Discover and read the best of Twitter Threads about #CHI2023

Most recents (11)

Because I took my meds in the wrong order, I am going to start sharing online presentations at #CHI2023 that were neglected due to the structure of the virtual conference.
Understanding Discussions Around Culture Within Courses Covering Topics on Accessibility and Disability at U.S. Universities

Nourish et al. explore how accessibility content in CS courses needs more culturally relevant pedagogy wrt disability.

doi.org/10.1145/354454…
Integrative Objects in Sociotechnical Contexts: Constructing Digital Well-Being with Generic Epistemology

Krysztoforska et al. describe a theoretical frame for analysis and design of sociotechnical objects that might better support nuance and complexity

doi.org/10.1145/354454…
Read 6 tweets
I saw some amazing talks and met some amazing people at #CHI2023.

I want to thank everyone who was masked: it made it easy to find folks who really care about disability.

And I can confidently say I made some really wonderful friends, finally connecting with so many of you!
It was very funny to hear the exact phrase "Frank from Twitter" so many times!

And while I have loved remote work (seriously, my physical health completely changed for the better when the pandemic started), meeting folks in person has actually been wonderful.
I set out with a goal to meet with as many folks as possible and learn what y'all were up to. I had 16 meetings with 21 people! Our impromptu visualization + accessibility lunch had just over 30 folks show up!

I actually went to a *party* lmao!! (I never do this.)
Read 4 tweets
Every day, 35+ million presentations bore 500+ million people to death.

Break free from the mundane PowerPoint BS.

Here are 8 powerful tips to engage, inspire, and enlighten your audience at #chi2023
1. Discriminability:

Differentiating between two properties requires a large enough proportion to be easily distinguished.

Clear patterns that stand out from the background are necessary for detecting the material to be encoded.

We tend to underestimate the size of areas.
2. Perceptual organization:

Organizing elements into groups makes them more memorable.

Elements nearby tend to be grouped together (proximity).

Similar elements are usually grouped together (similarity).

For example, height and width are often organized into a single shape.
Read 11 tweets
Supercharge your paper submissions with 5 powerful LaTeX snippets.

I've perfected them in 10,000+ hours of coding.

Unlock the secret to lightning-fast paper editing. ↓
1. Use the right documentclass options before submitting your paper to CHI

How it works:

- Comment out this line of code with % \documentclass[sigconf,authordraft]{acmart}
- Then add \documentclass[manuscript,screen,review, anonymous]{acmart}

This is the right review format. Screenshot of the replacement of the LaTeX code from the ACM
2. Format nicer-looking research questions

How it works:

Load in LaTeX doc header:
\usepackage{enumerate}
\usepackage[shortlabels]{enumitem}

Type in LaTeX doc body:
\begin{enumerate}[label= \textbf{RQ\arabic*:}]
\item x
\end{enumerate} The image shows the described code in the Overleaf editor an
Read 8 tweets
Meet Just Tech Fellow Rua Williams (@FractalEcho) 🎉, an assistant professor in the User Experience Design program at Purdue University! #JustTechFellowship
Their work illustrates injustice in technology design and highlights practices of resistance and advocacy via adaptive uses and modifications of those same technologies.
The @ColiberationLab had two papers accepted to #CHI2023: “Counterventions: A Reparative Reflection on Interventionist HCI” and “Cyborg Assemblages: How Autistic Adults Construct Sociotechnical Networks to Support Cognitive Function.”
Read 3 tweets
#LLMs are powerful, but can they make existing GUIs interactable with language? Last summer at @GoogleAI, we found that LLMs can perform diverse language-based mobile UI tasks using few-shot prompting. Exciting implications for future interaction design! #chi2023 Thread 🧵 Image
🧠 Key Takeaway: Using LLMs, designers/researchers can quickly implement and test *various* language-based UI interactions. In contrast, traditional ML pipelines require expensive data collection and model training for a *single* interaction capability.

