HICSS-43 Distinguished Lecture
Slides
Thursday, January 7, 2010
12:45 pm, Grand Ballroom

Ben Shneiderman
Professor, University of Maryland
http://www.cs.umd.edu/hcil/
Promoting National
Initiatives for Technology-Mediated Social Participation
Technology-mediated social
participation is generated when social networking tools (such as Facebook),
blogs and microblogs (Twitter), user-generated content sites (YouTube),
discussion groups, problem reporting, recommendation systems, and other
social media are applied to national priorities such as health, energy,
education, disaster response, environmental protection, business
innovation, cultural heritage, or community safety.
Fire, earthquake, storm, fraud,
or crime reporting sites provide information to civic authorities,
AmberAlert has more than 7 million users who help with information on
child abductions, Peer-to-Patent provides valuable information for patent
examiners, and the SERVE.GOV enables citizens to volunteer for national
parks, museums and other institutions. These early attempts hint at the
vast potential for technology-mediated social participation, but
substantial research is needed to scale up, raise motivation, control
malicious attacks, limit misguided rumors, and protect privacy (http://iparticipate.wikispaces.com).
As national initiatives are
launched in several countries to dramatically increase research and
education on social media, a coordinated approach will be helpful. Clearly
stated research challenges should have three key elements: (1) close
linkage to compelling national priorities (2) scientific foundation based
on established theories and well-defined research questions (privacy,
reciprocity, trust, motivation, recognition, etc.), and (3) computer
science research challenges (security, privacy protection, scalability,
visualization, end-user development, distributed data handling for massive
user-generated content, network analysis of community evolution, cross
network comparison, etc.).
Potential short-term
interventions include:
- universities changing course
content, add courses, and offering new degree programs
- industry helping researchers by providing access to data and platforms
for testing
- government agencies applying these strategies in pilot studies related
to national priorities
Ben Shneiderman is a Professor
in the Department of Computer Science, Founding Director (1983-2000) of
the Human-Computer Interaction Laboratory, and Member of the Institute for
Advanced Computer Studies at the University of Maryland at College Park (
http://www.cs.umd.edu/~ben ). He is the author of Leonardo’s Laptop: Human
Needs and the New Computing Technologies (MIT Press, 2002) and Designing
the User Interface: Strategies for Effective Human-Computer Interaction:
Fifth Edition Addison-Wesley, 2009).