20th Anniversary Celebration
The HCI Graduate Program invites you to celebrate 20 years! Join us for a series of events from Thursday, April 11 – Friday, April 12, 2024 Schedule of Events >>
HCI Program
May 13, 2023 – The following HCI students graduated Spring 2023:
May 2, 2023 – Iowa State researchers in psychology and engineering found women experience cybersickness from virtual reality more often than men. Their ongoing work, supported by a new $600,000 grant from the National Science Foundation, explores the difference and options to help individuals adapt. Like motion sickness, cybersickness occurs when there is a mismatch between visual motion and body motion. Read More.
September 7, 2023 – Isabel Almaguer, online Master of Human Computer Interaction student, has been awarded an ACM-W scholarship for attendance at The ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. Congratulations Isabel!
The HCI Graduate Program invites you to celebrate 20 years! Join us for a series of events from Thursday, April 11 – Friday, April 12, 2024 Schedule of Events >>
Congratulations to our Fall 2023 Graduates! Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) Heidi Doellinger: Majored in Human Computer Interaction Manuela (Ella) Faulhaber: Majored in Human Computer Interaction Long He: Co-Majored in Education
Digital accessibility: in conversation with Kavya Ramamoorthy In a rapidly evolving digital age, the nuances of technology and its interface with human touchpoints have become crucial. One individual working in
The HCI Graduate Program has four items to share for Fall 2023: 1) ChatGPT, the Bee Gees, and HCI; 2) New HCI policies regarding Ph.D. students; 3) Enrollment Keeps Rising (Keep telling your friends!); 4) CycloneSupport and TAO (for your well-being)
The 2023 SPIRE-EIT REU program has completed. VRAC has released a series of video highlighting the accomplishments of this years REU participants.
Iowa State researchers in psychology and engineering found women experience cybersickness with virtual reality headsets more often than men. Their ongoing work, supported by a new $600,000 grant from the National Science Foundation, explores why this difference exists and options to help individuals adapt.