Corina Sas
Corina Sas is a Professor in Human-Computer Interaction with the School of Computing and Communications at Lancaster University, UK. Her research focuses on designing and evaluating technologies for wellbeing, mental health, memory support, creative and reflective thinking in design, as well as novel tools for designing such technologies. Her work explores and integrates wearable bio sensors, mobile and lifelogging technologies with the aim to shape the interaction design and user experience.
Sruzan Lolla
Sruzan is a PhD candidate in the School of Computing and Communications at Lancaster University, UK. His research focuses on eudaimonic well-being, with the aim of designing interventions that help people set and pursue their goals. He also has five years of experience in the UX industry.
Elena Agapie
Elena is an Assistant Professor in Informatics at University of California, Irvine. She researches, designs and builds technologies that empower people to engage in health behaviors through a human centered approach. Her work draws on people's lived experiences and expert practices to support the implementation of evidence based behavioral interventions. She is affiliated with the Connected Learning Lab and the Institute for Future Health.
Jasmin Niess
Jasmin is an Associate Professor in Human-Computer Interaction at the University of Oslo. She designs and evaluates technologies that enhance well-being and foster positive societal impact, while critically examining the role of health and well-being technologies and their potential unintended consequences. To support this, she develops new methods and theories that guide their design and evaluation, ensuring they are both effective and contextually relevant.
Paweł W. Woźniak
I am a Professor in Human-Computer Interaction at Faculty of Informatics, TU Wien. I’m particularly interested in HCI for sports, designing technology for wellbeing and how interactive technologies can support reproducible science. I believe that HCI really has the potential to be a good thing in the world. What I like most is using a blend of methodologies and approaches for solving strange HCI problems.
Rúben Gouveia
Rúben Gouveia is an Assistant Professor at the University of Lisbon. He is interested in the design, adoption and use of personal health and wellbeing technologies in everyday contexts, with a particular interest in how to design these tools in ways that support health goals changes over time.