input
Enhancing Smartphone Eye Tracking with Cursor-Based Interactive Implicit Calibration
Chang Liu, Xiangyang Wang, Chun Yu, Yingtian Shi, Chongyang Wang, Ziqi Liu, Chen Liang, Yuanchun Shi

Nature
HONORABLE MENTION
Fabulating Bog Girl: Queer Entanglements of Body and Land Histories in More-than-Human AutoFiction and Design
Heidi Biggs

Neurodiversity
Working Together Toward Interdependence: Chatbot-Based Support for Balanced Social Interactions Between Neurodivergent and Neurotypical Individuals
Ha-Kyung Kong, Rachel Lowy, Youjin Choi, Jennifer Kim

Perception of Systems
Nurturing Capabilities: Unpacking the Gap in Human-Centered Evaluations of AI-Based Systems
Aman Khullar, Nikhil Nalin, Abhishek Prasad, Ann John Mampilli, Neha Kumar

Prototyping and Sustainable Development
Sustainability, Development, and Human–Computer Interaction
Vishal Sharma, Neha Kumar

Risk and Privacy
HONORABLE MENTION
Interaction Techniques for Providing Sensitive Location Data of Interpersonal Violence with User-Defined Privacy Preservation
Alex Godwin, Jasmine Foriest, Mia Bottcher, Gretchen Baas, Michael Tsai, Daniel Wu

Shaping Diverse Cognitive Process
GenieWizard: Multimodal App Feature Discovery with Large Language Models
Jackie Yang, Yingtian Shi, Chris Gu, Zhang Zheng, Anisha Jain, Tianshi Li, Monica Lam, James Landay

Spatial Interactions
Ego vs. Exo and Active vs. Passive: Investigating the Individual and Combined Effects of Viewpoint and Navigation on Spatial Immersion and Understanding in Immersive Storytelling
Tao Lu, Qian Zhu, Tiffany Ma, Wong Kam-Kwai, Anlan Xie, Alex Endert, Yalong Yang

Sustainable Individual, Society, and Environment
Architecting Utopias: How AI in Healthcare Envisions Societal Ideals and Human Flourishing
Catherine Wieczorek, Heidi Biggs, Kamala Payyapilly Thiruvenkatanathan, Shaowen Bardzell

UI/UX Design
Understanding Socio-technical Factors Configuring AI Non-Use in UX Work Practices
Inha Cha, Richmond Wong

Visualization and Language Communication
Confirmation Bias: The Double-Edged Sword of Data Facts in Visual Data Communication
Shiyao Li, Thomas Davidson, Cindy Xiong Bearfield, Emily Wall

ALT CHI

Artistic View
Lost in translation: Researchers’ reflections on writing in English for CHI
Sumita Sharma, Behnaz Norouzi, Edward White, Eva Durall Gazulla, Mohsin Yousufi, Netta Iivari, Noura Howell, Pauli Klemettilä, Suleman Shahid, Sayan Sarcar, Xingyu Li, Wricha Mishra

Well-being and Well-dying
Designing for Rest: Rethinking Access for / from Chronic Illness
Sylvia Janicki, Julio de Pereda Banda, Lisette Romero, Sarah Harris, Xuanyu Guo, Noura Howell, Abigale Stangl

Interactivity

Interactivity
Dotter: A One-Bit Predictive Text-Entry System
Oscar Laird, David Martin, Ananay Gupta, Celeste Mason, Thad Starner

Late-Breaking Work

Bridging Spatial and Social Network Analysis Communities through Visual Analytics for Collaborative Work: A Case Study
Sichen Jin, Ben Shapiro, Alex Endert, Clio Andris

Datum Fieldnotes: easing the data work burden on civic and non-profit organizations
William Eickman, Mukhlisabonu Nematova, Annabel Rothschild, Carl DiSalvo, Betsy DiSalvo

Exploring Wearable Design for Emotional Health and Well-Being during Menopause: Perspectives and Design Opportunities
Weiwei Zhang, Han Bao, Chenyang Li, Yuxiang Zhai, Jie Liu, Jiangtao Gong

Good XAI Design: For What? In Which Ways?
Lingqing Wang, Yifan Liu, Ashok Goel

I Would Never Trust Anything Western: Kumu (Educator) Perspectives on Use of LLMs for Culturally Revitalizing CS Education in Hawaiian Schools
Manas Mhasakar, Rachel Baker-Ramos, Benjamin Carter, Evyn-Bree Helekahi-Kaiwi, Josiah Hester

Leveraging Large Language Models for Personalized Public Messaging
Amit Kumar Das, Cindy Xiong Bearfield, Klaus Mueller

SPHERE: Supporting Personalized Feedback at Scale in Programming Classrooms with Structured Review of Generative AI Outputs
Xiaohang Tang, Sam Wong, Marcus Huynh, Zicheng He, Yalong Yang, Yan Chen