Learn more about it👇
To adapt LLMs to mobile UIs, we designed prompting techniques and an algorithm to convert the view hierarchy data in Android to the HTML syntax, which is well-represented in LLMs’ training data. Image
Read 13 tweets
I learned 22 academic writing lessons the hard way.

Here they are to celebrate the end of 2022: ↓
But why listen to me?

- Built an online writing course for #chi2023 authors in 2022

- Have taught this writing course for 6+ years at conferences and other venues

- Over 27,000 citations to my research

- Publish 3+ papers every year at high-impact HCI venues
Alright, here we go.

Lesson 1

🔴 Academic writing isn't just about publishing.

🟢 Academic writing is a way to share your knowledge with the world.
Read 25 tweets
During my academic career, I've spent 10,000+ hours editing LaTeX.

Want to know a secret?

I use these 5 easy-to-follow LaTeX snippets every time I submit a CHI paper, and this thread will save you the time of searching for how to do them.

You'll want to bookmark this. 🧵👇
1. Use the right documentclass options before submitting your paper to CHI

How it works:

- Comment out this line of code with % \documentclass[sigconf,authordraft]{acmart}
- Then add \documentclass[manuscript,screen,review, anonymous]{acmart}

This is the right review format. Screenshot of the replacement of the LaTeX code from the ACM
2. Format nicer-looking research questions

How it works:

Load in LaTeX doc header:
\usepackage{enumerate}
\usepackage[shortlabels]{enumitem}

Type in LaTeX doc body:
\begin{enumerate}[label= \textbf{RQ\arabic*:}]
\item x
\end{enumerate} The image shows the described code in the Overleaf editor an
Read 9 tweets
For a decade+, grammar-of-graphics approaches (ggplot, Tableau, #d3js, Vega/Altair) have been a leading way to make visualizations. Beyond chart templates & low-level programming, are there compelling alternatives? Or does the future lie in abstractions on top of these grammars?
There's exciting research work on new/extended grammars, including:
- probability expressions 📊 (mjskay.com/papers/chi2020…)
- responsive charts 📲 ()
- animation 🕺 (idl.cs.washington.edu/papers/gemini2, gganimate, and new @vega_vis work coming to VIS'22 from @mitvis)
.@_mcnutt_ has written a valuable survey of JSON-style grammars (arxiv.org/pdf/2207.07998…), concluding there is "No Grammar to Rule Them All". Should we expect a proliferating multiverse of visualization grammar variants? Where might we look beyond (or building on) such grammars?
Read 6 tweets
Every successful CHI author follows these 13 rules of writing.

Most people do not know them.

Here they are for free to help you become a better research writer.

🧵⬇️
1. Your credibility comes from using specific numbers and explaining things with specific language.

p = 0.003 not p < .05

Add additional materials/appendix with exact numbers or OSF

NOT: The study had various effect.
INSTEAD: Y increased X under Z conditions.

Be specific.
2. All killer, no filler.

Cut out the fat in your writing, delete these filler words:

Basically
Rather
Just
As a matter of fact
At all times

Write like lettuce, not like whip cream.
Read 18 tweets
Sure, IMRaD is a scientist's ballgame, but have you heard of IRMReDiLiFuConcR?

That's how we roll at #chi2023.

Here's what's in that tongue-twisting paper structure:
🧵↓
Introduction:

→ What is known?
→ What is unknown?
→ How and why should we fill the gap?
→ Why should people care?

Use @Grammarly @HemingwayApp @languagetool @Writefullapp @TheQuillBot @ReadableHQ @whoisjenniai when editing this section (and the rest of your paper) to rock.
@Grammarly @HemingwayApp @languagetool @Writefullapp @TheQuillBot @ReadableHQ @whoisjenniai Related work:

→ Prepare the state-of-the-art you will talk about later in your discussion.

Use tools like @paperpile, @pure_suggest, @ConnectedPapers, @RsrchRabbit, @scite, @scholarcy, @elicitorg, @LitmapsApp, @sci_hub_, @Science_Open to make this easy for yourself.
Read 8 tweets

Related hashtags

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3.00/month or $30.00/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!