Panels
Accepted Panels
More-than-human Concepts, Methodologies, and Practices in HCI
Aykut Coşkun, Nazli Cila, Iohanna Nicenboim, Elisa Giaccardi, Laura Forlano, Christopher Frauenberger, Marc Hassenzahl, Clara Mancini, Ron Wakkary
Monday May 2, 14:15 – 15:30, Virtual
Responsible Language Technologies: Foreseeing and Mitigating Harms
Su Lin Blodgett, Q. Vera Liao, Alexandra Olteanu, Rada Mihalcea, Michael Muller, Morgan Klaus Scheuerman, Chenhao Tan, Qian Yang
Tuesday May 3, 9:00 – 10:15, Hybrid, New Orleans Theater B
Participatory Design of AI Systems: Opportunities and Challenges Across Diverse Users, Relationships, and Application Domains
Douglas Zytko, Pamela J. Wisniewski, Shion Guha, Eric P. S. Baumer, Min Kyung Lee
Tuesday May 3, 11:00 – 12:15, Virtual
Alexa, Tell Me a Joke!: “Voice Interfaces are Truly Inclusive”
Jaisie Sin, Cosmin Munteanu, Jenny Waycott, Robin N. Brewer, Sergio Sayago, Amanda Lazar, Astrid Weber
Tuesday May 3, 14:15 – 15:30, Hybrid, New Orleans Theater B
Considerations for Building Solidarity among Academic and Tech Workers: Thinking Through Access, Positionality and Limits to Collective Action
Noopur Raval, Rida Qadri, Richmond Y. Wong, Tamara Kneese, Alex Hanna
Tuesday May 3, 14:15-15:30, Virtual
Fabricate It or Render It? Digital Fabrication vs. Virtual Reality for Creating Objects Instantly
Mustafa Doga Dogan, Patrick Baudisch, Hrvoje Benko, Michael Nebeling, Huaishu Peng, Valkyrie Savage, Stefanie Mueller
Tuesday May 3, 16:15 – 17:30, Hybrid, New Orleans Theater B
Platformisation of Digital Financial Services (DFS): The Journey of DFS in the Global North and Global South
Pranjal Jain, Alex Jordan Blandin, Jacki O’Neill, Mark Perry, Samia Ibtasam, Suleman Shahid, Beni Chugh, David Sullivan, Heloisa Candello, James Pomeroy, Rajat Jain, Robert Dowd, Matt Roach, Matt Jones
Wednesday May 4, 9:00 – 10:15, Hybrid, New Orleans Theater B
Anti-Racism in Action: A Speculative Design Approach to Reimagining SIGCHI
Bryan Dosono, Ihudiya Finda Ogbonnaya-Ogburu, Yolanda A. Rankin, Angela D. R. Smith, Kentaro Toyama
Wednesday May 4, 14:15 – 15:30, Hybrid, New Orleans Theater B
What We Talk About When We Talk About Human-Computer Integration
Nathan Semertzidis, Zoe Xiao Fang, Pedro Lopes, Kai Kunze, Paul Pangaro, Florian Floyd Mueller, Pattie Maes
Wednesday May 4, 14:15 – 15:30, Virtual
Telelife: A Vision of Remote Living in 2035
Kenan Bektas, Jeeeun Kim, Huaishu Peng, Kiyoshi Kiyokawa, Anthony Steed, Tobias Höllerer, Nataliya Kosmyna, Misha Sra, Jason Orlosky, Kaan Akşit
Thursday May 5, 9:00 – 10:15, Virtual
Quick Facts
CHI 2022 is structured as a Hybrid-Onsite full conference from April 30–May 5 in New Orleans, LA.
Important Dates
All times are in Anywhere on Earth (AoE) time zone. When the deadline is day D, the last time to submit is when D ends AoE. Check your local time in AoE.
- Submission deadline: December 16, 2021
- Notification deadline: January 31, 2022
- e-rights completion deadline: February 7, 2022
- initial upload to TAPS deadline: February 14, 2022
- publication-ready deadline: February 28, 2022
Submission Details
- Online submission: PCS Submission System
- Template: ACM Master Article Submission Templates (single column)
- Submission format: maximum 7-page proposal, including abstract and references
- Submissions are not anonymous and should include all author names, affiliations, and contact information.
Selection Process
Chairs
Oliver Haimson, Norman Makoto Su, Kathryn Ringland
panels@chi2022.acm.org
After the Conference
Accepted panel proposals will be published as Extended Abstracts in the ACM Digital Library.
Message from the Panels Chairs
Panels are an interactive, discussion oriented forum in which audience members are participants in the discussion. Organizers are strongly encouraged to propose topics likely to be of broad interest in the CHI community and interactive sessions that will engage both the panelists and the audience in creative ways. Panels should not be a series of short talks, akin to a papers session.
