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Mark S. Ackerman

职称:Professor Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and School of Information

所属学校:University of Michigan-Ann Arbor

所属院系:Electrical Engineering

所属专业:Electrical and Electronics Engineering

联系方式:(734) 763-5439

简介

Mark Ackerman is the George Herbert Mead Collegiate Professor of Human-Computer Interaction and a Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and in the School of Information at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. His major research area is Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), primarily Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW). He has published widely in HCI and CSCW, investigating collaborative information access in online knowledge communities, medical settings, expertise sharing, and most recently, pervasive environments. Mark is a member of the CHI Academy (HCI Fellow) and an ACM Fellow. Previously, Mark was a faculty member at the University of California, Irvine, and a research scientist at MIT's Laboratory for Computer Science (now CSAIL). Before becoming an academic, Mark led the development of the first home banking system, had three Billboard Top-10 games for the Atari 2600, and worked on the X Window System's first user-interface widget set. Mark has degrees from the University of Chicago, Ohio State, and MIT. Research areas - Computer supported cooperative work (CSCW), collaborative systems, human-computer interaction (HCI), pervasive computing, ubicomp, social computing. Also, Sociology of information, social analysis of computing systems. Particular Topics - Collaborative information access, infrastructures for social computing, memory artifacts, organizational (collective) memory, information reuse for chronic diseases, privacy, online communities, social computing.

职业经历

Mark Ackerman is the George Herbert Mead Collegiate Professor of Human-Computer Interaction and a Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and in the School of Information at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. His major research area is Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), primarily Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW). He has published widely in HCI and CSCW, investigating collaborative information access in online knowledge communities, medical settings, expertise sharing, and most recently, pervasive environments. Mark is a member of the CHI Academy (HCI Fellow) and an ACM Fellow. Previously, Mark was a faculty member at the University of California, Irvine, and a research scientist at MIT's Laboratory for Computer Science (now CSAIL). Before becoming an academic, Mark led the development of the first home banking system, had three Billboard Top-10 games for the Atari 2600, and worked on the X Window System's first user-interface widget set. Mark has degrees from the University of Chicago, Ohio State, and MIT. Research areas - Computer supported cooperative work (CSCW), collaborative systems, human-computer interaction (HCI), pervasive computing, ubicomp, social computing. Also, Sociology of information, social analysis of computing systems. Particular Topics - Collaborative information access, infrastructures for social computing, memory artifacts, organizational (collective) memory, information reuse for chronic diseases, privacy, online communities, social computing.

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