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Stephen S. Intille

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Publications by Stephen S. Intille (bibliography)

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» 2009 «

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Intille, Stephen S., Nawyn, Jason, Logan, Beth and Abowd, Gregory D. (2009): Developing shared home behavior datasets to advance HCI and ubiquitous computing research. In: Proceedings of ACM CHI 2009 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2009. pp. 4763-4766. Available online

Researchers in human-computer interaction and allied fields are increasingly interested in using new sensing capabilities to create context-aware interfaces and devices for the home. Data from sensors worn on the body or installed in an environment can be used by algorithms to infer what activities the home occupant may be engaged in and enable applications to respond accordingly. This one-day CHI'09 workshop would convene a multidisciplinary group of researchers to discuss strategies for creating community resources that might accelerate research on development of home technologies. In particular, the participants will discuss how to collaboratively gather high quality synchronized data streams from real homes, as well as qualitative material about home occupants and their behaviors. The resultant datasets could facilitate work on context modeling and enable researchers in other areas of HCI to explore contextual factors influencing the use of technology in naturalistic settings. The outcome of the workshop will be a community index of existing shared datasets of home behavior and guidelines for those interested in creating and disseminating new datasets.

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Bickmore, Timothy W., Consolvo, Sunny and Intille, Stephen S. (2009): Engagement by design. In: Proceedings of ACM CHI 2009 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2009. pp. 4807-4810. Available online

The focus of this workshop is on the development of interfaces for long-term, voluntary use, spanning dozens, if not thousands, of interactions, and in which maintenance of user adherence to a desired interaction usage pattern is of primary interest. Domains in which these issues are important include: wellness applications, such as long-term exercise or diet promotion; web site "stickiness"; multi-session intelligent tutoring systems; and computer games. This one-day CHI'09 workshop brings together researchers from a wide spectrum of disciplines who share a common interest in finding theoretical frameworks, models, and design methodologies to support longitudinal HCI.

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» 2008 «

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Goodwin, Matthew S., Intille, Stephen S., Velicer, Wayne F. and Groden, June (2008): Sensor-enabled detection of stereotypical motor movements in persons with autism spectrum disorder. In: Proceedings of ACM IDC08 Interaction Design and Children 2008. pp. 109-112. Available online

Stereotypical motor movements are one of the most common and least understood behaviors occurring in individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Problems with traditional methods for measuring movement stereotypy make it difficult to accurately determine when and why these behaviors occur. The current research overcomes previous measurement problems by utilizing wireless accelerometers and pattern recognition software to automatically and reliably detect stereotypical motor movements such as body rocking and hand flapping in children with ASD.

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» 2007 «

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Tapia, Emmanuel Munguia, Intille, Stephen S. and Larson, Kent (2007): Portable Wireless Sensors for Object Usage Sensing in the Home: Challenges and Practicalities. In: Schiele, Bernt, Dey, Anind K., Gellersen, Hans, Ruyter, Boris E. R. de, Tscheligi, Manfred, Wichert, Reiner, Aarts, Emile H. L. and Buchmann, Alejandro P. (eds.) Ambient Intelligence European Conference - AmI 2007 November 7-10, 2007, Darmstadt, Germany. pp. 19-37. Available online

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Beaudin, Jennifer, Intille, Stephen S., Tapia, Emmanuel Munguia, Rockinson, Randy and Morris, Margaret E. (2007): Context-Sensitive Microlearning of Foreign Language Vocabulary on a Mobile Device. In: Schiele, Bernt, Dey, Anind K., Gellersen, Hans, Ruyter, Boris E. R. de, Tscheligi, Manfred, Wichert, Reiner, Aarts, Emile H. L. and Buchmann, Alejandro P. (eds.) Ambient Intelligence European Conference - AmI 2007 November 7-10, 2007, Darmstadt, Germany. pp. 55-72. Available online

