Oganizers

Tilman Dingler

is a lecturer at the School of Computing and Information Systems at the University of Melbourne. He builds and investigates cognition-aware systems and technologies that support users' information processing capabilities. Tilman is initiator of the WAHM series, i.e., a four-workshop series on Ubiquitous Technologies for Augmenting the Human Mind.

Benjamin Tag

is a postdoctoral researcher and associate lecturer at the School of Computing and Information Systems at the University of Melbourne His research focuses on the conceptualisation of digital emotion regulation, and investigation of human cognition using biometric sensors and psychological test methods. Benjamin has been a main organizer of the workshop series on Eyewear Computing.

Philipp Lorenz-Spreen

is a network scientist, working at the Center for Adaptive Rationality, who is interested in how and why information is spreading on social media platforms. His current research turns to the question of how the individual choice environments can be changed such that they translate into positive collective effects of quality information distribution.

Andrew W. Vargo

is a research assistant professor at Osaka Prefecture University. His research focuses on the study and creation of collaborative platforms for supporting learning and self-awareness.

Simon Knight

is a senior lecturer at the University of Technology Sydney, Faculty of Transdisciplinary Innovation, where he leads the Transformative Learning research theme, and is Director of the Centre for Research on Learning in a Technological Society. His research investigates the role of technology in learning, particularly focusing on critical thinking and dialogue.

Stephan Lewandowsky

is a cognitive scientist at the University of Bristol. His main research interest relates to how people respond to misinformation and its correction, and why some people reject well-established scientific knowledge.