John M. Carroll is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Information Sciences and Technology at the Pennsylvania State University. His research is in methods and theory in human-computer interaction, particularly as applied to Internet tools for collaborative learning and problem solving, and design of interactive information systems. His books include Toward a Structural Psychology of Cinema (Mouton, 1980), What''s in a Name? (W. H. Freeman, 1985), The Nurnberg Funnel (MIT, 1990), Scenario-Based Design (McGraw Hill, 1995), Making Use (MIT, 2000), Usability Engineering (Morgan-Kaufmann, 2002, with M.B. Rosson), Rationale-Based Software Engineering (Springer, 2008, with J.
Burge, R. McCall and I. Mistrik), The Neighborhood in the Internet (Routledge, 2012), and Innovative Practices in Teaching Information Sciences and Technology (Springer, 2014). Carroll serves on several advisory and editorial boards for journals, handbooks, and series. He is Editor of the Synthesis Lectures on Human-Centered Informatics. In 2021, he received Pioneer in HCI Award from IFIP TC13. Jeongwon Jo is Ph.D.
Candidate at the College of Information Science and Technology at Pennsylvania State University. She is Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) Researcher with a focus on community resilience, social computing, and online-mediated support. Her work appeared in leading computer-supported cooperative work and community informatics venues, including ACM CHI, ACM CSCW, ACM GoodIT, C&T, and iConference. She is interested in understanding how existing digital systems for peer-to-peer support misalign with the values of users and marginalized populations and redesigning them for more ethical directions. Srishti Gupta earned her Ph.D. from the College of Information Science and Technology at Pennsylvania State University, where she was part of the Collaboration and Innovation Lab under the leadership of Dr. John M.
Carroll. Presently, she serves as UX Researcher at the Healthcare Innovation and Technology Lab (HITLAB). She combines her background in software engineering with her expertise in qualitative research methods to solve design challenges. Her primary research interests are sustainable HCI, social computing, community informatics, health informatics, and well-being. Over the course of her research career, she has worked on a variety of research projects such as collaborative system design for citizen science, LLM chatbot design for indigenous communities, designing for people with visual impairments, explainable AI design to improve interdisciplinary work, studying misinformation practices in the local community, and studying smart community services as socially reciprocal coproductions. Fanlu Gui is UX Researcher. She received her Ph.D.
in informatics from the Pennsylvania State University. Her research has focused on exploring the use of technology to support community engagement in both local communities and online exercise groups. Her work has been published in venues such as the International Journal of Human-Computer Studies and the GROUP conference. Jomara Sandbulte is Assistant Professor at the University of Minnesota at Duluth: Swenson College of Science and Engineering, Department of Computer Science. She received her Ph.D. in information sciences and technology at the Pennsylvania State University. She is Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) Researcher with an expertise in health informatics.
Sandbulte''s work explores how technology can be used to support individuals'' health and well-being by examining existing systems and building alternatives. Her research has shed important light on health informatics in HCI and design research, and it has appeared in leading computing venues including the International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction (IJHCI) and the EAI International Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare (PervasiveHealth). Prior to graduate school, she has worked in industry developing mobile devices solutions at Samsung Research, Latin America. Ya-Fang Lee is Passionate HCI Researcher and Ph.D. Student at Penn State University, mentored by Prof. John Carroll. Her research intersects computer-mediated communication and ubiquitous computing, focusing on creating supportive systems through qualitative research and design methodologies.
Committed to social and environmental sustainability, her objectives include designing technological innovations that enhance mental wellness, motivate individuals toward their long-term goals, and encourage prosocial behaviors. Specifically, Ya-Fang''s work on everyday technology aims to leverage professional and social support to facilitate positive behavioral changes and strengthen close relationships. Sooyeon Lee, Ph.D., is Assistant Professor in the Department of Informatics in the Ying Wu College of Computing at New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT). She received her B.S. summa cum laude from the Pennsylvania State University and her Ph.
D. in information sciences and technology from the Pennsylvania State University. Lee performs research on accessible AI technology, AI-powered assistive technology, and Human-AI collaboration/interaction for the community of the blind and deaf and hard of hearing users. Her goal is to empower and augment capabilities and promote inclusive experiences in both personal and social spaces through new technologies. Her work has been published in top-tier human-computer interaction and computing accessibility journals and conferences, including ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI), ACM SIGACCESS Conference on Computers and Accessibility (ASSETS), and ACM SIGCHI Conferences on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing (CSCW). Tiffany Knearem received her Ph.D. in information sciences and technology from Pennsylvania State University in 2021, advised by Dr.
John M. Carroll. Her dissertation focused on understanding and enabling community innovation through information and communication technologies, specifically, community-based care during COVID-19. Currently, as User Experience Researcher at Google, her research informs the development of tooling to support product designer and developer co-creation, as well as AI assistance in the design space. Prior to her career in research, she taught English abroad in Japan through the Japan Exchange and teaching Program (JET). Her undergraduate background lies in the humanities, having received dual bachelor of arts degrees in psychology and East Asian Languages and Cultures from the University of Kansas. Chun-Hua Tsai is Assistant Professor in the Department of Information Systems and Quantitative Analysis (ISQA) at the College of Information Science & Technology, University of Nebraska at Omaha (UNO). He obtained Ph.
D. from the University of Pittsburgh. His research focuses on the convergence of HCI, IUI, and AI. He strives to develop transparent and trustworthy AI systems using data-driven and human-centered computing approaches. By utilizing mixed methods, he investigates user interactions and experiences with AI-driven systems, aiming to design solutions that enhance human-AI interaction and empower non-expert users and marginalized groups. Broadly, his research generates insights into how users engage with AI systems and provides practical recommendations for designing controllable and explainable AI mechanisms, fostering meaningful interactions with AI systems.