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| Empathetic Computing for Inclusive Application Design | 
| CHOO TSU Wei Kenny PhD Candidate
School of Information Systems
Singapore Management University
| Research Area
Dissertation Committee Chairman Committee Members |
| | Date
July 20, 2018 (Friday) | Time
2.00pm - 3.00pm | Venue
Meeting Room 4.4, Level 4,
School of Information Systems,
Singapore Management University,
80 Stamford Road
Singapore 178902 | We look forward to seeing you at this research seminar. ![]()
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About The Talk The explosive growth of the ecosystem of personal and ambient computing devices, and high-speed connectivity has led to extremely powerful and varied mobile computing applications that we use everywhere. Yet today, there is poor design support for mobile applications to be inclusive, despite the growing number of impaired users (approximately 19% of the population have a disability). Impairments are extremely diverse, varying in presentation even for the same type of impairment. To compound this, mobile apps are typically designed by unimpaired designers, for unimpaired users. Without the ability to directly understand the specific problems that impaired app users face in the environments that they use the apps, app designers are extremely challenged in supporting app accessibility or to innovate new types of applications that seek to support impaired users. My dissertation investigates the challenges in supporting the designer-developer in designing apps for inclusiveness. Specifically, I examine these main themes: How can we support designers to design for impaired users on mobile devices? How do we design and develop a VR system that supports naturalistic interaction and assessments of mobile apps? How do we simulate impairments? In this talk, I seek to answer these questions and propose studies that seek to examine how designers design applications using our system, its efficacy, and the requirements for designing using our augmented virtuality impairment simulation system: Empath-D. | Speaker Biography Kenny CHOO is a PhD candidate in the School of Information Systems, Singapore Management University. He works under the guidance of Assistant Professor Lee Youngki. His primary research is on empathetic computing interfaces that support mobile application design. He is also interested in the application of mobile and pervasive context monitoring to support wellness. He received his B. Eng (ECE) from the National University of Singapore and MSc in Vision, Imaging and Virtual Environments from University College London. Before starting his PhD, Kenny worked on learning pedagogies for serious games for 6 years at DSO National Laboratories. |
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