Interdisciplinary Foundations for Ubiquitous Computing
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Nottingham
Department Name: School of Computer Science
Abstract
The impact of IT on society has already been profound, reshaping work, education, government, leisure, entertainment, and home life. The emergence of powerful digital infrastructures, wireless networks and mobile devices has started to embed computers into the architectures, furniture and personal fabric of everyday life. While once we would interact with one computer mobile phones, digital cameras, satellite navigation, handheld computers and a host of similar devices are today commonplace in our everyday activities. This shift to 'Ubiquitous Computing' is a challenge that affects all aspects of computer science and has massive implications for how we might reason about, build and experience computer systems in the future. This is a fundamentally interdisciplinary endeavour and advances in Ubiquitous Computing depend on the successful blending of perspectives drawn from the science of computing, the engineering of complex distributed systems and the understanding of their use in social settings. This means that in addition to undertaking fundamental research into each of the constituent areas we also need to promote interaction and dialogue across these perspectives. A key problem is that the interdisciplinary foundations of ubiquitous computing have yet to emerge and communication between each of the different communities involved is limited. This fellowship proposal is motivated by the concerned that without the formation of strong links between the research endeavours involved in ubiquitous computing and the development of approaches and techniques to allow the constituent parts of ubiquitous computing to talk to each other progress in this area will be significant inhibited. Within this fellowship I seek to build upon my experiences in the formation of interdisciplinary communities and my work within the Equator IRC to work closely with these different communities in order to develop a key set of interdisciplinary principles, technique and approaches to help underpin future advances in ubiquitous computing.
Organisations
People |
ORCID iD |
Tom Rodden (Principal Investigator) |
Publications
Crabtree A
(2012)
Unremarkable networking
Benford S
(2012)
Uncomfortable interactions
Grinter R
(2009)
The ins and outs of home networking The case for useful and usable domestic networking
in ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction
Dent Ian
(2013)
The Application of a Data Mining Framework to Energy Usage Profiling in Domestic Residences using UK data
in arXiv e-prints
Luger E
(2013)
Terms of Agreement: Rethinking Consent for Pervasive Computing
in Interacting with Computers
Benford S
(2012)
Supporting traditional music-making
Tolmie P
(2014)
Supporting group interactions in museum visiting
Sellen A
(2009)
Reflecting human values in the digital age
in Communications of the ACM
Brown A
(2013)
MultiNet
Balaam M
(2011)
Motivating mobility
Chamberlain A
(2011)
Locating experience: touring a pervasive performance
in Personal and Ubiquitous Computing
Moran S
(2014)
Listening to the forest and its curators
Hupfeld A
(2012)
Laying the table for HCI
Bedwell B
(2009)
In support of city exploration
Tom Rodden (Author)
(2009)
Homebase: Developing a Corpus of Domestic Network Usage
in Homebase: Developing a Corpus of Domestic Network Usage
Benford S
(2009)
From interaction to trajectories
Chamberlain A
(2012)
Fresh and local
Crabtree A
(2009)
Ethnography considered harmful
Costanza E
(2014)
Doing the laundry with agents
Crabtree A
(2013)
Doing innovation in the wild
Luger E
(2013)
Consent for all
Lodge T
(2013)
Communities in the clouds
Hupfeld A
(2014)
Books as a social technology
Harper, R
(2008)
Being Human: Human-Computer Interaction in the Year 2020
Rodden T
(2013)
At home with agents
Luger E
(2013)
An informed view on consent for UbiComp
Sventek J
(2011)
An information plane architecture supporting home network management
Ramchurn S.D.
(2013)
AgentSwitch: Towards smart energy tariff selection
in 12th International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems 2013, AAMAS 2013
Description | This project has explored the ways in which ubiquitous computing has found itself in the real world and the principles of how these systems are constructed. The key findings include A understanding of users acceptance of agent based systems The development of guidelines for the design of uncomfortable experiences Elaboration of new methods and techniques for understanding users Explorations in energy reduction using ubiquitous systems |
Exploitation Route | Areas include Entertainment , Healthcare, Energy, Education Exploitation has being through open innovation via the Horizon digital economy hub(www.horizon.ac.uk) |
Sectors | Creative Economy Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software) Energy |
Description | The findings from this fellowship have had significant influence across a broad range of the IT. New theories anc concepts have emerged which have influence the academic communities. Finding have led to Initiates with industry to develop future scenarios undeprining the IoT research agendas across the digital economy and multidisciplinary methods to underpin the principles of designing ubiquitous computing systems |
First Year Of Impact | 2010 |
Sector | Creative Economy,Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software),Education,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections |
Impact Types | Societal Economic |