AHCI RESEARCH GROUP
Publications
Papers published in international journals,
proceedings of conferences, workshops and books.
OUR RESEARCH
Scientific Publications
How to
Here you can find the complete list of our publications.
You can use the tag cloud to select only the papers dealing with specific research topics.
You can expand the Abstract, Links and BibTex record for each paper.
You can use the tag cloud to select only the papers dealing with specific research topics.
You can expand the Abstract, Links and BibTex record for each paper.
2024
Jones, D.; Gračanin, D.; Azab, M.
Augmented Reality Research: Benefit or Detriment for Neurodiverse People Proceedings Article
In: U., Eck; M., Sra; J., Stefanucci; M., Sugimoto; M., Tatzgern; I., Williams (Ed.): Proc. - IEEE Int. Symp. Mixed Augment. Real. Adjunct, ISMAR-Adjunct, pp. 26–28, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., 2024, ISBN: 979-833150691-9 (ISBN).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Anonymity, Attention Deficit, Augmented Reality, Benefit/risk, Cyber Attack, Cyber attacks, Cyber Defense, Cyber-attacks, Cyber-defense, Language Model, Model training, Potential risks, Privacy invasions, Quality of life, Training data
@inproceedings{jones_augmented_2024,
title = {Augmented Reality Research: Benefit or Detriment for Neurodiverse People},
author = {D. Jones and D. Gračanin and M. Azab},
editor = {Eck U. and Sra M. and Stefanucci J. and Sugimoto M. and Tatzgern M. and Williams I.},
url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85214361441&doi=10.1109%2fISMAR-Adjunct64951.2024.00015&partnerID=40&md5=c2e684986face0f49335d711fecf58c2},
doi = {10.1109/ISMAR-Adjunct64951.2024.00015},
isbn = {979-833150691-9 (ISBN)},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
booktitle = {Proc. - IEEE Int. Symp. Mixed Augment. Real. Adjunct, ISMAR-Adjunct},
pages = {26–28},
publisher = {Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.},
abstract = {The intersection of technology and innovation has always been a double-edged sword for humanity, offering both profound benefits and potential risks. This paper examines the positive and negative impacts of augmented reality (AR) and generative artificial intelligence (GAI) on neurodiverse users (NDU). While AR, coupled with large language models (LLM), has the potential to revolutionize the diagnosis and training environments for NDUs, inherent biases in LLM training data, which predominantly reflects neurotypical user (NTU) content, pose significant risks. These biases can result in environments and interactions that are less accessible and potentially harmful to NDUs. The paper explores the implications of these biases, including the possibility of privacy invasion and the misuse of technology for diagnosing undiagnosed NDUs, leading to severe personal and professional consequences. The study advocates for industry-wide collaboration to mitigate these biases, develop NDU-specific datasets, and create secure AR frameworks that safeguard the neurodiverse population while enhancing their quality of life. © 2024 IEEE.},
keywords = {Anonymity, Attention Deficit, Augmented Reality, Benefit/risk, Cyber Attack, Cyber attacks, Cyber Defense, Cyber-attacks, Cyber-defense, Language Model, Model training, Potential risks, Privacy invasions, Quality of life, Training data},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
The intersection of technology and innovation has always been a double-edged sword for humanity, offering both profound benefits and potential risks. This paper examines the positive and negative impacts of augmented reality (AR) and generative artificial intelligence (GAI) on neurodiverse users (NDU). While AR, coupled with large language models (LLM), has the potential to revolutionize the diagnosis and training environments for NDUs, inherent biases in LLM training data, which predominantly reflects neurotypical user (NTU) content, pose significant risks. These biases can result in environments and interactions that are less accessible and potentially harmful to NDUs. The paper explores the implications of these biases, including the possibility of privacy invasion and the misuse of technology for diagnosing undiagnosed NDUs, leading to severe personal and professional consequences. The study advocates for industry-wide collaboration to mitigate these biases, develop NDU-specific datasets, and create secure AR frameworks that safeguard the neurodiverse population while enhancing their quality of life. © 2024 IEEE.