Panels differ from Papers in that panels do not need to contain original research. They differ from other venues like Demonstrations in that they do not need to present a system or service. Panels are distinctive in their focus on: 1) discussing topics of interest to the CHI community; 2) focusing on audience interaction with the panelists.
Hot Topics
A key feature of Panels is the importance of the issue in our community. The following list is a few examples that we have considered may be exciting for CHI 2022, but look forward to receiving proposals based on your ideas, too.
- Lessons Learned from Covid-19’s Impact on HCI Research, Practice, and Community
- Race, Gender, Class, Disability, Culture, and Intersectionality in HCI
- Participatory Design and Community-Based Participatory Research Methods
- Augmented Reality / Virtual Reality / Extended Reality Futures
- Researcher Positionality in HCI Research and CHI Papers
- Ethical and Value-Based approaches to HCI Research and Design
- HCI and AI: Connections, Challenges, and Next Steps
- Building Solidarity among Academic and Tech Workers
A Note on Terminology
- Organizer: Coordinates and organizes the panel and the submission and invites moderators and panelists. can also be a moderator or a panelist.
- Moderator: Moderates the panel. Might also be an organizer, but not necessarily.
- Panelist: Speaks / discusses on the panel. Might also be an organizer, but not necessarily.
- Author: Everyone listed on the submission, including all moderators and panelists (each of whom may also be an organizer).
Panel Format
Panels are held in their own 60-minute session at the conference. For CHI 2022, panels can be either hybrid (held in-person with ability for panelists and attendees to participate virtually) or fully virtual.
In previous conferences, highly successful panels had the following characteristics:
- The presence of a strong moderator who was able to facilitate, help people express their opinions as well as limit off-topic discussions.
- Frame the discussion as a debate with a clear question.
- Pick panelists with naturally opposing viewpoints, positions and backgrounds.
- Ensure that panelists are prepped and debriefed for the session.
- Have clear strategies for involving the audience in discussions.
Effective panels have been designed in many forms and formats. For example, a panel session may include a group of experts who debate a topic or theme, enact some aspect of their expertise, or reflect on and compare their diverse experiences. Panels must include involvement from the audience – such as through questions and answers, voting or critique of the experts’ presentations, discussion, using web-based or mobile technologies, use of the physical room, or other mechanisms – and your proposal should clearly explain how you would involve the audience and encourage interactivity. Panels can take the form of a traditional panel of discussants with a moderator, a fireside chat in which an individual gets interviewed by a moderator, a roundtable in which the moderator(s) pose questions to the audience for discussion, a town hall session, or another proposed format. While we encourage discussions that provide multiple perspectives and controversy, rancor or ad hominem attacks are not professional and must be avoided.
We highly encourage panel organizers to minimize the number of panelists to provide for fruitful and cohesive discussion. The best panels tend to have fewer panelists and more interaction with the audience. We also encourage debate and discussion; we will not accept panels where time is primarily allocated to pre-prepared presentations by panel members.
It is important to us that panels represent the diversity of CHI’s community, including diversity of gender, experience, national origin, native language, race, ethnicity, and sexual identity. Panels that have all representatives from one part of the globe or one gender or race may be less favorably considered. Additionally, a diversity of ideas is strongly encouraged. Panels can cover issues of pragmatic or applied importance in addition to research issues. Panels are a great place to sound some of the major debates of the field, whether about how we develop scholarly knowledge or teach and apply that knowledge.
Preparing and Submitting Your Panel
Panel Proposal Format
A maximum 7-page proposal (including abstract and references) in the ACM Master Article Submission Templates (single column) submitted as a single PDF file. In the LaTeX format, use \documentclass[manuscript]{acmart}. Use of different templates or formats may result in desk reject.
The panel proposal should include:
- The panel’s title
- The names and affiliations of 1-3 organizers/moderators and up to 5 additional panelists.
- You may also list panelists who have been invited but have not yet confirmed. Nonetheless, we encourage organizers to get confirmation from as many panelists as possible prior to submission.
- All panelists must be confirmed at the time of publication ready source files submission, with no exceptions. All panelists must be listed as authors in the proposal and in the PCS Submission System for scheduling reasons, and all authors must be panelists of panel moderator(s), with no exceptions.
- You must list why these moderators and panelists were selected, and what qualifications they bring.
- We recommend a maximum of 1-3 organizers/moderators and 5 additional panelists. If a panel requires more than 5 panelists (e.g., to contribute to CHI’s inclusion and equity goals), the proposal must provide rationale.
