Feb 21 2009

Pressing Deadlines

So for the past week I’ve been meaning to write up a description of the general awesomeness that was IUI ’09, but with end-of-term craziness in full force, it’s going to have to wait.  Suffice to say it was a fabulous week full of wonderful people and some fascinating research.  Photos are slowly making their way from my notebook to Flickr, and once the VLHCC ’09 submission deadline passes, the process should speed up.

Speaking of, the past week has flown by as we prepare our paper, and I’m certain the next two will be similar.  Today and tomorrow I’ve eight transcripts to code, plus an abstract to write and a clever title to generate.  Feeling pretty good about it all at this particular moment, though; met up with Andrea at a funky new coffee shop (Vibe) downtown this morning, and ran into her friend Lisa as well.  Now I’m exporting our final transcript video from the lab, then heading home to throw open some windows, put on a kettle, and code until I can code no more (and maybe a bit past that, we’ll see).  The past few evenings have ended with mini-marathons of Series Three Doctor Who, and I’m looking forward to finishing that off late tonight.


Feb 7 2009

Arrival

Twenty-five hours after leaving Corvallis, I’ve finally made it to Florida, site of IUI 2009.  Taking the red-eye in order to sleep on the flight totally and hilariously back-fired; I haven’t fallen asleep since Thursday night.  Instead, I got a haircut in Portland, then wandered about the city for a bit.  The number of shops closing up downtown is a little frightening, it looked an awful lot like Michigan did when I was back over the holidays.  One of my favorite boutiques, Same Underneath, totally cut their inventory to just a handful of relatively tired-looking styles.  Not a good sign.

I got to PDX way ahead of time and got some work done, then boarded a plane on which my legs simply couldn’t get comfortable (that has never happened before, I usually fit just fine into the tiny amount of legroom).  Four restless hours later, I watched the sun rise behind the smudged glass of ATL:

Sunrise in Atlanta

Sunrise in Atlanta

The flight down to Fort Myers was exciting, we got stuck on the runway for an hour when an engine wouldn’t start.  All was well, though, and looking down on gulf-coastal islands made me wish my camera wasn’t stowed in the overhead.  I took a cab ride from a local artist, originally from Italy, who proudly showed me a regional publication with his face on the cover: it was without a doubt the most interesting taxi ride of my life.  Now I’m at the Sundial resort, staying in someone’s condo and searching for vegetarian options from the bar menu.  Also, prepping for tomorrow’s day-long workshop, after which I really need to finish up my presentation.  I’m getting nervous now that I’m here.  But!  This condo has a screened-in porch with a lovely view:

A view from my porch

A view from my porch


Feb 3 2009

Happenings

Friday I leave for IUI 2009, where I’ll be presenting a formative study about end users debugging machine-learned programs.  This will be my first conference presentation, and I’m about equal parts excited and nervous.  At the very least, I should a chance to head out with my camera in sunny Florida.  I’ve hardly even taken it out of its bag this past month, and that needs to change.

I finally finished running participants for our current research study… now to start analyzing the data.  The paper deadline is March 8th, which feels like it’s approaching rudely fast.  But hey, at least we’re still on track.  I’d been worried that bringing in participants would become a 2 or 3-week nightmare like our last study, which would have pushed things way too close to the deadline.

This weekend I bought Henri T. Cat a new scratching board, which he promptly fell in love with.  Maybe now he’ll leave my couch alone.

Also, yesterday I learned that I’ll be going to CHI 2009 in Boston!  First big conference, eep!


Jan 10 2009

January To-Do List

  • Finish the design of our next experiment involving debugging machine-learned programs.  This is actually coming along pretty well, and with a little luck I’ll be running sandbox pilots next week.  Assuming we get IRB approval, we should then be able to get real participants in for the last two weeks of the month.
  • Prepare a presentation of our last research paper for IUI’09.  Still haven’t even started this.
  • Figure out what my CS 519 term project will be.  Hopefully I can tie it in with my research and turn it into another paper.
  • Talk to my adviser about internship possibilities for this summer.  Teaching was a lot of fun last year, but I’m ready for something new.
  • Get a couple of cavities filled.  I may not have a paralyzing fear of dentists, but no one looks forward to fillings. :(
  • Make it to the rec center at least 3 times a week.  I’m actually totally on track for this!
  • Cook at least one new dish each week.  Again, I’ve been doing really well at this–I’ve actually been looking forward to leftovers!
  • Record something, even if just a cover tune.  Phil loaned me some excellent books on digital audio and audio engineering, but I still haven’t found the time (see above) to put any of it to practice.

Nov 21 2008

Success!

Yesterday I was notified that my research group’s submission to IUI’09 was accepted!  This was the first research study and resulting publication that I led, and I’d honestly not been expecting it to be accepted on the first try.  So yay!  That’s two publications in a year and half–not a bad start, I suppose :)   The paper detailed a formative study of barriers end users encounter when attempting to “fix” [i.e. debug] machine-learned programs, like junk mail filters or hand-writing recognizers.  These sorts of machine-learned programs are becoming increasingly common in software, and since they need to tailor themselves to a particular user’s needs, that end user is the only person available to debug them if they misbehave.  It’s really a whole new research field that can build upon existing data about end-user programmers debugging in more traditional environments, like Microsoft Excel, but the machine-learned component is a significant change from such traditional models of source code.

Now we have three weeks to address the reviewers’ comments and get a camera-ready version to the conference organizers.  The conference itself is in Florida this February, so with a little luck, I might be able to afford to go and present the results in person :)