*What*:  Research Lightning Talks

*When:* Tuesday, March 3 at 12pm

*Where:* The Allen Center, CSE 203

Please join us this week for the last Change Seminar of the quarter.  This
week we will be having lighting talks from CS and iSchool grad students.
This is a great opportunity to learn about some of the current research
going on at UW right now.
Each lighting talk will be 8-10 min with some time for questions and
answers while we switch speakers.

*Participants:*

*Lassana Magassa *on *Digital Literacy Level of the Incarcerated*

*Abstract: *A proposal to validate a framework of digital literacy that
includes a social behavioral dimension and an instrument designed to
measure the digital literacy level of those incarcerated. Additionally,
trying to uncover what being digital literate means for individuals leaving
prison and returning to the community.
*Bio: *Lassana Magassa is a 6th year PhD candidate developing instruments
to measure the digital literacy level of incarcerated people. He is in the
Information School and is advised by Karine Nahon.

*Trevor Perrier* on *USSD as a Patient Interface *
*Abstract:* A proposal for extending two-way SMS messaging to an USSD based
menu system. What would such a system look like, how could it be used,
would it provide a net benefit to justify the costs.
*Bio:* Trevor Perrier is a 3rd year PhD student working with SMS for data
reporting and health literacy.  He is in the Computer Science and
Engineering department and advised by Richard Anderson.

*Raza Khan* on *Behavioral Modeling for Churn Prediction in Developing
Countries*
*Abstract:* This presentation is going to describe our work on churn
prediction on data from a Telecom Operator of South Asia. A key highlight
of our work is the identification of some unexpected features of customer
attrition.
*Bio:* Muhammad Raza Khan is a 2nd year PhD student in the Information
School, University of Washington working under Dr. Joshua Blumenstock. Raza
has been working on different big data projects related to product adoption
and churn.

*Philip Reed* on *Patterns of mobile phone use based on gender and work
status.*
*Abstract:* In this work, in collaboration with Raza Rehman, we are
examining patterns of mobile phone use between men and women, further
subdivided into women who work outside the home and those who do not. We
aim to help disentangle conflicting claims in the literature about whether
differential access to ICT is primarily a reflection of general
socio-cultural marginalization or whether it has other stronger roots.
*Bio:* Philip J. Reed is a 3rd year PhD student in the Information School.
Within the field of ICTD, he studies the effects of access to technology on
people's job and career aspirations. His adviser is Ricardo Gomez.
_______________________________________________
change mailing list
change@change.washington.edu
http://changemm.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/change

Reply via email to