Distributed, Ambient and Pervasive Interactions Best Paper Award

6th International Conference on Distributed, Ambient and Pervasive Interactions Best Paper Award. Details in text following the image.
 

Best Paper Award for the 6th International Conference on Distributed, Ambient and Pervasive Interactions, in the context of HCI International 2018, 15-20 July 2018, Las Vegas, NV, USA

 

Certificate for best paper award of the 6th International Conference on Distributed, Ambient and Pervasive Interactions. Details in text following the image

Certificate for Best Paper Award of the 6th International Conference on Distributed, Ambient and Pervasive Interactions

conferred to

Felecia Davis (Pennsylvania State University, USA)

for the paper entitled

"Touch: Communication of Emotion through Computational Textile Expression"

Presented in the context of
HCI International 2018
15-20 July 2018, Las Vegas, NV, USA

Paper Abstract
"Touch of a computational textile on human skin provides a unique opportunity to look at relationships between ambience, emotion and computing. The sense of touch on human skin offers a potential framework to think about ambient computing as the information from skin is multimodal and comes in many forms such as temperature, humidity, sharpness, smoothness, location and movement. Computational materials that shelter, surround and are inside us have become sentient and are able to ‘speak’ to us. It is common that these things not only speak to us but also to each other through what is called the internet of things. This is a physical world web or quite simply a network of physical things. Materials that can connect to this network this author will call computational materials, which are materials that respond to commands and communicate through computer programming, electronics and sensors. A computational textile is a textile that responds to commands through computer programming, electronics and sensors. If architects, artists, designers, engineers and scientists and others could begin to understand the nature of what various textile expressions communicated via touch, then it would be possible to more fully understand the role texture of a computational textile plays in communicating emotion through an object. The author of this paper will present and discuss one project, FELT a 5′ × 6′ wall panel designed to communicate emotion through touch."

The full paper is available through SpringerLink, provided that you have proper access rights.