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Gregory D. Abowd
Associate Professor, IIC Division, College of Computing
12:00 Noon on Thursday, January 25, 2007
Centergy Building, Hodges Room 335
In the Fall of 1999, my wife and I learned that our son, Aidan, age 2,
had been diagnosed with autism. In the summer of 2003, our second son,
Blaise, was also diagnosed with autism, at the age of 3. The CDC
estimates that the incidence of autism in the U.S. is 1 in 166, so my
wife and I are not alone in having to come to grips with the everyday
struggles of this perplexing neurological developmental disability.
Since I prescribe to the research philosophy of "scratching your own
itch", it is no surprise that I have looked for ways to have my research
in ubiquitous computing address the challenges of those impacted by
autism. My goal is not to use technology to "cure" autism, but to have
it play a vital role in increasing our understanding of that unique
human condition and to have it ease the everyday struggles for those who
deal with it. In this talk, I will give an overview of the research
trajectory of a growing community of GVU researchers who are using this
real-world health challenge to drive a human-centered research agenda.
I will summarize four years of research and give a glimpse of what I
think are the important challenges for the next four years, and why I
think computer scientists are an important part of the solution.
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