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Hannah Murphy’19 and Chloe Blazey’19 receive CRA-CREU funding for their research on Coordinated Mobile Crowdsensing

Congratulations for Hannah and Chloe!

“CREU is an undergraduate research program that provides research stipends to teams of students working on research projects under the guidance of a mentor at their home institutions. Students supported by CREU collaborate with each other and with their mentors during the academic year and, in some cases, the following summer.”

Susan Lange joins CS and the Science Center office

The CS department is excited to welcome Susan Lange as our new administrative assistant.  Susan is splitting her time between keeping CS in motion and keeping the whole building in motion as Science Center Office Manager.  Susan has been at Wellesley nearly 9 years, first in the Africana Studies department and more recently in the Provost’s Office.  Stop by Susan’s desk in the minifocus to introduce yourself and welcome her!

Wellesley CS News

This Wellesley CS news blog aims to carry on the Wellesley CS Department’s newsletter series in a state-of-the-art turn-of-the-millennium format. Follow along for old news (since Winter 2016) and new news alike.

Wellesley Daily Shot features HCI Lab’s HoloMuse

The Wellesley Daily Shot recently featured HoloMuse, a virtual reality museum application developed in the Wellesley HCI Lab with Orit Shaer.

Three new faculty join Wellesley CS

Wellesley CS is delighted to welcome three new faculty members to the department for Fall 2017.

Assistant Professor Ada Lerner studies computer security and privacy, especially in interaction with social systems, the law, and human needs.  They combine low-level measurement studies and systems building projects with high-level human subjects work in order to design and build tools that solve human problems, with an eye especially for needs of underprivileged groups. Ada’s recent work explored the security and privacy needs of journalists building and evaluating Confidante, a usable encrypted email system.  Ada joins us from the University of Washington in Seattle, where they recently received their PhD.  Ada is teaching CS 230 this fall. Come introduce yourself to Ada in SCI E120!

Assistant Professor Catherine Grevet Delcourt ’09 prototypes social systems to study how people relate to each other through social technologies.  She uses the lenses of human-computer interaction and social computing to develop novel prototyping methods for social systems research and to explore the role of social media in political polarization, identity and anonymity in online conversations, personal information management, and personal informatics.  Catherine, a Wellesley alum, returns to join us via PhD work at Georgia Tech and research on social systems at Yik Yak.  She is teaching CS 115 this fall. Stop by to meet Catherine in SCI E104!

Hess Fellow Cibele Freire is a theoretical computer scientist whose research focuses on computational complexity and the theoretical foundations of databases. Her recent work has characterized several classes of database queries with respect to the notion of “resilience” — quantifying the minimal database changes required to cause a query to return different results. Cibele’s work has applications in efficiently updating database views and in explaining query results.  Cibele joins us from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, where she conducted her PhD work.  She is teaching CS 235 this fall.  Come meet Cibele in SCI S160!

Please join us in extending a warm welcome to Ada, Catherine, and Cibele!

Daily Shot features Eni Mustafaraj’s research on combating fake news

Eni Mustafaraj’s research on tracking and combating online misinformation was featured in the Wellesley Daily Shot: Why Are We Still Falling for “Fake News”?

Christine Bassem selected for inaugural ACM Future of Computing Academy

In April, Wellesley CS Lecturer Christine Bassem was selected in a highly competitive process as a member of the inaugural class of the new ACM Future of Computing Academy.  Christine and fellow ACM-FCA members traveled to San Francisco in June to join Turing Award winners and others for the 50th anniversary of the ACM Turing Award.  The ACM-FCA members will take a prominent role in shaping the future of the ACM and the broader computing field, building connections between academia and industry.

Congratulations to Christine on this well-earned honor!

CS Summer Research 2017

Several CS students participated in this year’s summer research program. Khonzoda Umarova ’20 and Emma Lurie ’19 won the best CS/Math poster prize for their work, “Stop falling for fake news: Three Easy Steps,” advised by Eni Mustafaraj.  Emma was interviewed for a front page Daily Shot article.

Faculty Goodbyes

Three members of the Wellesley CS faculty moved on to new positions this summer.

Susan Buck, Instructor in the Science Laboratory, web programming expert, instructor at the Harvard Extension School, and co-founder of the Women’s Coding Collective among a wealth of other things, joined the department in Fall 2014 and was instrumental in developing successful infrastructure and pedagogy in the popular CS 110 and CS 111 courses for three years.  The 2017 senior class rated her as “single-handedly fixing the CS pipeline.”  Susan is now expanding her ongoing pedagogical and development work at the other Boston-area institutions.

Sravana Reddy, Hess Fellow and natural language researcher, joined the department in Fall 2015 and introduced popular (and highly over-enrolled!) courses on natural language processing and machine learning.  Sravana’s research recently investigated gender (and its obfuscation) in writing on social media.  She was also a regular member of the CS 111 team, where she led development of Otter Inspector, a user-facing testing tool for CS 111 programming assignments that has now been used by multiple new crops of CS 111 students.  Sravana continues her work in natural language processing, now at Spotify.

Anna Loparev ’10, Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the HCI Lab, joined the department in Spring 2016 and made countless contributions to the research output of the HCI Lab, including leading the TangiBac research project creating novel playful interactions that engage young children in bio-design activities. The fun and dynamic interfaces she created were presented at multiple venues including the Tech Museum of Innovation, the New England Science Museum, and the TEI conference in Japan. Anna also taught CS110 and CS231, an enormous help to the department in times of high enrollment demand and tight staffing.  Anna is now leading user interface development for the flagship product at Waters Corporation, a major scientific instrumentation company.

Fortunately, our colleagues remain Boston-area neighbors.  Stay in touch, and best wishes beyond Wellesley!

Ashley DeFlumere tends goal for Ireland in 2017 Women’s Lacrosse World Cup

Wellesley CS Lecturer Ashley DeFlumere (#28) played goalkeeper for Ireland in the 2017 Women’s Lacrosse World Cup.  Go Ashley!  This fall she’ll be back teaching CS 240 and leading our peer mentoring program, hopefully with fewer fast-moving projectiles to stop.

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