CS Faculty Candidate Colloquium

 

Monday                                  **Special Location & Time**
February 18
10:45 - 11:50 AM 
Kelley 1007

 

 

Krzysztof Gajos 
EECS Colloquium: Computer Science Faculty Candidate
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
University of Washington

 

Automatically Generating Personalized Adaptive User Interfaces

 

User Interfaces delivered with today's software are usually created in a
one-size-fits-all manner, making implicit assumptions about the needs,
abilities, and preferences of the "average user" and the characteristics
of the "average device." I argue that personalized user interfaces,
which are adapted to a person's devices, tasks, preferences, and
abilities, can improve user satisfaction and performance. In this talk,
I focus on the portion of my research, which demonstrates how this
approach benefits people with motor impairments. I present three
concrete systems: * SUPPLE, which uses decision-theoretic optimization
to automatically generate user interfaces adapted to a person's device;
* ARNAULD, which allows optimization-based systems to be adapted to
users' preferences; and * SUPPLE++, a system that first performs a
one-time assessment of a person's motor capabilities and then
automatically generates user interfaces adapted to that user. My
experiments show that these automatically generated, personalized user
interfaces significantly improve speed, accuracy, and satisfaction for
users with motor impairments compared to manufacturers' default
interfaces.

 

Biography:

 

Krzysztof Gajos is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Computer
Science and Engineering at the University of Washington, working with
professors Daniel Weld and Jacob Wobbrock. His research interests
include human-computer interaction, artificial intelligence, and machine
learning. He was a recipient of a Microsoft Graduate Research Fellowship
and he has also been a visiting faculty member at the Ashesi University
in Ghana where he designed and taught an introductory course in
artificial intelligence. Krzysztof received his B.Sc. and M.Eng. degrees
in Computer Science from MIT, where he also worked for 2 years as a
research scientist managing the Intelligent Room Project at the MIT
Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.

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