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  <title><![CDATA[GVU Brown Bag: Celine Latulipe]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<h5>
              Building and Evaluating Creative Interaction</h5><strong>Abstract:&nbsp;</strong>
                    <p>Visionaries in Computer Science have long seen 
the computer as a tool to augment our intellect. However, while it is 
relatively straightforward to measure the impact of a tool or technique 
on task efficiency for well-defined tasks, it is much more difficult to 
measure computers' impact on higher-level cognitive processes, such as 
creative processes. In my own research in Human-Computer Interaction, I 
create novel interaction techniques, but run up against the problem of 
trying to demonstrate how these tools positively impact higher-level 
processes such as creativity, expressiveness and exploration. In this 
talk, I first present a variety of interaction techniques that I have 
developed, and I then describe a new survey metric, the Creativity 
Support Index (CSI), that we have developed to help researchers and 
designers evaluate the level of creativity support provided by various 
systems, tools or interfaces. I will discuss what has been learned 
during the process of creating this survey and its usage in three 
different studies. The Creativity Support Index is one of the very first
 indices to support any evaluation of a computer system's impact on 
higher-level cognitive work. I will discuss the CSI within the context 
of my longer term goal to develop a suite of tools (including biometric 
tools) that provide both stronger analytical power, and a fundamental 
framework for evaluating computational support for creative activities, 
engagement and aesthetic experience.</p>
        
        


    
            
                      
              <strong>Bio:&nbsp;</strong>
                    <p>Dr. Celine Latulipe has a PhD in Computer Science
 from the University of Waterloo in Canada. She is an Assistant 
Professor of Human-Computer Interaction in the Department of Software 
and Information Systems in the College of Computing and Informatics at 
UNC Charlotte. Dr. Latulipe has long been fascinated by two-handed 
interaction in the real world, and the absence of it in the 
human-computer interface. She has developed numerous individual and 
collaborative two-handed interaction techniques and these have blossomed
 into an exploration of creative expression. Dr. Latulipe works on 
projects with choreographers, dancers, artists and theatre producers to 
better understand creative work in practice and how technology may play a
 role in supporting and evaluating creative work practices. Currently, 
Dr. Latulipe is working on the Dance.Draw project, funded by an NSF 
CreativeIT grant.</p>]]></body>
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