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Logan, Beth, Healey, Jennifer, Philipose, Matthai, Tapia, Emmanuel Munguia and Intille, Stephen S. (2007): A Long-Term Evaluation of Sensing Modalities for Activity Recognition. In: Krumm, John, Abowd, Gregory D., Seneviratne, Aruna and Strang, Thomas (eds.) UbiComp 2007 Ubiquitous Computing - 9th International Conference September 16-19, 2007, Innsbruck, Austria. pp. 483-500. Available online

» 2006 «

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Nawyn, Jason, Intille, Stephen S. and Larson, Kent (2006): Embedding Behavior Modification Strategies into a Consumer Electronic Device: A Case Study. In: Dourish, Paul and Friday, Adrian (eds.) UbiComp 2006 Ubiquitous Computing - 8th International Conference September 17-21, 2006, Orange County, CA, USA. pp. 297-314. Available online

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Tapia, Emmanuel Munguia, Intille, Stephen S., Lopez, Louis and Larson, Kent (2006): The Design of a Portable Kit of Wireless Sensors for Naturalistic Data Collection. In: Fishkin, Kenneth P., Schiele, Bernt, Nixon, Paddy and Quigley, Aaron J. (eds.) PERVASIVE 2006 - Pervasive Computing 4th International Conference May 7-10, 2006, Dublin, Ireland. pp. 117-134. Available online

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Intille, Stephen S., Larson, Kent, Tapia, Emmanuel Munguia, Beaudin, Jennifer, Kaushik, Pallavi, Nawyn, Jason and Rockinson, Randy (2006): Using a Live-In Laboratory for Ubiquitous Computing Research. In: Fishkin, Kenneth P., Schiele, Bernt, Nixon, Paddy and Quigley, Aaron J. (eds.) PERVASIVE 2006 - Pervasive Computing 4th International Conference May 7-10, 2006, Dublin, Ireland. pp. 349-365. Available online

» 2005 «

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Ho, Joyce and Intille, Stephen S. (2005): Using context-aware computing to reduce the perceived burden of interruptions from mobile devices. In: Proceedings of ACM CHI 2005 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2005. pp. 909-918. Available online

The potential for sensor-enabled mobile devices to proactively present information when and where users need it ranks among the greatest promises of ubiquitous computing. Unfortunately, mobile phones, PDAs, and other computing devices that compete for the user's attention can contribute to interruption irritability and feelings of information overload. Designers of mobile computing interfaces, therefore, require strategies for minimizing the perceived interruption burden of proactively delivered messages. In this work, a context-aware mobile computing device was developed that automatically detects postural and ambulatory activity transitions in real time using wireless accelerometers. This device was used to experimentally measure the receptivity to interruptions delivered at activity transitions relative to those delivered at random times. Messages delivered at activity transitions were found to be better received, thereby suggesting a viable strategy for context-aware message delivery in sensor-enabled mobile computing devices.

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Intille, Stephen S., Larson, Kent, Beaudin, J. S., Nawyn, J., Tapia, E. Munguia and Kaushik, P. (2005): A living laboratory for the design and evaluation of ubiquitous computing technologies. In: Proceedings of ACM CHI 2005 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2005. pp. 1941-1944. Available online

We introduce the PlaceLab, a new "living laboratory" for the study of ubiquitous technologies in home settings. The PlaceLab is a tool for researchers developing context-aware and ubiquitous interaction technologies. It complements more traditional data gathering instruments and methods, such as home ethnography and laboratory studies. We describe the data collection capabilities of the laboratory and current examples of its use.

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Beigl, Michael, Intille, Stephen S., Rekimoto, Jun and Tokuda, Hideyuki (eds.) UbiComp 2005 Ubiquitous Computing - 7th International Conference September 11-14, 2005, Tokyo, Japan.

