Curriculum Vitæ
Research Interests
I am primarily interested in combining physical computing with principles from ambient display research to generate novel technologies for home healthcare, particularly technologies that promote aging in place. Additionally, I am interested in both the design methodologies necessary to integrate such technologies into home environments, as well as the evaluation techniques that must be applied when conducting the necessary long-term, in-situ studies examining how people interact with such technologies in real-world settings.
Education
| Ph.D. Informatics School of Informatics and Computing Thesis Topic: Design and Evaluation of Ambient Displays |
Indiana University at Bloomington May 2011 |
| M.S. Human-Computer Interaction School of Informatics and Computing Thesis Topic: Technologies for creating Valued E-Learning |
Indiana University at Bloomington August 2003 |
| B.A. Computer Science Department of Computer Science |
Indiana University at Bloomington August 2001 |
| B.A. Philosophy Department of Philosophy |
Indiana University at Bloomington May 2001 |
Publications
Book Chapters
| [b.02] | John F. Duncan, L. Jean Camp, & William R. Hazlewood (2011). The Portal Monitor: A Privacy-Aware Event-Driven System for Elder Care. In Carsten Röcker & Martina Ziefie (Eds.) Smart Healthcare Applications and Services (pp. 219-235). IGI. |
| [b.01] | William R. Hazlewood, Kay Connelly, Kelly Caine, Zach Zimmerman, & Greg Blanton (in press). Property Damage, Purchasing Orders, and Power Outages, Oh My!: Suggestions for Planning your next In the Wild Deployment. In S. Consolvo, D. W. McDonald & B. Harrison (Eds.), Ubiquitous Computing Deployments. Boston, MA: MIT Press. |
Refereed Journal Articles
| [j.04] | Kelly E. Caine, Celine Y. Zimmerman, Zachary Schall-Zimmerman, William R. Hazlewood, L. Jean Camp, Kay Connelly, Lesa Huber & Kalpana Shankar (in press). DigiSwitch: A device to allow older adults to monitor and direct the collection and transmission of health information collected at home. Journal of Medical Systems. |
| [j.03] | Yvonne Rogers, Kay Connelly, William Hazlewood, and Lenore Tedesco. (2010). Enhancing learning: a study of how mobile devices can facilitate sensemaking. Personal Ubiquitous Computing. 14(2), 111-124. |
| [j.02] | William R. Hazlewood, Lorcan Coyle. (2009). On Ambient Information Systems: Challenges of Design and Evaluation. International Journal of Ambient Computing and Intelligence. 1(2), 1-12. |
| [j.01] | Yvonne Rogers, Youn-Lim Kyung, William R. Hazlewood, and Paul Marshall. (2009). Equal Opportunities: Do shareable interfaces promote more group participation than single users displays?Human-Computer Interaction. 24 (2), 79-116. |
Peer Reviewed Conference Papers
| [c.14] | William R. Hazlewood, Erik Stolterman, Kay Connelly. (2011). Issues in Evaluating Ambient Displays in the Wild: Two Case Studies. Proceedings of the 29th International Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI’11). ACM, New York, NY, USA. [26% acceptance rate] |
| [c.13] | Kelly Caine, Celine Zimmerman, William Hazlewood, Zachary Schall-Zimmerman, Alexander Sulgrove, L. Jean Camp, Katherine Connelly, Lesa Lorenzen-Huber and Kalpana Shankar. (2010). DigiSwitch: Design and Evaluation of a Device for Older Adults to Preserve Privacy While Monitoring Health at Home. In Proceedings of the 1st ACM International Health Informatics Symposium (IHI’10). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 153-162. [17.1% acceptance rate] (Best Paper: Privacy and Security Track) |
| [c.12] | William R. Hazlewood, Nick Dalton, Paul Marshall, Yvonne Rogers, and Susanna Hertrich. (2010). Bricolage and consultation: addressing new design challenges when building large-scale installations. In Proceedings of the 8th ACM Conference on Designing Interactive Systems (DIS’10). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 380-389. [15% acceptance rate] |
