is a PhD researcher at the OFFIS Institute for Information Technology in Oldenburg, Germany. Her research focuses on the experiences of families after childbirth, with a focus on mental health challenges and how technologies can support collaboration during this time. She will co-facilitate the workshop.
is a PhD researcher at the OFFIS Institute for Information Technology in Oldenburg, Germany. Her research investigates how women’s health technologies shape tracking and support practices and how they can be designed to support data agency in sensitive health contexts, including FemTech privacy transparency. She will serve as communications and submissions chair for the workshop.
is a postdoctoral researcher at The University of Tokyo. Her research explores how technology can support interpersonal relationships, collaboration, and wellbeing. She contributes to this workshop through the lens of coproduction of mother-father dyads, and will serve as submissions and communications chair for the workshop.
is a PhD researcher at the Department of Informatics, University of Oslo. Her research focuses on understanding the creepy experiences technology might evoke. Her recent research interests focus on the lived experience of "intimate" technologies.
She contributes insights into how experiences with technology–such as pregnancy-tracking technologies–might be harmful, and she will serve as workshop co-facilitator.
is a PhD researcher in the research unit of Human-Computer Interaction at TU Wien. Her research investigates how PI technologies can move beyond standardised health goals and assumptions about the "default" body, focusing on metric design that reflects individual user preferences and more effectively supports wellbeing. She will serve as communications chair and co-facilitator of the workshop.
is a PhD researcher in Human-Computer Interaction at Uppsala University. She studies fatherhood and digital technologies used in early parenthood.
She contributes to this workshop through a critical feminist perspective on gender relations in parenthood technologies and with a focus on fatherhood. She will serve as submissions chair and co-facilitator for the workshop.
received an MSc in Information Security at Stockholm University, Sweden. Her research focuses on privacy and digital intimacy, with a particular interest in marginalized communities affected by technological harms. Her research investigates how intimate data is collected, communicated, and governed in connected systems. She will serve as communications chair for the workshop
is a group leader at the OFFIS Institute for Information Technology in Oldenburg, Germany. Her research focuses on personal pervasive technologies for everyday wellbeing, including providing models for the design of Virtual Reality, and family informatics. She contributes to the workshop with a focus on designing technologies for wellbeing of the whole care ecosystem. She has been involved in a series of workshops on technologies for wellbeing at CHI and organised several winter and summer schools, and will serve as co-facilitator for the workshop.