IUW is a single day, single stream workshop participated in and hosted by: University at Buffalo – SUNY, University of Toronto and University of Waterloo. The pleasure of hosting is rotated among the universities. This is designed as a way for emerging researchers to share their work in a friendly, low-pressure environment. You are invited to share partial work (maybe a phase of an experiment, or a study design you are working on), or completed work (something you are preparing to present at a conference or are considering for submission to a publication).
8:30am Welcome address and orientation to the event
9:00am Transition from Graduate School to Beyond– Panel Discussion We will be joined by exceptional ISE masters and PhD graduates who are working in academia and industries, focusing on healthcare and human-machine modeling, user experience, as well as quality and safety issues. They will share their experience and journey in the transition from graduate school to a career, as well as suggestions on what to do once you have found a position.
10:00am Work From Home Tips and Tricks: Networking Coffee Break – come and go as you please during this break to meet other IUW participants and share and discuss tips and tricks you have (or need help with) for working from home.
10:15am Student Lectures: Alia Galal, Birsen Donmez, Matthew Roorda - Truck driver hazard anticipation skills training and testing to improve truck-vulnerable user safety
Ebru Kamis - Perception of Behaviour and Personality in Robotic Vacuum Cleaners
Yovela Murzello, Shi Cao, Siby Samuel - Age Differences in the Situation Awareness and Takeover Performance in a Semi-Autonomous Vehicle Simulator
Ece Uereten, Catherine Burns - Exploring expertise development, interface design and evaluation in neuro-critical care
Qian Zhang - A pilot study on the use of changes in facial features to assess physical workload in real-time.
11:25am After graduating, I want to: Networking Coffee Break – come and go as you please during this break to meet other IUW participants and share and discuss your post-graduation ambitions
11:40am Student Lectures: Elliot Biltekoff, Matthew Bolton - Computational Virtue Ethics for Understanding and Preventing Moral Injury
Olamide Olatoye, Catherine Burns, Kathleen Andres, Erica Patterson - Understanding Clinicians’ Needs, Requirements, and Perception of a Sepsis Clinical Decision Support System (CDSS) to support successful implementation
Ryan Tennant, Sana Allana, Kathryn Mercer, Catherine Burns - Exploring Family Caregiver Perspectives about Information Management and Communication in Complex Home Care: A Qualitative Study
Kang Wang, Shi Cao, Plinio Morita - Optimizing public health data collection from Internet of Things sensors: An integrated data-sharing platform
12:50pm Lunch Break – offline
1:30pm Keynote Address: Trust, Adaptation and Future Work – Dr. John Lee Ubiquitous sensors, wearable and distributed computing, and powerful algorithms are transforming work. This transformation will eliminate jobs, displacing as many as 47% of today's workers. This transformation will also change jobs with nanomanagement and AI teaming. Nanomanagement risks usurping human autonomy and AI teaming risks dreadful surprises. AI teaming and nanomanagement are examples of responsive automation. Responsive automation is not only observable and directable but also observant and directive. This automation will direct and adapt people, and people will direct and adapt it. This adaptation depends on trust; trust smooths interactions and governs societal acceptance. This presentation describes a new framing of trust in automation. It describes the process of trusting that depends on the situation, semiotics, sequence, and strategy.
2:30pm Networking Strategies: Networking Coffee Break – come and go as you please during this break to meet other IUW participants and share and discuss your networking strategies, including but not limited to conferences, virtual conferences, and networking platforms
2:45pm Student Lectures: Kate Kazlovich - Development and evaluation of a non-wearable intelligent multi-camera system for intraoperative video recording of open surgery.
Taylor Kunkes – Making patient context concrete: Using abstraction hierarchy to examine contextual care in medication use
Pengyuan Wan, Matthew Bolton - A Taxonomy of Forcing Functions for Addressing Human Errors in Human-machine Interaction
Pedro Velmovitsky, Plinio Morita - Mobile Health Platform for Individual and Population-Level Surveillance
Rongbing Xu, Shi Cao - Modelling Pilot Flight Performance in a Cognitive Architecture
4:00pm Human Factors Success and Failures in our Everyday Life: Networking Coffee Break – come and go as you please during this break to meet other IUW participants and share and discuss the things you notice as human factors successes and failures all around you
4:15pm Debating Inclusions Practices in Human Factors
5:30pm Prizes and Closing Remarks Must be present to receive your prize
*If a session ends early, we enter the break early and get back on schedule with the next non-networking session.