Diversity and Inclusion Events
Tue 11 Oct 2022 14:00 - 15:00 at Ballroom C West - Welcome Speed Networkingno description available
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Diversity and Inclusion Events
Wed 12 Oct 2022 13:30 - 14:30 at Ballroom C West - Fireside Chat & Ask Me Anythingno description available
Bonita Sharif, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at University of Nebraska - Lincoln, Lincoln, Nebraska USA. She received her Ph.D. in 2010 and MS in 2003 in Computer Science from Kent State University, U.S.A and B.S. in Computer Science from Cyprus College, Nicosia Cyprus. Her research interests are in eye tracking related to software engineering, program comprehension, empirical software engineering, emotional awareness, software traceability, and software visualization to support maintenance of large systems. She has authored over 40 refereed publications. She serves on numerous program committees including ICSME, VISSOFT, SANER, ICSE NIER, and ICPC. Sharif is a recipient of the NSF CAREER award and the NSF CRI award related to empowering software engineering with eye tracking. She directs the Software Engineering Research and Empirical Studies Lab in the Computer Science and Engineering department at UNL.Check out the iTrace infrastructure that supports eye tracking within developer work environments at http://www.i-trace.org
Diversity and Inclusion Events
Wed 12 Oct 2022 14:30 - 15:30 at Ballroom C West - Fireside Chat & Ask Me Anythingno description available
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[Workshop] VARSE '22
Fri 14 Oct 2022 10:30 - 11:50 at Ballroom C West - Session 2: Keynote PresentationAugmented, virtual, and mixed reality technologies are at the cusp of commercial viability. Though these technologies bring great potential benefits, they also raise new and serious computer security and privacy risks. For example, risks may arise for both AR/VR/MR input (due to the need for applications to continuously receive and process sensor data, posing privacy risks to users and bystanders) and for AR/VR/MR output (in which application may, for instance, overlay distracting content on a user’s view of the real world). How should we design AR/VR/MR systems to mitigate these risks, enabling exciting future use cases while protecting the security, privacy, and safety of end users? I will discuss our lab’s past 10 years on research on this topic, and present challenges for the next 10 years.
Franziska (Franzi) Roesner is an Associate Professor in the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering at the University of Washington, where she co-directs the Security and Privacy Research Lab. Her research focuses broadly on computer security and privacy for end users of existing and emerging technologies. Her work has studied topics including online tracking and advertising, security and privacy for sensitive user groups, security and privacy in emerging augmented reality (AR) and IoT platforms, and online mis/disinformation. She is the recipient of a Google Research Scholar Award, a Consumer Reports Digital Lab Fellowship, an MIT Technology Review “Innovators Under 35” Award, an Emerging Leader Alumni Award from the University of Texas at Austin, and an NSF CAREER Award. She serves on the USENIX Security and USENIX Enigma Steering Committees. For more information on her work related to AR, please see: https://ar-sec.cs.washington.edu.
[Workshop] VARSE '22
Fri 14 Oct 2022 11:50 - 12:00 at Ballroom C West - Session 2: Keynote Presentationno description available