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- Creative Technology and Design seniors may now opt to work on sponsored projects: "Students work on real-world projects in a client-contractor relationship, and companies have the opportunity to work with creative engineering students exploring聽interesting and leading-edge creative technology projects.鈥
- THING Lab researchers, led by recent PhD graduate, Ryo Suzuki, developed a swarm of shape-changing robots that move furniture around a room, opening up new haptic ideas for virtual reality.
- 鈥婨llen Do, professor of computer science with the ATLAS Institute,聽has a long history of doing community outreach and service for the ACM Creativity & Cognition聽Conference, and this year is no exception.
- ATLAS researchers and Ericsson Research project collaborators are exploring ways in which remote drumming experiences can be made more enjoyable despite the latency, including drumming with avatars.
- Ellen Yi-Luen Do, professor of computer science with the ATLAS Institute, participated in the Ada Lovelace Week's academic panel with a talk entitled, "From Electronic Cocktail Napkin to Creative Technology and Design." Do's academia panel with Marshini Chetty, assistant professor of computer science at the University of Chicago, focused on the impact and trajectory of scholars in the field of human computer interaction. The event was hosted by University of Chicago's Human Computer Integration Lab from Oct. 13-16.
- RoomShift is a haptic and dynamic environment that could be used to support a variety of virtual reality (VR) experiences.
- Though she remained in Boulder all of last week, Ellen Do, professor of computer science with the ATLAS Institute, was busy globe-trotting on a virtual speaking tour in Asia, addressing faculty and students at engineering
- Ellen Do, professor and director of partnership and innovation in the ATLAS Institute, will be a keynote speaker.
- At a time when the field of human-computer interaction is becoming more important than ever, ATLAS researchers are making substantial contributions, contributing nine papers and two workshops to CHI '20.
- ATLAS CTD master's student Ruhan Yang聽and two聽teammates won first place for their project, "e-Trombone," at聽Georgia Tech's聽annual Moog Hackathon,聽beating 11 teams, taking home聽$3,000, and securing a place in GT's聽prestigious Guthman Musical Instrument Competition.