value
sensitive
design


outreach
home

people

publications

projects

outreach
Value Sensitive Design Theory & Methods
Value Sensitive Design in Industry
Human-Robotic Interaction
Technological Nature With Large Displays
Urban Simulation
Privacy & Informed Consent Online
Network Browser Security & Human Values
Other

funding

contact


Last updated: Thursday, 30-Jun-2011 18:42:59 EDT
© 2009 Information School and Department of Computer Science & Engineering, University of Washington
All rights reserved

Value Sensitive Design Theory & Methods [top]


Presentations (partial list)

Friedman, B. (2004, May 10 - 11). Remarks on privacy, anonymity and access to RFID-generated data. Invited panelist at the Workshop on Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) Technologies, Computer Science and Telecommunications Board. Seattle, Washington.

Friedman, B. (February 5, 2004). Value sensitive design: Theory and methods. Invited lecture at Aarhus University. Aarhus, Denmark.Friedman, B. (February 4, 2004). Value sensitive design: Theory and methods. Invited lecture at the KTH - Royal Institute of Technology. Stockholm, Sweden.

Friedman, B. (February 2, 2004). Value sensitive design: Theory and methods. Invited lecture at the IT-University, Kista. Kista, Sweden.

Friedman, B. (2004, January 16 - 17). Human values in information system design. Keynote address at the Technology, Values and the Justice System Conference. Seattle, WA.

Friedman, B.  (2000, April 2).  Augmented reality, communities of use, and Value-Sensitive Design.  Paper presented to the workshop on Electronic Communities: Places and Spaces, Contents and Boundaries, CHI 2000, The Hague, The Netherlands.

Friedman, B. (with Felten, E., Grudin, J., Nissenbaum, H. & Winograd, T.). (1999). Value-Sensitive Design: A research agenda for informationtechnology.  Unpublished report on the May 20-21, 1999, Value-Sensitive Design Workshop. [PDF]


Value Sensitive Design in Industry [top]


Presentations

Freier, N. G., Consolvo, S., Kahn, P. H., Jr., Smith, I., & Friedman, B. (2005, April).  A value sensitive design of privacy for location enhanced computing.  Paper presented at the CHI 2005 Workshop on Quality, Value(s), and Choice: Exploring Wider Implications of HCI in Practice. Portland, Oregon. [PDF]

Friedman, B. (2005, March 3). Privacy by design. Invited talk presented at the Forum on Usable Privacy when Privacy is Ubiquitous, Intel Corporation. Hillsboro, OR.

Friedman, B. (2003, December 3) Research and design for trust. Invited talk presented at the Trust and Ubiquitous Computing Workshop, Intel Corporation. Seattle, WA.


Human-Robotic Interaction [top]


Science Museum Exhibit

Research video and results from our robotic pet studies are included in the science museum exhibit Robots + Us, Science Museum of Minnesota. (See http://www.smm.org/robots/).

Presentations (partial list)

Kahn, Jr., P. H., Friedman, B., Alexander, I. S., Freier, N. G., Collett, S. L. (2005). The distant gardener: What conversation in the Telegarden reveal about the user experience of telepresence. Presented at CHI 2005's alt.chi Session. Available on the CHI 2005 DVD-ROM Proceedings. [PDF]

Melson, G. F., Kahn, P. H., Jr., Beck, A. M., Friedman, B., Roberts, T., & Garrett, E. (2005, April). Does AIBO have a soul? Children's perceptions of robotic dogs. Presented at the Biennial Meeting of the Society for Research in Child Development, Atlanta, GA.

Beck, A. M., Edwards, N. E., Kahn, P. H., Jr., & Friedman, B. (2004, October). Robotic pets as perceived companions for older adults. Presented at the Tenth International Conference on Human-Animal Interactions, Glasgow, Scotland.

Melson, G. F., Kahn, P. H., Jr., Beck, A. M., Friedman, B., Roberts, T., & Garrett, E. (2004, October). Children's understanding of and behavior toward robotic and living dogs. Presented at the Tenth International Conference on Human-Animal Interactions, Glasgow, Scotland.

Kahn, P. H., Jr., Friedman, B., Perez-Granados, D. R., & Freier, N. G. (2003, April). Robotic pets in the lives of preschool children. Poster presented to the Biennial Meeting of the Society for Research in Child Development, Tampa, FL.

