Timothy L. Stelter

2papers

2 Papers

HCMar 16, 2021
Conversational User Interfaces As Assistive interlocutors For Young Children's Bilingual Language Acquisition

Neelma Bhatti, Timothy L. Stelter, D. Scott McCrickard

Children in a large number of international and cross-cultural families in and outside of the US learn and speak more than one language. However, parents often struggle to acquaint their young children with their local language if the child spends majority of time at home and with their spoken language if they go to daycare or school. By reviewing relevant literature about the role of screen media content in young children's language learning, and interviewing a subset of parents raising multilingual children, we explore the potential of designing conversational user interfaces which can double as an assistive language aid.We present a preliminary list of objectives to guide the the design of conversational user interfaces dialogue for young children's bilingual language acquisition.

HCSep 5, 2019
Willing Buyer, Willing Seller: Personal Data Trade as a Service

Lindah Kotut, Timothy L. Stelter, Michael Horning et al.

There is an increased sensitivity by people about how companies collect information about them, and how this information is packaged, used and sold. This perceived lack of control is highlighted by the helplessness of users of various platforms in managing or halting what data is collected from/about them. In a future where users have wrested control of their data and have the autonomy to decide what information is collected, how it is used and most importantly, how much it is worth, a new market emerges. This design fiction considers possible steps prescient companies would take to meet these demands, such as providing third-party subscription platforms offering personal data trade as a service. These services would provide a means for transparent transactions that preserve an owner's control over their data; allowing them to individually make decisions about what data they avail for sale, and the amount of compensation they would accept in trade.