[Access Lunch] Fwd: HCII Virtual Seminar Speaker Anne Marie Piper Friday Nov 20 @ 1:30pm

Cynthia Bennett cbennet2 at andrew.cmu.edu
Mon Nov 16 08:51:50 EST 2020


We don’t have Accessibility Lunch this week, but we do have a fantastic HCII Seminar speaker, Anne Marie Piper. This talk is highly relevant for HCI and accessibility researchers. Note the time is Friday, November 20, from 1:30 to 2:30 PM ET.  I’ll forward other reminders to this list as the zoom link has not yet been posted.

Cynthia Bennett
Pronouns: she/her

Web: https://www.bennettc.com/

Begin forwarded message:

From: Jo Bodnar <jbodnar at andrew.cmu.edu>
Date: November 16, 2020 at 8:24:51 AM EST
To: hcii-seminar-series at cs.cmu.edu, pgh-hci at cs.cmu.edu, Jo Bodnar <jbodnar at cmu.edu>
Subject: HCII Virtual Seminar Speaker Anne Marie Piper Friday Nov 20 @ 1:30pm


Friday Nov 20 @ 1:30pm

Zoom link forthcoming.

Anne Marie Piper -  Associate Professor in the Department of Informatics at the University of California, Irvine

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Talk title: Rethinking Design for Accessibility

Abstract: Approximately 61 million Americans, or one in four U.S. adults, have a disability that affects daily life. Despite the prevalence of disability across the lifespan, accessibility is typically an afterthought in technology design. Discussions of accessibility often center on checklists of requirements and whether or not a system has particular features. In this talk, I will argue for a view of accessibility that is collaboratively negotiated, situated, and enacted through sociomaterial relations. Grounded in extensive field work, I will present three cases of design for accessibility that shift how we think about building systems with and for individuals with disabilities. These projects detail new systems for collaborative meaning-making in the context of dementia, online social advocacy among blind and visually impaired older adults, and ability-diverse group work and design. Collectively, these projects reveal the interactive nature of accessibility that is often missing in individualistic system design and call attention to the importance of the social and political dimensions of accessibility alongside the technological.

Bio: Anne Marie Piper is an Associate Professor in the Department of Informatics at the University of California, Irvine. Her research in human-computer interaction focuses on designing and studying new technologies to support communication, social interaction, and learning for people across the lifespan. Her research is funded through four NSF awards, including a CAREER award, and has been recognized with numerous Best Paper Awards and Nominations at ACM CHI, CSCW, DIS, and ASSETS. She was named a U.S. National Academy of Sciences Kavli Fellow and received Northwestern’s Simon Award for Teaching Excellence and UC-San Diego’s Interdisciplinary Scholar Award. Anne Marie earned her PhD in Cognitive Science from the University of California, San Diego, MA in Education from Stanford University, and BS in Computer Science from Georgia Tech. Prior to joining UC-Irvine, she was a tenured faculty member at Northwestern University.
Website:  https://www.ics.uci.edu/~ampiper/

HOST:  Sarah Fox & Cynthia Bennett


--

Jo Bodnar

Administrative Associate

Carnegie Mellon University

Human-Computer Interaction Institute

412-268-6162 - office
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