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Jo Vermeulen

Researcher at Aarhus University

Publications -  76
Citations -  2410

Jo Vermeulen is an academic researcher from Aarhus University. The author has contributed to research in topics: User interface & Situated. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 71 publications receiving 1763 citations. Previous affiliations of Jo Vermeulen include University of Calgary & University of Birmingham.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Trends and Trajectories for Explainable, Accountable and Intelligible Systems: An HCI Research Agenda

TL;DR: This work investigates how HCI researchers can help to develop accountable systems by performing a literature analysis of 289 core papers on explanations and explaina-ble systems, as well as 12,412 citing papers.
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My Phone and Me: Understanding People's Receptivity to Mobile Notifications

TL;DR: It is found that even a notification that contains important or useful content can cause disruption, and the substantial role of the psychological traits of the individuals on the response time and the disruption perceived from a notification is observed.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

From today's augmented houses to tomorrow's smart homes: new directions for home automation research

TL;DR: A discussion of ongoing and emerging challenges, namely challenges for meaningful technologies, complex domestic spaces, and human-home collaboration, and promising directions for the field are provided.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Evaluation Strategies for HCI Toolkit Research

TL;DR: An analysis of 68 published toolkit papers provides an overview of, reflection on, and discussion of evaluation methods for toolkit contributions, and identifies and discusses the value of four toolkit evaluation strategies, including the associated techniques that each employs.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Dark patterns in proxemic interactions: a critical perspective

TL;DR: A critical perspective on proxemic interactions in the form of dark patterns: ways proxies can be misused is offered and several root problems that underlie these patterns are identified and potential solutions that could lower their harmfulness are discussed.