Documentation

UW Connect

HCI Seminar: Interacting with and through agentic objects

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1240 CS
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HCI Seminar: Interacting with and through agentic objects

Speaker: Leila Takayama, Willow Garage Inc.

Abstract: We encounter and interact with non-human agents every day when withdrawing cash from ATMs, driving cars with anti-lock brakes, and tuning our thermostats. Through controlled experiments and field studies, this talk will examine the ways that people make sense of agentic objects, including (1) how we interact with agentic objects like voice agents and personal robots, and (2) how we interact through agentic objects like telepresence robots. Drawing from the theories that informed ubiquitous computing, we can see how people make sense of agentic objects, thereby providing implications for both theory and the design of interactive systems.

Bio: Leila Takayama is a research scientist at Willow Garage, studying human-computer interaction and human-robot interaction. Dr. Takayama completed her PhD in Communication at Stanford University in 2008. She also holds a PhD minor in Psychology from Stanford, MA in Communication from Stanford, and BAs in Psychology and Cognitive Science from UC Berkeley (2003). During her graduate studies, she was a research assistant in the User Interface Research (UIR) group at Palo Alto Research Center (PARC). Her thesis, titled “Throwing Voices: Investigating the Psychological Effects of the Spatial Location of Projected Voices,” won the Nathan Maccoby outstanding dissertation award. She is a member of the global agenda council on robotics and smart devices for the World Economic Forum as well as editor for the inaugural issue of the Journal of Human-Robot Interaction.

Event Date:
Wednesday, February 29, 2012 - 4:00pm - 5:00pm (ended)