| [c.11] | Yvonne Rogers, William R. Hazlewood, Paul Marshall, Nick Dalton, and Susanna Hertrich. (2010). Ambient influence: can twinkly lights lure and abstract representations trigger behavioral change?. In Proceedings of the 12th ACM international conference on Ubiquitous computing (UbiComp’10). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 261-270. [19.3% acceptance rate] |
| [c.10] | William Ryan, William R. Hazlewood, and Erik Stolterman. (2010). Breaking the Mold: Presenting evocative design as a method for divergent thought for interaction design. In Proceedings of 7th International Conference on Design & Emotion, Chicago, Illinois October 4-7 |
| [c.9] | Joseph F. McCarthy, Shelly D. Farnham, Yogi Patel, Sameer Ahuja, Daniel Norman, William R. Hazlewood, and Josh Lind. (2009). Supporting community in third places with situated social software. In Proceedings of the fourth international conference on Communities and technologies (C&T’09). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 225-234. [40% acceptance rate] |
| [c.8] | Shelly D. Farnham, Joseph F. McCarthy, Yagnesh Patel, Sameer Ahuja, Daniel Norman, William R. Hazlewood, and Josh Lind. (2009). Measuring the impact of third place attachment on the adoption of a place-based community technology. In Proceedings of the 27th international conference on Human factors in computing systems (CHI’09). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 2153-2156. [24.5% acceptance rate] |
| [c.7] | John Duncan, L. Jean Camp, and William R. Hazelwood. (2009). The portal monitor: a privacy-enhanced event-driven system for elder care. In Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Persuasive Technology (Persuasive ’09). ACM, New York, NY, USA, Article 36, 9 pages. [31% acceptance rate] |
| [c.6] | Justin Donaldson, William R. Hazlewood. (2008). Candidate Mapping: Finding Your Place Amongst the Candidates. In Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Information Visualization (IV‘08). IEEE Computer Society, 63-68. [40% acceptance rate] |
| [c.5] | William Ryan, William R. Hazlewood, Kevin Makice. (2008). Twitterspace: A co-developed Display using Twitter to Enhance Community Awareness In Proceedings of Participatory Design Conference (PDC’08). ACM, New York, NY, 230-233. [25% acceptance rate] |
| [c.4] | Yvonne Rogers, Kay Connelly, Lenore Tedesco, William Hazlewood, Andrew Kurtz, Robert E. Hall, Joshua Hursey, Tammy Toscos (2007). Why It’s Worth the Hassle: The Value of In-Situ Studies When Designing Ubicomp. In Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Ubiquitous Computing (UbiComp’07). Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg, 336-353. [14% acceptance rate] (Nominated for the Best Paper) |
| [c.3] | Yvonne Rogers, Youn-Kyung Lim, William R. Hazlewood (2006). Extending Tabletops to Support Flexible Collaborative Interactions. In Proceedings of The First IEEE International Workshop on Horizontal Interactive Human-Computer Systems (TableTop’06). IEEE Computer Society, Washington, DC, USA, 71-78. |
| [c.2] | Yvonne Rogers, William R. Hazlewood, Eli Blevis, Youn-Kyung Lim (2004). Finger talk: collaborative decision-making using talk and fingertip interaction around a tabletop display. In CHI ’04 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI’04). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 1271-1274. [14% acceptance rate] |
| [c.1] | Katy Börner, William R. Hazlewood, Sy-Miaw Lin. (2002). Visualizing the Spatial and Temporal Distribution of User Interaction Data Collected in Three-Dimensional Virtual Worlds. In Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Information Visualization (IV’02). IEEE Computer Society, 25-31. [40% acceptance rate] |
Posters, Videos, Workshops, and Works in Progress
