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Privacy, Safety, and Trust in Mobile Health Applications
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Privacy, Safety, and Trust in Mobile Health Applications
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  • Accepted papers
  • Organisers
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    • Accepted papers
    • Organisers
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Organisers


Image by Jason Howie (Flickr)

Ruba Abu-Salma

Workshop Lead

Ruba is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at King’s College London. Her research is interdisciplinary, sitting at the intersection of cybersecurity, privacy, HCI, and emerging technologies such as mHealth apps. She aims to understand and improve people’s security, privacy, and safety decision-making processes when interacting with technologies.

Amid Ayobi

Amid a Lecturer (Assistant Professor) at University College London and is part of the UCL Interaction Centre. His research has investigated how people from diverse backgrounds engage with and disengage from health and wellbeing apps and aims to inform the design of agency-supportive digital health technologies.

Julia Bernd

Julia researches usable privacy and security at the International Computer Science Institute. Drawing on a background in linguistics, social science, and public health, she investigates user privacy perceptions and intersections of HCI with social power dynamics. Her research on mobile health has examined app users' perceptions about legal protections for health data, and health app developers' challenges in implementing protections.


Fatima Boujarwah

Fatima is an Assistant Professor of Information Science at Kuwait University. She researches usable and accessible mobile technologies supporting mental health.


Lee C4


Lee is a Researcher in the Sociotechnical Security Group at the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC). Lee works with partners in academia, industry, and government to understand and address the security and risks posed by inaccessible technologies.


Alisa Frik

Alisa is a Research Scientist at the International Computer Science Institute. Her areas of interest and expertise include HCI and user experience research, applied to the topics of usable privacy and security. She is a co-PI on an NSF grant “Narrowing The Gap Between Privacy Expectations and Reality in Mobile Health".



Majid Hatamian

Majid is a Senior Privacy Engineer at Google. His area of interest and expertise sits at the intersection of usable privacy and online safety. 




Ina Kaleva

Ina is a research assistant at King’s College London. Her interests include digital technologies facilitating the assessment, support, treatment, and prevention of mental health conditions.





Lisa Malki

Lisa is a PhD student at University College London. Her research focuses on the intersections between HCI, gender, and usable privacy, with a particular interest in how vulnerable and marginalised user groups understand and navigate privacy risks on web and mobile platforms.

Dilisha Patel

Dilisha is a Research Fellow in Gender and Disability inclusion at the Global Disability Innovation Hub. Her research has focused on HCI, women’s health, digital health, and underserved populations. Her work includes understanding the design of technology to improve participation, informed inclusion, and well-being.

Corina Sas

Corina is a Professor in Human-Computer Interaction and Digital Health in the School of Computing and Communications at Lancaster University, UK. Her research interests include design and evaluation of technologies for well-being and mental health, with a focus on their ethical concerns and design implications for addressing such issues.

Pushpendra Singh

Pushpendra is a Professor in Computer Science and Engineering in the Department of Computer Science at IIIT-Delhi, India. His research explores menstrual health education, awareness, and practices in India. His recent work aims to look at the challenges of using lab-generated data for mental health.

Mohammad Tahaei

Mohammad is an independent researcher specializing in responsible AI, HCI, privacy, and security. His recent research explores the nuances of developing AI for diverse populations and highlights discrepancies between existing and future AI technologies.

Mark Warner

Mark is a Lecturer (Assistant Professor) in the Computer Science Department at University College London. He is an HCI researcher working at the intersection of privacy, security, and safety. Relevant prior work includes research on privacy mechanisms in femTech apps, and an interdisciplinary project exploring data-driven system use during the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Primal Wijesekera


Primal is a Staff Research Scientist at ICSI. His research includes measuring regulatory compliance in the mobile ecosystem under different regimes such as CCPA, COPPA, and health regulations. He has collaborated with federal regulators, sharing the research findings and working as an external consultant.


Moses Namara


Moses is a Human Factors Research Engineer at Apple, where he works to enhance product usability and privacy. With a PhD in Human-Centered Computing from Clemson University, Dr. Namara’s expertise lies in the design & study of user interfaces that seamlessly integrate privacy measures and controls to afford for user control of their data while delivering intuitive experiences.


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