7:30am-8:45am
Registration and breakfast
8:45am-8:50am
Welcome from meeting organizers
8:50am-9:00am
Opening remarks from Dr. Alexis Lewis, Deputy Directorate Head, Directorate for Engineering
9:00am-9:10am
Opening remarks from Dr. Kaye Husbands Fealing, Assistant Director, Directorate for Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences
Why should human factors be formalized into computational models?
What does it look like, to have solved formalization of human factors into computational models? What are the impacts of having this capability? What could we do that we couldn’t previously do?
9:10am-10:10am
Lightning talks
10:10am-11:10am
Panel: State-of-the-art in formalization of human factors
Panelists: Greg Trafton, Naval Research Laboratory; Craig Fox, University of California, Los Angeles; Todd Murphey, Northwestern University
11:10am-11:30am
Coffee break
11:30am-12:45pm
Breakout discussion during lunch: What do we want from computational models of human factors?
12:45pm-1:30pm
Report out to main group
Why don’t we already have these capabilities? What are the key challenges to formalizing human factors into computational models?
Which theoretical or computational properties should the computational models have?
1:30pm-2:30pm
Panel: Disciplinary perspectives
Panelists: Linda Ng Boyle, New York University; Katie Driggs-Campbell, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign; Julian Jara-Ettinger, Yale University
2:30pm-3:00pm
Coffee break
3:00pm-4:00pm
Breakout discussion: Developing integrated visions: behavior, use case, application
4:00pm-4:55pm
Report out from breakout groups
4:55pm-5:00pm
Summary of the day
No-host happy hour immediately after
How do we overcome these challenges? Research funding, bespoke educational programs, community equipment or infrastructure?
What recommendations do we have for each stakeholder? Funding agencies, industry, universities, nonprofits…
8:30am-9:00am
Breakfast available
8:50am-9:00am
Overview of day and objectives
9:00am-9:30am
Research speed-dating
9:30am-10:30am
Panel: Supporting research in formalization of human factors into computational models
Panelists: Dagmar Sternad, Northeastern University; Nikolas Martelaro, Carnegie Mellon University; Sam Burden, University of Washington
10:30am-11:00am
Coffee break
11:00am-11:15am
Individual reflection
11:15am-11:45am
Ask a NSF Program Director
11:45am-12:00pm
Preparation for breakout group activity
12:00pm-1:15pm
Breakout discussion during lunch: Creating a one-page solicitation with Motivation/Vision/Goal
1:15pm-1:45pm
Report out from breakout groups
1:45pm-2:30pm
Open discussion and next steps
2:30pm-2:40pm
Concluding remarks