research
We are happy to announce that 19 members of the ATLAS community contributed to work accepted for the 2023 ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, taking place in Hamburg, Germany, April 23ā28.Accepting fewer
Bruns lands prestigious NSF CAREER research award to usher in next generation of āsmart tattoosāAssistant Professor Carson Bruns has received a prestigious National Science Foundation CAREER Award for research that investigates how the art of tattooing can incorporate the latest advances in
Electronic musician, flutist and researcher Grace Leslie believes that music touches something deep in the human braināa hardwired need, perhaps, to sit around a fire or in a concert arena and feel connected to the people around us. Humans have been making music for longer than weāve lived in cities and grown crops. āIn most cultures, itās used to draw people together,ā says Leslie.
Robots help build cars, fly planes, fight wars and provide healthcare; they play a role in countless industries, but for the most part, they don't work in chemistry labs. A team of CU Boulder scientists plans to change that.
Like many people across Colorado, Peter Gyory spent the height of the COVID-19 pandemic sitting at home with nothing to do. Then the ATLAS-based PhD candidate and game designer looked around his apartment: āI was surrounded by cardboard. I thought: āHow could I make a game out of that?āā
Researchers from ATLAS Institute's Unstable Design, THING, Living Matter and Superhuman Computing labs presented four papers, including three that received āHonorable Mentionā awards, at the ACM conference on Designing Interactive Systems (DIS '22).
Prior psychology findings show humans can communicate distinct emotions solely through touch. In this award-winning work presented at DIS'22, THING LabĀ researchers hypothesize that similar effects might also be apply to robotic touch.Ā
Exploring biofoam as a Material for Tangible Interaction, authored by Eldy S. Lazaro Vasquez, Netta Ofer, Shanel Wu, Mary Etta West, Mirela Alistar and Laura Devendorf Ā introducedĀ the DIS audience to biofoam, a water soluble and biodegradable material thatĀ can be made conductive.
āAn Introduction to Weave Structure for HCI: A How-to and Reflection on Modes of Exchange,ā authored by Assistant Professor Laura Devendorf, director of the Unstable Design Lab, Sasha De Koninck, an ATLAS-affiliated PhD candidate,Ā and Etta Sandry, weaver-in-residence, received aĀ āBest Pictorial Honorable Mentionā award at theĀ ACM SIGCHI Conference on Designing Interactive Systems (DIS '22).
āKnitting Access: Exploring Stateful Textiles with People with Disabilities,ā authored by Annika Muehlbradt (PhD Comp. Sciā22) and researchers Shaun Kane, director of the Superhuman Computing Lab, Laura DevendorfĀ director of the Unstable Design Lab, and Gregory Whiting, associate professor of mechanical engineering, won a DISā22 Honorable Mention award.