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Computing is deeply intertwined with human behavior in a number of ways. At Cornell we study them all: designing ways people interact with computing systems, ways computers mediate communication and other interaction between people, things we can learn about people by looking at those interactions, and impacts of computing on society in a number of critical domains from education to health. We have a strong presence at related conferences, including CHI, CSCW, ICWSM, KDD, WWW, and do work in a number of areas. Designing interfaces One key question in human interaction is how to design computers people can actually use, whether the computers are sensors, phones, tablets, traditional computers, or robots. Cornell has a number of researchers deeply interested in making computation more accessible and useful to everyone. Human-robot interaction: (Sue Fussell), (Malte Jung), Ross Knepper, Hadas Kress-Gazit Information visualization: David Mimno, Mor Naaman, Noah Snavely, Ramin Zabih Interaction techniques: Shiri Azenkot, Tanzeem Choudhury, Francois Guimbretiere, Noah Snavely Mobile interfaces: Tanzeem Choudhury, Nicola Dell, Deborah Estrin, (Geri Gay) Social media and web interfaces: Dan Cosley, (Geri Gay), (Gilly Leshed), Mor Naaman, (Sue Fussell) Modeling human and information behavior ("Computational Social Science") A second key question is what we can learn about people from how they interact with computers and how they interact with each other through computers. Both the data people record about themselves and they traces they leave behind when using computational systems promise to provide insight into people's interests and social networks; this insight, in turn, can be used to improve information access, communication, and market mechanisms. Information networks: Dan Cosley, Dan Huttenlocher, Thorsten Joachims, Jon Kleinberg, (Michael Macy), Mor Naaman Language and meaning: Claire Cardie, Cristian Danescu Niculescu-Mizil, Lillian Lee, David Mimno Mechanism design: (Larry Blume), (David Easley), Arpita Ghosh, Eva Tardos Personal informatics: Tanzeem Choudhury, Dan Cosley, Deborah Estrin Recommender systems: Dan Cosley, Thorsten Joachims
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