SenseCam 2009 : Chicago, Illinois  :  16-17 October
 


 
 

SenseCam 2009

Clinical and Technical Advances and the Future of SenseCam Research

 

 
 

Presentations: SenseCam 2009 Symposium

Martin A. Conway
Institute of Psychological Sciences, University of Leeds
SenseCam: The Future of Everyday Memory Research
Nils Muhlert, Fraser Milton, Chris Butler& Adam Zeman
Peninsula Medical School, Universities of Exeter & Plymouth
Holding on to Tuesday until Wednesday: Accelerated long-term forgetting of real life events in TEA
Gaston R. Cangiano
Distributed Cognition HCI Laboratory, University of California at San Diego
Studying Work at a Law Office using Activity Recording
David Winkelaar, M.Ed. R. Psych. & Stephanie Worrell, B.Sc.
Halvar Jonson Centre for Brain Injury, The Centennial Centre for Mental Health and Brain Injury, Ponoka, Alberta, Canada
Evaluation of SenseCam as a memory compensation aid:Two patients with severe memory impairments
Fergus Gracey, Rob Brindley, Priscilla Covre and the team at OZC
Oliver Zangwill Centre for Neuropsychological Rehabilitation, Cambridgeshire Community Services,
Using SenseCam to support self-regulation deficits after brain injury
Cathal Gurrin
CLARITY: Centre for Sensor Web Technologies, DCU
I Remember…Experiences of a long-term, everyday, sensecamwearer
Catherine Loveday1  Martin Conway2
1University of Westminster  2University of Leeds
Memory regained: Re-establishing access to lost memories
Peggy L. St. Jacques & Roberto Cabeza
Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University
Watching Your Life vs. Mine Unfold: An fMRI Study Using a Novel SenseCam Technology 
 
The Case of CJ
Pauly-Takacs, Katalin 1 Moulin, Chris 2
1 Institute of Psychological Sciences  2  University of Leeds, Institute of Psychological Services
SenseCam as a rehabilitation tool in a child following treatment for metastatic intracranial germinoma
1 Khai N. Truong  2 Gillian R. Hayes
1 Department Of Computer Science, University of Toronto, Canada  2 Department of Informatics, University of California, Irvine,USA
Encountering SenseCam: Implications for personal recording technologies in everyday life
Paul Kelly and Charlie Foster
University of Oxford BHF Health Promotion Research Group, UK.
Public Heath Surveillance: Applications for SenseCam in the fight against chronic disease

Jason R. Finley, William F. Brewer and Aaron S. Benjamin

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Department of Psychology, USA

Reflections of memory in the environment
1, 2 Ron Baecker 2 Masashi Crete Nishihata 2 1 Department of Computer Science 2 Knowledge Media Design Institute University of Toronto Assessing the Cognitive and Psychosocial
Impact of Two SenseCam Media Formats on
Persons with MCI and Mild AD
1 Philip Barnard, 1 Fionnuala Murphy, 1 Teresa Carthery 2 Kayleigh Terry and 2 Emily Holmes 1 MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge 2 Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford SenseCam, Imagery and Bias in Memory for
Wellbeing
 

 

Poster Session: SenseCam Symposium, Hotel Allegro, Chicago

16th October 2009

Ron Baecker1, Masashi Crete Nishihata1, Deborah Ptak1, Adam Brickman2, Gary Turner3, Sandra Black3 and Joshua Steinerman4. 1Knowledge Media Design Institute, University of Toronto, 2Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, 3Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto and 4ProGevity Neuroscience. 

Assessing the cognitive and psychosocial impact of two SenseCam media formats on persons with MCI and Mild AD.

 

Max Buchanan1, Hannah Frith2 and Suzanne Conboyhill1. 1Sussex Partnership NHS foundation Trust and Brighton and Hove Council, and 2University of Brighton and Research Design Service South East.

Towards utilising SenseCam and positive psychology to increase subjective well being in adults with learning disabilities.

 

Kiernan Burke, Sue Franklin and Olive Gowan. University of Limerick, Ireland. 

Potential for facilitating communication using a passive digital camera (Microsoft Research SenseCam).

Daragh Byrne1 and Gareth J F Jones2.  1CLARITY: Centre for Sensor Web Technologies, Dublin City University and 2Centre for Digital Video Processing, Dublin City University, Ireland. 

Digital Life Stories: Narrating Personal Experience from SenseCam Collections

Niamh Caprani, Aiden R. Doherty, Hyowon Lee, Alan F. Smeaton and Noel E. O'Connor.   CLARITY: Centre for Sensor Web Technologies, Dublin City University, Ireland.

Utilising the simplicity of touch to enable older people to review their SenseCam images independently.

Yi Chen and Gareth J F Jones.  Centre for Digital Video Processing, Dublin City University, Ireland. 

The iCLIPS Album: Browsing a lifetime SenseCam archive using associative episodic context.

Jesus Favela and Rene Navarro. Computer Science Department, CICESE, Mexico.

An augmented memory system to assist elders with mild cognitive decline.

 

Cathal Gurrin1, ZhenXing Zhang2, Hyowon Lee1, Niamh Caprani1 and Denise Carthy2. 1CLARITY: Centre for Sensor Web Technologies, Dublin City University, Ireland and 2Dublin City University, Ireland. 

SenseCam in the living room: interacting in a lean back environment.

Liadh Kelly and Gareth J F Jones.  Centre for Digital Video Processing, Dublin City University, Ireland.

Examining the Utility of Biometric Response for SenseCam Archive Browsing.

 

Paul Kelly and Charlie Foster. University of Oxford BHF Health Promotion Research Group, UK.

 Public Health Applications for SenseCam in the field of travel research.

 

Siân Lindley1, Maxine Glancy1, Richard Harper1, Dave Randall2 and Nicky Smyth3. 1Microsoft Research Cambridge, 2Manchester Metropolitan University  and 3BBC R & I.

Family life through a SenseCam lens: putting lifelogging tools into everyday context.

 

Katalin Takacs Pauly1, Chris Moulin1 and Edward J Estlin2.   1Leeds Memory Group, University of Leeds, UK and 2Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital, Manchester, UK.  

Supporting personal semantic memories with SenseCam – a child case study.

 

John Waterworth, Centre for Human Computer Interaction Design, City University, London.

 Putting Names to Faces.

Nils Muhlert, Fraser Milton, Chris Butler, & Adam Zeman, Peninsula Medical School, Universities of Exeter & Plymouth The neural correlates of everyday recognition memory
 
 

*If you would like to have your poster or presentation added above, please email it to Lindsay Gerber.