Andreas Riener

is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Institute of Pervasive Computing at the University of Linz (Austria). He has more than 50 refereed publications in the broader field of (implicit) human-computer interaction and context-aware computing. His core competence and current research focus is driver vital state recognition from embedded sensors, multimodal sensor and actuator systems, context-sensitive data processing/context-aware computing and implicit interaction influencing the driver-vehicle interaction loop. Andreas is and has been engaged in several EU- and industrial-funded research projects. Andreas is member of the Austrian Computer Society (OCG) and IEEE Member.

Myounghoon "Philart" Jeon

is an assistant professor in the Department of Cognitive and Learning Sciences at Michigan Tech. His research areas encompass auditory displays, affective computing, assistive technology, and automotive interface design. His research has yielded around 60 publications across various journals and conference proceedings. He received his PhD from Georgia Tech in 2012. His dissertation focused on the design of in-vehicle emotion regulation interfaces using auditory displays. Previously, he worked at LG Electronics and was responsible for all of their automotive UIs & sound designs.

Andrea Gaggioli

is currently researcher at the Department of Psychology at Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore od Milan, Italy. For over 10 years, Andrea Gaggioli has been focusing on the intersection between psychology, neuroscience and emerging technologies. This effort has lead to the foundation of a new research area - Positive Technology - which aims at investigating how new technologies can be used to promote mental and physical wellbeing.

Anind Dey

is an Associate Professor in the Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) Institute at Carnegie Mellon University. His research interests include ubiquitous computing and context-aware computing, user-interface software and technology, and end-user programming.