- A summary of the main topic(s) to be presented, debated, discussed, enacted; any lessons or experiences you hope to convey in the session; as well as contrasting or controversial perspectives on the topic(s).
- A description of the proposed panel’s format (hybrid of fully virtual), and how the panel organizers will ensure discussion and interactivity in a hybrid or virtual format. Describe how you will run the panel, the organizers’/panelists’/moderators’ roles, and any special logistical needs (e.g., special seating or A/V, audience size limitations, involvement of student volunteers, accessibility requirements, language-support requests, etc.).
- Regardless of the topic, all panel proposals must include a plan for interactivity and engaging audience members.
- You need to persuade the chairs that your panel will be exciting, enjoyable, well-attended, and relevant to the CHI community.
- Connection to CHI 2022’s theme (optional): Cultivating Communities
Your proposal must stand alone; readers must be able to get something out of the proposal even if they do not attend the panel session.
Submissions should not contain sensitive, private, or proprietary information that cannot be disclosed at publication time. Submissions should NOT be anonymous. However, confidentiality of submissions will be maintained during the review process. All rejected submissions will be kept confidential. All submitted materials for accepted submissions will be kept confidential until the start of the conference, with the exception of title and author information which will be published on the website prior to the conference.
Authors are strongly encouraged to work on improving the accessibility of their submissions, using recommendations found in the Guide to an Accessible Submission. If you have any questions or concerns about creating accessible submissions, please contact the Accessibility Chairs at accessibility@chi2022.acm.org.
Additional PDF Accessibility Advice
- A trial version of Adobe Acrobat Pro is available, and it will let you tag papers (https://www.adobe.com/acrobat/free-trial-download.html).
- Speak to your co-authors to see if they have the resources to help make your paper accessible. Learning how to do PDF tagging will benefit our community in the long run.
- If the above steps are not possible, you can send the PDF to the Accessibility Chairs at accessibility@chi2022.acm.org. However, please refrain from sending us your PDF too early. We want to reduce repeated efforts and if your paper needs to go through TAPS again, then it will need to be retagged. Send the PDF after you are confident no more corrections will need to be made.
Selection Process
Panels will have a mix of invited and curated content. All proposals submitted through this open call will be Curated. We will determine which panels are accepted on the basis of the review criteria below, and may decide to bring in outside experts for further review. There is no mechanism for author response in the panel review process, and decisions are final. In some special cases, the Panels Chairs may request changes to the panel proposal as a condition of its acceptance (“conditional accept”). We encourage panel organizers to respond rapidly to suggestions from the Panels Chairs as part of the conditional accept and to engage in constructive dialog to produce the best overall panel experience for the conference.
Authors of accepted panels will receive instructions on how to prepare and submit the publication ready source files for their panel. These will be due on the publication-ready deadline.
Review Criteria
Panels present ideas that are novel, controversial, or engaging, and that inspire the audience to respond and further elaborate. We aim to select a balance of panels to appeal to the wide variety of CHI attendees. The review criteria will consider the extent to which the session includes:
- One or more topics likely to evoke a lively response from the CHI attendees
- Invited panelists who will contribute unique perspectives, content, or other interactive content to the session
- A well-organized and feasible session plan, particularly for a hybrid or fully virtual format
- A novel and creative session plan that emphasizes audience interaction
- Useful and interesting contributions to HCI
- Appropriate levels of diversity in panelist selection
- Likely to draw a large audience
- Content that is unlikely to be seen by CHI audiences elsewhere in the conference
At the Conference
Panels will be included in the conference program, and will have a 60-minute slot in parallel with other sessions. Session organizers are strongly advised to meet with their invited panelists prior to their session to ensure a coordinated effort. If any special logistics are involved (e.g., seating, student volunteers, unique technological setup), organizers should alert the Panels Chairs (panels@chi2022.acm.org).
Panel organizers are also reminded that panelists invited to speak/present at the session are responsible for their conference registration fees. There are one day registrations available for panelists who do not wish to attend the entire conference.
After the Conference
Panels can often be a jumping-off point for future work. Previous panels have become the starting point for special issues of journals or books, or follow-up panels, papers, workshops, SIG meetings or Communities. We encourage panel organizers to think about their panel’s potential to inform future work or public audiences. Accepted panel abstracts will be distributed in the CHI Conference Extended Abstracts and in the ACM Digital Library, where they will remain accessible to thousands of researchers and practitioners worldwide. Some of these discussions may also be recorded at the conference and distributed by the ACM.
Contact Email
If, when submitting to this venue, you detect a conflict of interest with one of its program committee members, contact the chairs. Should you have a conflict with the venue chairs themselves, contact the technical program chairs (tpc@chi2022.acm.org).