Jacob Wobbrock, along with several of his students, had the following three papers accepted to CHI 2019, to be held in Glasgow, Scotland:
- Mingrui Ray Zhang, Zhai, S. and Jacob Wobbrock (2019). “Text entry throughput: Towards unifying speed and accuracy in a single performance metric.” Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI ’19). Glasgow, Scotland (May 4-9, 2019). New York: ACM Press. To appear.
- Martez Mott and Jacob Wobbrock (2019). “Cluster Touch: Improving smartphone touch accuracy for people with motor and situational impairments.” Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI ’19). Glasgow, Scotland (May 4-9, 2019). New York: ACM Press. To appear.
- Abdullah X. Ali, Meredith Ringel Morris, and Jacob Wobbrock (2019). “Crowdlicit: A system for conducting distributed end-user elicitation and identification studies.” Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI ’19). Glasgow, Scotland (May 4-9). New York: ACM Press. To appear.
Jacob Wobbrock was quoted in the Washington Post’s On Parenting article titled, In the era of spellcheck and auto-correct, does it matter that my son can’t spell? The article highlights his work with Stanford University that examined a speech recognition program.
Joe Janes participated in a panel about librarian podcasters at the American Library Association’s 2019 Midwinter Meeting, held this year in Seattle. American Libraries magazine featured the panel in its article, Podcast Pros: Dewey Decibel host Phil Morehart leads librarian podcaster panel at Midwinter.
Alexis Hiniker was quoted in the Wall Street Journal article titled, Generation Z’s 7 lessons for surviving in our tech-obsessed world.