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Printed Program (pdf) - CHI 2012 - Association for Computing ...

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.Tuesday | Morning | 8:30—10:50<br />

<strong>CHI</strong> MADNESS | BALLROOM D<br />

8:30-9:20<br />

SESSION CHAIRS:<br />

Paul André, Carnegie Mellon University<br />

Petra Sundström, Salzburg University<br />

<strong>CHI</strong> Madness returns to give everyone a<br />

lightning speed overview of the day’s<br />

program.<br />

n SPECIAL EVENT | BALLROOM D<br />

TOWN HALL MEETING ON PEER REVIEWING AT<br />

<strong>CHI</strong><br />

SESSION CHAIR: Joseph “Jofish” Kaye, Nokia Research<br />

Jofish Kaye, Nokia Research Center, Finland<br />

Jeffrey Bardzell, Indiana University, USA<br />

Susanne Bødker, Aarhus University, Denmark<br />

Rebecca Grinter, Georgia Tech, USA<br />

Jonathan Grudin, Microsoft Research, UK<br />

James Landay, University of Washington, USA<br />

The <strong>CHI</strong> community is vibrant, growing, and interdisciplinary, and<br />

peer review is at the heart of what it means to be a community of<br />

researchers. In this Special Town Hall on Peer Review, we discuss<br />

the question of how to grow and change our reviewing practices to<br />

meet the challenge of both ongoing growth and increasing<br />

interdisciplinary participation. Our community has seen a wide<br />

variety of explorations of the best way to change and improve our<br />

practices: alt.chi’s open reviewing, CSCW’s revise & resubmit<br />

process and UIST’s removal of page limits are all ways to address<br />

the changing nature of this research. This Town Hall will provide an<br />

opportunity to discuss and address this ongoing question.<br />

n TECHNICAL PRESENTATIONS | BALLROOM E<br />

I AM HOW I TOUCH: AUTHENTICATING USERS<br />

SESSION CHAIR: Xiang Cao, Microsoft Research Asia, China<br />

To<strong>CHI</strong> | Homogenous Physio-Behavioral Visual and<br />

Mouse Based Biometric<br />

Omar Hamdy, Helwan University<br />

Issa Traore, University of Victoria<br />

Describes a new biometric technique that uses cognitive features<br />

and mouse dynamics without the introduction of new hardware.<br />

This technique opens doors <strong>for</strong> advanced biometrics used <strong>for</strong> static<br />

authentication.<br />

48 | ACM Conference on Human Factors in <strong>Computing</strong> Systems<br />

PAPER | Biometric-Rich Gestures: A Novel Approach to<br />

Authentication on Multi-touch Devices<br />

Napa Sae-Bae, Kowsar Ahmed, Katherine Isbister, Nasir Memon,<br />

Polytechnic Institute of NYU, USA<br />

Describes a new approach to login/authentication on multi-touch<br />

devices, using behavior-based biometrics gleaned from five-finger<br />

gestures. This approach better aligns usability with security, than is<br />

the case <strong>for</strong> text-based passwords.<br />

PAPER | Touch me once and I know it’s you! Implicit<br />

Authentication based on Touch Screen Patterns<br />

Alexander De Luca, Alina Hang, Frederik Brudy, Christian Lindner,<br />

Heinrich Hussmann, University of Munich, Germany<br />

Presents two user studies of an implicit authentication approach <strong>for</strong><br />

touch screen phones. Proofs that it is possible to distinguish users<br />

by the way they per<strong>for</strong>m the authentication.<br />

PAPER | WebTicket: Account Management Using<br />

Printable Tokens<br />

Eiji Hayashi, Bryan Pendleton, Carnegie Mellon University, USA<br />

Fatih Ozenc, Autodesk Inc., USA<br />

Jason Hong, Carnegie Mellon University, USA<br />

Describes development and evaluations of WebTicket that<br />

manages web accounts using paper-based or mobile-phone-based<br />

tickets. Demonstrates that WebTicket provides reliable and<br />

phishing-resilient user authentication.<br />

n PANEL | BALLROOM F<br />

MUSIC INTERACTION RESEARCH - LET’S GET<br />

THE BAND BACK TOGETHER<br />

PANELISTS<br />

Lassi Liikkanen, Helsinki Institute <strong>for</strong> In<strong>for</strong>mation Technology HIIT,<br />

Finland<br />

Christopher Amos, Carnegie Hall, USA<br />

Sally Jo Cunningham, University of Waikato, New Zealand<br />

J. Stephen Downie, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,<br />

USA<br />

David McDonald, University of Washington, USA<br />

This panel discusses music interaction as a part of digital media<br />

research. We consider why music interaction research has become<br />

marginal in HCI and how to revive it.

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