Hi Everyone!

At next week's Change seminar (Feb 7th), we will be hearing from George
Hope Chidziwisano (he/him) of Carnegie Mellon University. Hope's talk is
titled "Using Smart Home Technologies to Support Domestic Activities in the
Global South."

Check out our website: www.change.washington.edu!

*Description*
Smart home technologies have significantly contributed to the design of new
applications that improve people’s domestic lives, such as systems for
energy monitoring, home surveillance, activity tracking, and air quality
monitoring. Even though homes are not the same across the globe, human
computer interaction (HCI) research on smart home technologies
overwhelmingly takes place in western societies. In this talk, Hope will
present his work focusing on using smart home technologies to support
domestic activities in the Global South, specifically in some parts of
sub-Saharan Africa. Generally, his findings suggest that people in the
Global South are interested in using sensor-based technologies, and they
quickly find different ways of appropriating them to suit their needs. Hope
will focus on the unexpected ways people use these technologies and their
reflections on using them to support domestic activities. He will conclude
his presentation with a discussion about the unintended consequences which
accompany the deployment of smart home technologies in the Global South.
Hopes’ work presents opportunities for designing smart home technologies to
support people’s needs beyond western societies. Further, his work expands
on existing discussion about smart home technologies by considering
marginalized perspectives on how they can be used in the home

*Resources for Attendees*
* None

*Seminar Details*
*Location*: Tuesdays from 12-1pm in 271 CSE2 (The Bill and Melinda Gates
Center)
*Zoom:* https://washington.zoom.us/j/93100061611

*Presenter Bio*
George Hope Chidziwisano is a Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow in the Human
Computer Interaction Institute at Carnegie Mellon University. His research
focuses on designing sensing technologies for resource constrained areas.
More specifically, he conducts design-oriented studies in the Global South,
where he collaborates with local technicians and families to design,
develop, and deploy novel sensing technologies that have the potential to
solve some of the challenges facing homes. Hope’s research has received
recognition from Google Research and ACM COMPASS. Hope was a fellow in the
Data Science for Social Good program; a program affiliated with the
University of Washington’s eScience Institute. He used his expertise in
machine learning, natural language processing and deep learning to
contribute to a project on identifying disinformation in online news
articles. Hope has also participated in the Global Innovation Exchange
program (University of Washington and Tsinghua University) where he
practiced a variety of human-centered design methods to develop novel
sensing techniques, user-friendly interfaces, and cutting-edge computer
technologies. Before joining CMU, Hope completed his Ph.D. and M.A. in
Information and Media at Michigan State University. Hope completed his
undergraduate studies in Computer Science and Physics at the University of
Malawi.


Best,

UW Change Organizers
_______________________________________________
change mailing list
change@change.washington.edu
https://changemm.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/change

Reply via email to