| [m.11] | Andrew J. Younge, Vinod Periasamy, Mohammed Al-Azdee, William R. Hazlewood, and Kay Connelly. (2010). ScaleMirror: A Pervasive Device to Aid Weight Analysis. in Proceedings of the 29h International Conference Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI’11), ACM. |
| [m.10] | William R. Hazlewood. (2010). Participatory Design with a Community of Seniors. in Extended Abstracts of the 4th International Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare (PervasiveHealth3010). |
| [m.9] | William Ryan, Erik Stolterman, Heekyoung Jung, Martin Siegel, Tonya Thompson, and William R. Hazlewood. (2009). Device ecology mapper: a tool for studying users’ ecosystems of interactive artifacts. In Proceedings of the 27th international conference extended abstracts on Human factors in computing systems (CHI ’09). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 4327-4332. |
| [m.8] | William R. Hazlewood, Ian Knopke (2008). Designing Ambient Musical Information Systems In Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression (NIME‘08). |
| [m.7] | William R. Hazlewood, Kevin Makice, Kay Connelly. (2008). Defining Ambience: Public Ambient Displays for Promoting Community Awareness in Workshop: Surrounded by Persuasive Ambient Intelligence (Florence, Italy, Apr 06, 2008). |
| [m.6] | William Odom, Heekyoung Jung, William R. Hazlewood (2008). Reflective Inquires: a multi-dimensional approach to user research. In workshop proceedings of on Designing for Engaged Experience (OZCHI’08). ACM, New York, NY, USA. |
| [m.5] | William R. Hazlewood, Kay Connelly, Kevin Makice, Youn-kyung Lim. (2008). Exploring Evaluation Methods for Ambient Information Systems In CHI ’08 extended abstracts on Human factors in computing systems (CHI’08). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 2973-2978. |
| [m.4] | Rajasee Rege, Heekyoung Jung, William R. Hazelwood, Greg Orlov, Kay Connelly, and Kalpana Shankar. (2008). Exploring early evaluation techniques of ambient health promoting devices in home environments of senior citizens living independently. In Proceedings of the 2nd International Workshop on Systems and Networking Support for Health Care and Assisted Living Environments (HealthNet ’08). ACM, New York, NY, USA |
| [m.3] | Troy Church, William R. Hazlewood, Yvonne Rogers: Around the Table: Studies in Co-located Collaboration. In the Adjunct Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Pervasive Computing (Pervasive’06). books@OCG.at Vol. 207. (video) |
| [m.2] | William R. Hazlewood, Dennis Groth: A Pervasive Computing Workshop for Pre-Collegiate Students. In the Eighth International Conference on Ubiquitous Computing (Irvine, California, Sep 18-21, 2006). UbiComp’06 (poster) |
| [m.1] | William R. Hazlewood, Yvonne Rogers, Kay Connelly, Bob E. Hall. (2006). Implementing a portable outdoor wireless network within a budget. Submitted to The 4th International Conference on Pervasive Computing (Pervasive’06). |
Workshop Proposals
| [w.2] | 1st Workshop on Designing and Evaluating Ambient Information Systems. Eds. William R. Hazlewood, Lorcan Coyle, and Sunny Consolvo. Collocated with the 5th International Conference on Pervasive Computing, May 13th 2007, Toronto Canada. CEUR Workshop Proceedings, ISSN 1613-0073, online CEUR-WS.org/Vol-254/. AIS2007. |
| [w.1] | Workshop: Ambient Information Systems Eds. William R. Hazlewood, Lorcan Coyle, Youn-kyung Lim, and Zach Pousman. Collocated with the Tenth International Conference on Ubiquitous Computing (COEX, Seoul, South Korea, Sep 21, 2008). AIS2008. (proposal) |
Invited Talks
| [t.2] | “Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing” – Informatics Summer Workshop – June 2007 |
| [t.1] | “Twitterspace: Exploring Methods of Evaluation for Large Public Ambient Displays through In-Situ Studies” – Open University – April 2009 |
Patent Applications