What Makes a Visualization Visually Complex?
Kylie Lin, Sean Ru, David Rapp, Hui Guan, Cindy Xiong Bearfield

Panel

Technoskepticism or Justified Caution?
Technoskepticism or Justified Caution? The Future of Human-Centered AI in Mental Health Care
Nathaniel Swinger, Lauren Moran, Saeed Abdullah, Christopher Wiese, Uichin Lee, Yuan-Chi Tseng, Andrew Sherrill, Rosa Arriaga

SIGCHI Academy Panel

SIGCHI Academy Panel
SIGCHI Academy
Carl DiSalvo, James Fogarty, Elizabeth Gerber, Wendy Ju, Pattie Maes, Joanna McGrenere, Antti Oulasvirta, Kate Starbird, Wolfgang Stuerzlinger, Kentaro Toyama, Martin Wattenberg

Special Interest Group (SIG)

Beyond Culture: Centering Power, Reciprocity, and Justice in HCI and Mental Health Research
Sachin Pendse, Novia Wong, Munmun De Choudhury, Jaydon Farao, Neha Kumar, Nasalifya Namwinga, Giovanni Ramos, Asra Sakeen Wani, Jessica Schleider, Madhu Reddy

Unanticipated Lessons from Communities: Navigating Society-CenteredResearch in the AI Era
Ding Wang, Remi Denton, Anoop Sinha, Shruti Sheth, Lauren Wilcox, Maryam Mustafa, Motahhare Eslami, Ken Holstein, Maarten Sap, Angela D. R. Smith, Andrea Parker, Neha Kumar, Naveena Karusala, Tawanna Dillahunt, Jared Katzman

Student Design Competition

RePlate: A User-Driven Solution for Empowering Sustainable Food Consumption in University Dining
Yaxuan Xiao, Kelly Truong, Jingjing Huang, Faustine Wang

Sound to Sight: Enhancing Contextual Awareness for the DHH Community in Public Transportation
Rachit Bhayana, Timothy Chiu, Natalie Jarrett, Disha Sikaria, Lynn Dombrowski

Student Game Competition

Student Game Competition
PopSignAI: Integrating Sign Recognition into Gameplay to Teach Sign Language
Riya Sogani, Ananay Gupta, Aaron Gabryluk, Viswak Raja

Workshops

WS08: How do design stories work? Exploring narrative forms of knowledge in HCI
How do design stories work? Exploring narrative forms of knowledge in HCI
Doenja Oogjes, Heidi Biggs, Audrey Desjardins, Nadia Campo Woytuk, Sylvia Janicki, Karey Helms, Kristina Andersen, Laura Devendorf, Marie Louise Søndergaard, Li Jönsson

WS10: Human-AI Interaction for Augmented Reasoning: Improving Human Reflective and Critical Thinking with Artificial Intelligence
Human-AI Interaction for Augmented Reasoning: Improving Human Reflective and Critical Thinking with Artificial Intelligence
Valdemar Danry, Pat Pataranutaporn, Christopher Cui, Jui-Tse Hung, Lancelot Blanchard, Zana Buçinca, Chenhao Tan, Thad Starner, Pattie Maes

WS17: Human-Centered Evaluation and Auditing of Language Models
Human-Centered Evaluation and Auditing of Language Models
Yu Lu Liu, Wesley Deng, Michelle Lam, Motahhare Eslami, Juho Kim, Q. Vera Liao, Wei Xu, Jekaterina Novikova, Ziang Xiao

WS19: Advancing Post-growth HCI
Advancing Post-growth HCI
Vishal Sharma, Hongjin Lin, Asra Sakeen Wani, Jared Katzman, Anupriya Tuli, Naveena Karusala, Shaowen Bardzell, Christoph Becker, Martin Tomitsch, Neha Kumar

WS20: Resisting AI Solutionism: Where Do We Go From Here?
Resisting AI Solutionism: Where Do We Go From Here?
Gisela Reyes-Cruz, Velvet Spors, Michael Muller, Marianela Ciolfi Felice, Shaowen Bardzell, Rua Williams, Karin Hansson, Ivana Feldfeber

WS38: Technology Mediated Caregiving For Older Adults Aging in Place
Technology Mediated Caregiving For Older Adults Aging in Place
Elizabeth Mynatt, Masatomo Kobayashi, Alisha Pradhan, Niharika Mathur, John Vines, Katie Seaborn, Erin Buehler, Jenny Waycott, John Rudnik, Tamara Zubatiy, Agata Rozga







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See you in Yokohama!

Development: College of Computing
Project and Web Lead/Data Graphics: Joshua Preston
News: Bryant Wine
Photography: Kevin Beasley and Terence Rushin; submitted photos
Data: https://programs.sigchi.org/chi/2025 CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license
Additional data collection/formatting: Joni Isbell