Vicki L. Hanson

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Vicki L. Hanson
File:Vicki l hanson photo 1.png
Born Vicki Lynne Hanson
Indianapolis, IN, US
Nationality American
Fields Computer Science
Institutions University of Dundee
Rochester Institute of Technology
Alma mater University of Colorado
University of Oregon
Doctoral advisor Michael Posner (psychologist)
Known for Human-Computer Interaction
Accessibility
Notable awards Fellow, ACM (2004)
Fellow, British Computer Society (2008)
Fellow, Royal Society of Edinburgh (2013)
ACM SIGCHI Social Impact Award (2008)
ACM SIGACCESS Award for Outstanding Contributions to Computing and Accessibility (2014)
Royal Society, Wolfson Research Merit Award (2009)
Anita Borg Institute, Woman of Vision Award for Social Impact (2013)
Website
staff.computing.dundee.ac.uk/vlh/

Vicki Hanson, FACM, FBCS, FRSE, is an American computer scientist noted for her research on human-computer interaction and accessibility. She is also noted for her leadership in broadening participation in computing. She is currently the vice President of ACM. She has been elected as President for a two-year term beginning July 1, 2016.[1]

Biography

Hanson received a B.A. in Psychology from the University of Colorado in 1974. She received a M.A. in Cognitive Psychology from the University of Oregon in 1976 and a Ph.D in Cognitive Psychology from the University of Oregon in 1978.

She is a Distinguished Professor [2] at the Rochester Institute of Technology within the HCI and Accessibility research groups. She is also Professor and Chair of Inclusive Technologies at the University of Dundee where she leads multiple efforts related to inclusion of older adults and individuals with disabilities. From 1986–2009 she was a Research Staff Member and Manager at IBM’s T. J. Watson Research Center in New York, founding the Accessibility Research Group in 2000.

Hanson was named an ACM Fellow in 2004 ,[3] a Fellow CITP of the British Computer Society in 2008 ,[4] a recipient of the Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award in 2009 ,[5] and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 2013 .[6] She received the ACM SIGCHI Social Impact Award in 2008 ,[7] the Women of Vision ABIE Award for Social Impact in 2013 ,[8] and the ACM SIGACCESS Award for Outstanding Contributions to Computing and Accessibility in 2014 .[9]

Professor Hanson currently serves as the ACM Vice President and as a member of the ACM-W Europe Executive Committee. She is Past Chair of SIGACCESS and was Co-Founder and Editor-in-Chief of ACM Transactions on Accessible Computing. She serves on Fellows Committees for ACM and the Royal Society of Edinburgh and has been active in conference organizing and program committees for ASSETS, CHI, and several other ACM conferences. She has been elected as President for a two-year term beginning July 1, 2016.

Research history

Hanson's interest in supporting disabled populations began at the University of Colorado where she focused on communication disorders, majoring in psychology along with speech pathology and audiology. In graduate school at the University of Oregon [10] , her scope broadened to include psycholinguistics and applied cognitive psychology. These threads converged during her postdoctoral fellowship at the Laboratory for Language and Cognitive Studies at the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California, and later at Haskin's Laboratories in New Haven, Connecticut, where she conducted research on American Sign Language [11] and the acquisition of reading by deaf children and adults. In this work, she demonstrated the surprising degree to which reading success among the profoundly and prelingually deaf was coupled to the existence and use of phonological mental representations, representations that were formed without the benefit of ever having heard spoken language [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] .

Joining the Research staff at IBM's Thomas J. Watson Research Center in 1986, Hanson began developing educational applications for the deaf and others. Her first application, HandsOn [17] [18] , demonstrated how computer technology could provide a bilingual educational experience for deaf children. Combining ASL and English, it allowed a student's skill in ASL to bootstrap the acquisition of skill in English. The technology was, for its time, state of the art (involving an object-oriented application environment, coupled to random-access laser disks, all driven by a simple touch screen user interface) and was deployed at numerous schools for deaf children both in the United States and Canada. It was recognized in 1992 as a National Merit Winner in the Johns Hopkins National Search for Computing to Assist Persons with Disabilities. Recently, it has been rebuilt using streaming Internet video and conventional browser technologies, allowing it to be used by a much larger audience.

In 2000, IBM formed a Worldwide Accessibility Center and Hanson took on the management of the newly formed Accessibility Research Group. A primary output of this effort was Web Accessibility Technology (for Internet Explorer) and accessibilityWorks (for Firefox), browser extensions that allowed people with visual, motor, and cognitive disabilities to modify Web content on the fly to meet their needs [19] . Initially tested with older adults through SeniorNet and other organizations serving older adults, it was subsequently deployed in 26 countries through numerous non-profit organizations. In 2003, the National Disabilities Council named it Product of the Year. In 2004, it received the Best New Ability Research Award from the New Freedom Foundation and the Applied Research da Vinci award from the National Multiple Sclerosis Society. In 2006 it brought IBM recognition as the Goodwill Partner of the Year, and in 2008 it received Lighthouse International’s Corporate Visionary award. In 2011, accessibilityWorks was donated to the Global Inclusive Infrastructure project as a key open source component. Later work included the world's first fully accessible 3D virtual world [20] .

In 2009, Hanson joined the School of Computing at the University of Dundee in Scotland as Professor and Chair of Accessible Technology. Working with Newcastle University, she launched the Social Inclusion Through the Digital Economy (SiDE) project aimed at ensuring that all people, regardless of age or disability, were not left behind as the world became more digitally linked [21] . The success of this effort motivated a broadening of the work in the recently funded BESiDE project, targeting both technology and architectural design aspects of the Built Environment of older adult care homes [22] . With multi-million-pound support from Research Councils UK, Hanson has created a research network to focus on this area. As the global population is aging rapidly, this work has the potential to improve the quality of life for millions of people.

In 2011, Hanson accepted a joint appointment at the Rochester Institute of Technology as a Distinguished Professor where she is building a team to continue research in support of the disabled and older adults. Her leadership of the SiDE and BESiDE projects continues in Scotland and international collaborations are now beginning.

References

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External links