| [p.1] | Joseph F. McCarthy, Shelly D. Farnham, Yogi Patel, Sameer Ahuja, Daniel Norman, William R. Hazlewood, and Josh Lind Ambient Collage Display of Digital Media Content Appl. No.: 12/506,538 Publication number: US 2010/0017725 A1, Filing date: Jul 21, 2009 |
Teaching Experience
| Primary Lecturer: Discrete Structures in Mathematics Indiana University School of Informatics |
Summer 2003 Bloomington, IN |
- Developed new class schedule for “Mathematical Foundations of Informatics”
- Prepared original labs, lecture materials, homework, and quizzes
- Managed one associate instructor
- Received Award for Excellence in Teaching from the School of Informatics
| Primary Lecturer: Information Infrastructure II Indiana University School of Informatics |
Spring 2007 Bloomington, IN |
- Developed new class schedule for “Information Infrastructure II”
- Prepared original class materials focused on pervasive computing
- Managed two associate instructors
| Teaching Assistant Indiana University School of Informatics |
September 2001 – Present Bloomington, IN |
| P535: Pervasive Computing | I300: Human-Computer Interaction |
| I202: Social Informatics | I201: Mathematical Foundations of Informatics |
| I400: Human-Robot Interaction |
Research and Professional Experience
| Clouds research investigation project Pervasive Computing Labs at the Open University Adviser: Prof. Yvonne Rogers, Position: Visiting Researcher |
March 2009 – August 2009 Milton Keynes, UK |
- Collaborated with lab members and a professional Interaction Designer to explore how ambient displays could alter human behavior
- Implemented a fully functioning series of large-scale prototypes based on designs co-developed with our Interaction Designer
- Conducted long-term observations and a user study to to determine how the displays altered behavior
- Published different aspects of the project at DIS’10, UbiComp’10, and CHI’11
| CoCollage: project on increasing 3rd place attachment Strands Research Labs Employer: Dr. Joe McCarthy, Position: Visiting Research Intern |
Summer, 2008 Seattle, WA |
- Aided in the design of a public ambient display which was intended to promote serendipitous interactions among people in so called “3rd Places,” including: bars, cafes, libraries, etc.
- Coordinated with local coffee shop who offered to install the display for testing purposes
- Conducted long term observations and a user study to analyze this display’s level of impact
- Published results at CHI’09
| Laboratory Manager, ETHOS Ethical Technologies in the Homes of Seniors (ETHOS) Advisor: Prof. Kay Connely, Position: Researcher/Manager |
January 2007 – present Bloomington, IN |
- Managed and consulted on all projects occurring within the lab and oversaw multiple students
- Assembled build space within the lab for constructing prototypes
- Consulted on prototype design, devised implementation strategies, and acquired necessary resources
- Helped to develop and conduct user studies to evaluate prototypes
| LillyPad: project on mobile learning Indiana University School of Informatics Employer: Prof. Yvonne Rogers, Position: Professional Research Assistant (non-student) Working collaboratively with the Department of Computer Science (IUB), the Center for Earth and Environmental Sciences (IUPUI), and the School of Informatics (IUB) |
January 2003 to December 2007 Bloomington, IN |
- Helped to develop research on how people collect and review data while in the field, and how to best create assistive technologies for related tasks
- Designed a series of hand-held applications for logging measurements taken of flora, and for facilitating discussions around observed measurements
- Coordinated logistics for large-scale user field study involving over 50 participants roaming in a mile long stretch of woodland
- Gained experience in programming for Pocket PC using Superwaba, working with wireless technologies outdoors.