Edwards, N., Beck, A. M., Kahn, P. H., Jr., & Friedman, B. (2002, October). Older people and pets: Real and robotic. Presented at the Governor's Conference on Aging and Home Services, Indianapolis, IN.

Hagman, J., Friedman, B., & Kahn, P. H., Jr. (2002, October 13 - 16).  Online AIBO discussion forums: Talking robotic pets or just plain talking?  Paper presented at Internet Research 3.0: NET / WORK / THEORY, Association of Internet Researchers (AoIR) International Conference, Maastricht, The Netherlands.

Kahn, P. H., Jr. & Friedman, B. (2002, September). Children, nature, and information technology. Daylong symposium hosted by the Woodland Park Zoo, Seattle, WA.


Technological Nature With Large Displays [top]


Presentations (partial list)

Friedman, B. (2004, January 30 - 31). Privacy in a public place. Keynote address at the WHOLES Conference on A Multiple View of Individual Privacy in a Networked World. Sigtuna, Sweden. (Sponsored by the Swedish Institute of Computer Science.)


Urban Simulation [top]


Presentations (partial list)

Davis, J., Lin, P., Borning, A., & Friedman, B. (2005, April 3 - 4). Designing urban simulation to foster civic engagement: A Value Sensitive Design approach. Paper presented in the Workshop at CHI 2005 Engaging the City: Public Interfaces as Civic Intermediary. Portland, OR.

Borning, A., Friedman, B., & Kahn, P. H., Jr. (2004). Designing for human values in an urban simulation system: Value Sensitive Design and Participatory Design. Presented at the Eighth Biennial Participatory Design Conference, Toronto, Canada, July 2004. [PDF]


Privacy & Informed Consent Online [top]


Presentations (partial list)

Friedman, B. (2001, April 24). Value-Sensitive Design: Cookies, web browsers and informed consent online. Seminar presented to the Department of Computer Science, University of California, Berkeley, CA.

Friedman, B.  (1999, May 16-17).  Informed consent and the design of recommender systems. Paper presented to the workshop on Interacting with Recommender Systems, CHI 99, Pittsburgh, PA.


Network Browser Security and Human Values [top]


Presentations (partial list)

Friedman, B. (2000, April 10). Value-Sensitive Design: Informed consent and network browser security. Talk presented at Ris?, Danish National Research Laboratory, Roskilde, Denmark.

Friedman, B. (2000, April 4). (Panelist). Artificial morality? Non-contractual trust, design, and human and computer interaction.Extended Abstracts of CHI 2000 the Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (pp. 239-240). New York: Association for Computing Machinery.

Nissenbaum, H. (2000, April). Securing trust online: Wisdom or oxymoron? Paper presented at the Conference on a Free Information Ecology in the Digital Environment. New York: New York University School of Law.

Nissenbaum, H. (2000, February). (Panelist). Ethics and information technology. Ninth Annual Meeting of the Association for Practical and Professional Ethics. Washington, D.C.

Friedman, B. (1999, November 11). New directions in Value-sensitive Design: Informed consent, online trust, and the beginnings of a national research agenda. Half-day seminar presented to the Industrial Affiliate Program, Center for the Study of Language and Information, Stanford University, Stanford, CA. This seminar was attended by researchers and management from companies such as Alpine Research of America, AT&T Labs, Eastman Kodak Company, Fidelity Investments, IBM Research, Microsoft Corporation, Motorola, SRI International, and Sun Microsystems.

Friedman, B., & Thomas, J. C. (1999). (Organizer and Panelists).Trust me, I'm accountable: Trust and accountability online. CHI 1999 Extended Abstracts of the Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (p.79-80). New York: Association for Computing Machinery. [PDF]

Nissenbaum. H. (1999, September). Securing trust online. Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen: SWE-Hendrik Muller Seminar (Royal Dutch Academy, The Netherlands).

Nissenbaum, H. (1999, March). Values in the design of computer systems: An approach to the study of information technology and ethics. Keynote talk. First International Workshop for Foundations of Information Ethics. Kyoto, Japan.

Nissenbaum, H. (1999). Issues in computer ethics. Presented at the International Conference on Ethics in Engineering and Computer Science. Case Western Reserve University. Cleveland, OH.


Other [top]


Feldman, E., Kahn, P. H., Jr. & Severson, R. L. (2005, April 5 - 7).  A developmental approach to investigating creativity in children: New methods for analyzing the unusual uses test.  Poster presented at the Biennial Meeting of the Society for Research in Child Development. Atlanta, GA.