Interrogating Biosensing in Everyday Life

This workshop seeks to expand our understanding and imaginations regarding the possible roles biosensors (sensors measuring humans) can-and should-play in everyday life. By applying a critical lens to issues of interpretation, representation, and experience around biosensing and biosensors, we aim to shape research agendas within DIS, and generate new recommendations for designers working with biosensors or their data.

[1]  Ivan Poupyrev,et al.  Biosignals as Social Cues: Ambiguity and Emotional Interpretation in Social Displays of Skin Conductance , 2016, Conference on Designing Interactive Systems.

[2]  Helen Nissenbaum,et al.  Biosensing in context: Health privacy in a connected world , 2016 .

[3]  Luke Stark,et al.  The emotional context of information privacy , 2016, Inf. Soc..

[4]  Tom Rodden,et al.  “This has to be the cats”: Personal Data Legibility in Networked Sensing Systems , 2016, CSCW.

[5]  Paul Dourish,et al.  How emotion is made and measured , 2007, Int. J. Hum. Comput. Stud..

[6]  Anna Vallgårda,et al.  FeltRadio: Sensing and Making Sense of Wireless Traffic , 2016, Conference on Designing Interactive Systems.

[7]  Geraldine Fitzpatrick,et al.  Understanding heart rate sharing: towards unpacking physiosocial space , 2012, CHI.

[8]  Bettina Nissen,et al.  Metadating: Exploring the Romance and Future of Personal Data , 2016, CHI.

[9]  Nikolas Rose,et al.  The Politics of Life Itself , 2001, The New Social Theory Reader.

[10]  Vera D. Khovanskaya,et al.  Data Narratives: Uncovering tensions in personal data management , 2016, CSCW.

[11]  Vera D. Khovanskaya,et al.  Reviewing reflection: on the use of reflection in interactive system design , 2014, Conference on Designing Interactive Systems.

[12]  Dawn Nafus,et al.  This One Does Not Go Up to 11: The Quantified Self Movement as an Alternative Big Data Practice , 2014 .

[13]  Coye Cheshire,et al.  Trust Your Heart: Assessing Cooperation and Trust with Biosignals in Computer-Mediated Interactions , 2017, CSCW.

[14]  Rob Miller,et al.  Smart Homes that Monitor Breathing and Heart Rate , 2015, CHI.

[15]  Deirdre K. Mulligan,et al.  When a Product Is Still Fictional: Anticipating and Speculating Futures through Concept Videos , 2016, Conference on Designing Interactive Systems.

[16]  Richmond Y. Wong,et al.  A Window into the Soul: Biosensing in Public , 2017, Surveillance, Privacy and Public Space.

[17]  Selma Sabanovic,et al.  The effect of monitoring by cameras and robots on the privacy enhancing behaviors of older adults , 2012, 2012 7th ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI).

[18]  Tamar Sharon,et al.  From data fetishism to quantifying selves: Self-tracking practices and the other values of data , 2017, New Media Soc..

[19]  Eric Paulos,et al.  Participatory sensing in public spaces: activating urban surfaces with sensor probes , 2010, Conference on Designing Interactive Systems.

[20]  Daniel McDuff,et al.  A medical mirror for non-contact health monitoring , 2011, SIGGRAPH '11.

[21]  Lucian Leahu,et al.  Ontological Surprises: A Relational Perspective on Machine Learning , 2016, Conference on Designing Interactive Systems.

[22]  Phoebe Sengers,et al.  Freaky: performing hybrid human-machine emotion , 2014, Conference on Designing Interactive Systems.