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Morris, Margaret E., Intille, Stephen S. and Beaudin, Jennifer (2005): Embedded Assessment: Overcoming Barriers to Early Detection with Pervasive Computing. In: Gellersen, Hans-Werner, Want, Roy and Schmidt, Albrecht (eds.) PERVASIVE 2005 - Pervasive Computing, Third International Conference May 8-13, 2005, Munich, Germany. pp. 333-346. Available online

» 2004 «

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Intille, Stephen S., Bao, Ling, Tapia, Emmanuel Munguia and Rondoni, John (2004): Acquiring in situ training data for context-aware ubiquitous computing applications. In: Dykstra-Erickson, Elizabeth and Tscheligi, Manfred (eds.) Proceedings of ACM CHI 2004 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems April 24-29, 2004, Vienna, Austria. pp. 1-8. Available online

Ubiquitous, context-aware computer systems may ultimately enable computer applications that naturally and usefully respond to a user's everyday activity. Although new algorithms that can automatically detect context from wearable and environmental sensor systems show promise, many of the most flexible and robust systems use probabilistic detection algorithms that require extensive libraries of training data with labeled examples. In this paper, we describe the need for such training data and some challenges we have identified when trying to collect it while testing three context-detection systems for ubiquitous computing and mobile applications.

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Bao, Ling and Intille, Stephen S. (2004): Activity Recognition from User-Annotated Acceleration Data. In: Ferscha, Alois and Mattern, Friedemann (eds.) PERVASIVE 2004 - Pervasive Computing, Second International Conference April 21-23, 2004, Vienna, Austria. pp. 1-17. Available online

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Tapia, Emmanuel Munguia, Intille, Stephen S. and Larson, Kent (2004): Activity Recognition in the Home Using Simple and Ubiquitous Sensors. In: Ferscha, Alois and Mattern, Friedemann (eds.) PERVASIVE 2004 - Pervasive Computing, Second International Conference April 21-23, 2004, Vienna, Austria. pp. 158-175. Available online

» 2003 «

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Intille, Stephen S., Tapia, Emmanuel Munguia, Rondoni, John, Beaudin, Jennifer, Kukla, Chuck, Agarwal, Sitij, Bao, Ling and Larson, Kent (2003): Tools for Studying Behavior and Technology in Natural Settings. In: Dey, Anind K., Schmidt, Albrecht and McCarthy, Joseph F. (eds.) UbiComp 2003 Ubiquitous Computing - 5th International Conference October 12-15, 2003, Seattle, WA, USA. pp. 157-174. Available online

» 2002 «

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Intille, Stephen S. (2002): Change Blind Information Display for Ubiquitous Computing Environments. In: Borriello, Gaetano and Holmquist, Lars Erik (eds.) UbiComp 2002 Ubiquitous Computing - 4th International Conference September 29 - October 1, 2002, Göteborg, Sweden. pp. 91-106. Available online

» 2000 «

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Bobick, Aaron F., Intille, Stephen S., Davis, James W., Baird, Freedom, Pinhanez, Claudio S., Campbell, Lee W., Ivanov, Yuri A., Schütte, Arjan and Wilson, Andrew D. (2000): The KidsRoom. In Communications of the ACM, 43 (3) pp. 60-61

» 1999 «

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Bobick, Aaron F., Intille, Stephen S., Davis, James W., Baird, Freedom, Pinhanez, Claudio S., Campbell, Lee W., Ivanov, Yuri A., Schütte, Arjan and Wilson, Andrew D. (1999): The KidsRoom: A Perceptually-Based Interactive and Immersive Story Environment. In Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments, 8 (4) pp. 369-393

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Changes to this page (author)

20 Feb 2010: Enabled abstracts to be shown on Stephen S. Intille's author page.
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28 Apr 2003: Added the author to the bibliography

Publication statistics

Publication period:1999-2009
Publication count:20
Number of co-authors:37



Productive colleagues

Stephen S. Intille's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:

Gregory D. Abowd:93
Jun Rekimoto:42
Sunny Consolvo:25


Collaboration count

Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:

Emmanuel Munguia Tapia:8
Kent Larson:7
Jennifer Beaudin:4

 

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Learn more about Stephen S. Intille:
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Mar 20

Computer programs emerge as the outcome of complex human processes of cognition, communication and negotiation, which serve to establish the meaningful embedding of the computer system in its intended use context.

-- Floyd, 1992, p. 24

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