Anna L. Cox
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View article: 'How Do You Know That Stuff?': Barriers to Expertise Sharing Among Spreadsheet Users
'How Do You Know That Stuff?': Barriers to Expertise Sharing Among Spreadsheet Users Open
Spreadsheet collaboration provides valuable opportunities for learning and expertise sharing between colleagues. Sharing expertise is essential for the retention of important technical skillsets within organisations, but previous studies s…
View article: "How do you even know that stuff?": Barriers to expertise sharing among spreadsheet users
"How do you even know that stuff?": Barriers to expertise sharing among spreadsheet users Open
Spreadsheet collaboration provides valuable opportunities for learning and expertise sharing between colleagues. Sharing expertise is essential for the retention of important technical skillsets within organisations, but previous studies s…
View article: Mapping the landscape of functionality reviews in HCI: trends, methods, and contributions
Mapping the landscape of functionality reviews in HCI: trends, methods, and contributions Open
Functionality reviews are an emerging method in human–computer interaction (HCI) for examining a set of existing technologies to understand their features. However, while studies share similar methodological approaches, the absence of unif…
View article: A multiperspective investigation of the underrepresentation of minoritized ethnic participants in dementia research and proposed strategies to improve inclusive recruitment practices
A multiperspective investigation of the underrepresentation of minoritized ethnic participants in dementia research and proposed strategies to improve inclusive recruitment practices Open
INTRODUCTION Minoritized ethnic populations are underrepresented in dementia research despite having differing risk and prognosis profiles. We sought to gain multiperspective insights about why minoritized ethnic groups are underrepresente…
View article: The Paradox of Spreadsheet Self-Efficacy: Social Incentives for Informal Knowledge Sharing in End-User Programming
The Paradox of Spreadsheet Self-Efficacy: Social Incentives for Informal Knowledge Sharing in End-User Programming Open
Informal Knowledge Sharing (KS) is vital for end-user programmers to gain expertise. To better understand how personal (self-efficacy), social (reputational gains, trust between colleagues), and software-related (codification effort) varia…
View article: Designing personalized mental health interventions for anxiety: CBT therapists’ perspective
Designing personalized mental health interventions for anxiety: CBT therapists’ perspective Open
Anxiety disorders are the most common mental health problem, and cognitive-behavioral therapy is one of the most widely used, evidence-based treatments. While several mobile apps for anxiety that integrate cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT…
View article: The CHI’24 Workshop on the Future of Cognitive Personal Informatics
The CHI’24 Workshop on the Future of Cognitive Personal Informatics Open
While Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) has contributed to demonstrating that physiological measures can be used to detect cognitive changes, engineering and machine learning will bring these to application in consumer wearable technology. …
View article: ChatTL;DR – You Really Ought to Check What the LLM Said on Your Behalf
ChatTL;DR – You Really Ought to Check What the LLM Said on Your Behalf Open
Interactive large language models (LLMs) are so hot right now, and are probably going to be hot for a while. There are lots of p̶r̶o̶b̶l̶e̶m̶s̶ exciting challenges created by mass use of LLMs. These include the reinscription of biases, ‘hallucinat…
View article: “Jumping Out from the Pressure of Work and into the Game”: Curating Immersive Digital Game Experiences for Post-Work Recovery
“Jumping Out from the Pressure of Work and into the Game”: Curating Immersive Digital Game Experiences for Post-Work Recovery Open
Extant research demonstrates that playing digital games after work can have a psychologically restorative effect. This article focuses on understanding how players can maximise this effect by strategically leveraging the immersive potentia…
View article: Adaptive, Sociable and Ready for Anything: Undergraduate Students Are Resilient When Faced with Technological Change
Adaptive, Sociable and Ready for Anything: Undergraduate Students Are Resilient When Faced with Technological Change Open
Attending university is an important time for many young people's social lives. But changes are afoot with new innovative digital higher-education experiences being built, shifting students' social lives further online. However, it is uncl…
View article: Capturing the distinction between task and device errors in a formal model of user behaviour
Capturing the distinction between task and device errors in a formal model of user behaviour Open
In any complex interactive human-computer system, people are likely to make errors during its operation. In this paper, we describe a validation study of an existing generic model of user behaviour. The study is based on the data and concl…
View article: Privacy preferences in automotive data collection
Privacy preferences in automotive data collection Open
Connected cars are becoming commonplace, creating vast volumes of data that may contain or reveal information about drivers. It is imperative to understand drivers' perspectives on such data being collected and used by car manufacturers. A…
View article: Visioning channel evolution for river management: Toward a functional decision support framework
Visioning channel evolution for river management: Toward a functional decision support framework Open
Improvements in simulating and communicating the evolutionary trajectory of river morphology in response to environmental forcing over multi‐decadal timeframes would foreshadow the development of “foresight competency” in river management,…
View article: “Sometimes It’s Like Putting the Track in Front of the Rushing Train”: Having to Be ‘On Call’ for Work Limits the Temporal Flexibility of Crowdworkers
“Sometimes It’s Like Putting the Track in Front of the Rushing Train”: Having to Be ‘On Call’ for Work Limits the Temporal Flexibility of Crowdworkers Open
Research suggests that the temporal flexibility advertised to crowdworkers by crowdsourcing platforms is limited by both client-imposed constraints (e.g., strict completion times) and crowdworkers’ tooling practices (e.g., multitasking). I…
View article: Reflecting on Hybrid Events: Learning from a Year of Hybrid Experiences
Reflecting on Hybrid Events: Learning from a Year of Hybrid Experiences Open
The COVID-19 pandemic led to a sudden shift to virtual work and events, with the last two years enabling an appropriated and rather simulated togetherness - the hybrid mode. As we return to in-person events, it is important to reflect on n…
View article: Gaming for Post-Work Recovery: The Role of Immersion
Gaming for Post-Work Recovery: The Role of Immersion Open
Playing digital games can be an effective means of recovering from daily work strain. However, limited research has examined which player experiences contribute to this process, limiting the ability of players to select games and play them…
View article: Remote Work, Work Measurement and the State of Work Research in Human-Centred Computing
Remote Work, Work Measurement and the State of Work Research in Human-Centred Computing Open
Over the past few decades, a small but growing group of people have worked remotely from their homes. With the arrival of the coronavirus pandemic, millions of people found themselves joining this group overnight. In this position paper, w…
View article: Examining young adults daily perspectives on usage of anxiety apps: A user study
Examining young adults daily perspectives on usage of anxiety apps: A user study Open
The growing number of mental health smartphone applications has led to increased interest in how these tools might support users in different models of care. However, research on the use of these interventions in real-world settings has be…
View article: Understanding users’ perspectives on mobile apps for anxiety management
Understanding users’ perspectives on mobile apps for anxiety management Open
Anxiety disorders are the most common type of mental health problem. The potential of apps to improve mental health has led to an increase in the number of anxiety apps available. Even though anxiety apps hold the potential to enhance ment…
View article: Human-Computer Interaction and the Future of Work
Human-Computer Interaction and the Future of Work Open
Advances in computing technology, changing policies, and slow crises are rapidly changing the way we work. Human-computer interaction (HCI) is a critical aspect of these trends, to understand how workers contend with emerging technologies …
View article: The Future of Emotion in Human-Computer Interaction
The Future of Emotion in Human-Computer Interaction Open
Emotion has been studied in HCI for two decades, with specific traditions interested in sensing, expressing, transmitting, modelling, experiencing, visualizing, understanding, constructing, regulating, manipulating or adapting to emotion i…