| CoSpace: project on shared surfaces and collaborative interactions Indiana University School of Informatics Employer: Prof. Yvonne Rogers, Position: Research Assistant (non-student) |
January 2007 – present Bloomington, IN |
- Develop research on aspects of collocated collaboration by implementing software on various pervasive technologies
- Implemented a system of integrated technologies including: a multi-touch shared display (DiamondTouch), an industrial RFID system, and a collection of hardware devices (Phidgets, Arduino)
- Co-developed and conducted user study to analyze interaction styles within this environment
- Gained experience working with Mantara’s Middleware software, Texas Instruments RFID, and Mitsubishi’s DiamondTouch table, and DiamondSpin software
| GetMastery: project on community driven e-learning WisdomTools LLC Employer: Prof. Martin Siegel, CLO, Position: Researcher/Developer (non-student) |
September 2002 to January 2003 Bloomington, IN |
- Applied masters thesis research to expand the scope of an original complex system for e-learning
- Applied the process of developing thorough design arguments
- Discovered the complexities involved in human-centered interaction design
- Successfully pitched the concept to the board of investors at WisdomTools
| 3D World Mapper: project on perceptions of virtual space Indiana University School of Library and Information Science Employer: Prof. Katy Börner, Position: Developer (non-student) |
September 2002 to February 2003 Bloomington, IN |
- Implemented a set of visualization and navigation tools for “ActiveWorlds,” a 3D chat environment
- Developed software which allowed for complex analysis of interactions in the 3D world by logging all movement, conversations, and object clicks
- Gained additional experience in Java and PERL
- Published results in the IEEE Sixth International Conference on Information Visualization
| CollaborationTools: project on bot-facilitated online meeting tools Accenture Technology Labs Advisor: Adam Siegel, Position: Developer |
Summer 2002 Chicago, IL |
- Improve and enhanced an existing project that needed an information system and a portal for access
- Implemented a chat bot that logged large amounts of data during online meetings
- Rapid-prototyped all suggestions for enhancement
- Developed parser to take information from bot and upload to online database
- Designed and implemented database to contain chat data
- Designed and implemented portal website for searching data which included advanced searching, user-based access, file uploading, and account maintenance
| Technology Director American Indian Studies Research Institute (AISRI) Employer: Prof. Ray DeMallie, Position: Systems Admin |
October 1998 to March 2003 Bloomington, IN |
- Establish a computing network for an independent research institution
- In charge of all decisions involving technology and supervised a small staff
- Implemented a network that supported file sharing, backup, web serving, online database access, online collaboration, and remote access
- Consulted on all technology projects, which included online language databases, online multi-media databases, language learning software, and digitization of media
Service
Reviewer
| • CHI 2007 | • CHI 2009 | • CHI 2010 | • UbiComp 2006 |
| • UbiComp 2009 | • CSCW 2010 | • CSCW 2011 | • Pervasive 2011 |
| • PervasiveHealth 2009 | • International Journal of Ambient Computing and Intelligence | ||
Technical Liaison
- CHI 2009
Workshop Organizer
- 1st Workshop on Designing and Evaluating Ambient Information Systems. @ PERVASIVE ‘07
- Workshop: Ambient Information Systems @ UBICOMP ‘08
Student Volunteer:
CHI 2006, PERVASIVE 2006, CHI 2007, CHI 2008, PDC 2008, UbiComp 2008, CHI 2009
Grants
Older Adults Perceptions of Digital Privacy: NSF Grant # 0916993 for $400,000. This project extends on qualitative results from the ETHOS project to develop and administer a multi-media survey about digital privacy for older adults. (2009-2011). [My Role: Senior personnel]
Equipment Grant: Multi-user Tabletop Interaction: Granted by the Mitsubishi Electronics Research Lab (MERL). Equipment: Mitsubishi DiamondTouch Table. Value: $15,000. This grant was issued to support multiple studies on tabletop interaction being conducted within the HCI department at Indiana University. [My Role: PI]
AWARDS & HONORS
- Graduate Teaching Award (School of Informatics)
- Research Fellowship (Informatics Pervasive Computing Lab)
- Summer Internship (Accenture Technology Labs, Chicago)
- Research Fellowship (Ethical Technology in the Homes of Seniors)
- Summer Internship (Strands Research Labs, Seattle)
- Research Fellowship (American Indian Studies Research Institute)