AIST Creative HCI Seminar

At AIST (National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology), we strive to develop technologies that help people unleash their creativity, which should be the prominent role of human beings in the age of AI.

This seminar series will invite bright minds in the Human-Computer Interaction field and cover diverse topics which are directly/indirectly connected to creativity support research. The seminar series is supported by the advisory board of senior and prestigious HCI researchers based in Japan.

[Photo: Jonas Frich]
Jonas Frich

Assistant Professor, Digital Design & Information Studies, Aarhus University

[Photo: Zhicong Lu]
Zhicong Lu

Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Science, City University of Hong Kong

[Photo: Amy Pavel]
Amy Pavel

Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Science, The University of Texas at Austin

[Photo: Xingyu Bruce Liu]
Xingyu Bruce Liu

Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, University of California, Los Angeles

[Photo: Koya Narumi]
Koya Narumi

Project Assistant Professor, Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo

[Photo: Hiromu Yakura]
Hiromu Yakura

University of Tsukuba

[Photo: Motomura Ami]
Motomura Ami

Ochanomizu University

[Photo: Kotaro Hara]
Kotaro Hara

Assistant Professor, School of Computing and Information Systems, Singapore Management University

[Photo: Riku Arakawa]
Riku Arakawa

Human-Computer Interaction Institute, Carnegie Mellon University

[Photo: Manami Nakagawa]
Manami Nakagawa

Dept. of Computer Science, University of Bristol

[Photo: Xavier Lambein]
Xavier Lambein

Artist and programmer

[Photo: Tomoya Matsuura]
Tomoya Matsuura

SoundMaker / Art Media Center, Tokyo University of the Arts

[Photo: Baku Hashmoto]
Baku Hashmoto

Visual artist / INS Studio, AIST

[Photo: Jennifer Jacobs]
Jennifer Jacobs

Assistant Professor, Media Arts and Technology, University of California Santa Barbara

[Photo: Koya Narumi]
Koya Narumi

Project Assistant Professor, Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo

This seminar series is co-organized by Japan ACM SIGCHI Chapter.