mark w. newman

School of Information
University of Michigan
2222 SI North
1075 Beal Ave.
Ann Arbor, MI 48104
+1 734 764 0020

[professional] mwnewman AT umich DOT edu
[unprofessional] mark AT newmantaylor DOT com

In Brief

I am an assistant professor in the School of Information at the University of Michigan. My research interests lie broadly in the field of human-computer interaction, and particularly in the areas of ubiquitous computing and end-user programming. Prior to the Summer of 2007, I was a research scientist at the Palo Alto Research Center (PARC, formerly known as Xerox PARC) and a doctoral candidate in Computer Science at UC Berkeley.

Will the real "Mark Newman" please stand up?

Before you contact me, be aware that there's another Mark Newman at the University of Michigan. Mark E. J. Newman is in the physics dept. and does work in complex systems and network analysis (in the sense of graph theory, not TCP/IP). I'm the one that does HCI and ubiquitous computing reasearch. We're both interested in the social world, thus increasing the likelihood of confusion, but I tend to avoid the really hard math. Also, I've never made an election map, even though I've been complimented on the other Mark Newman's maps a number of times now.

 

Recent News

  • Want a free usability evaluation? SI 622 will be offered in Winter 2010 and I am seeking projects. For more information or to suggest your application, website, or device, get more information.
  • Are you wondering about the SI programming requirement? All your questions are answered.
  • The Talking Points project will be working with E. Royster Harper, U-M's Vice President for Student Affairs to deploy Talking Points in the Michigan Union and outdoors throughout Central Campus. Be sure to check out our video that was featured on the umich.edu home page.
  • Mark Ackerman and I have received a grant from NSF for a project entitled "Collaborative Configuration: Supporting End-User Control of Complex Computing." We're seeking PhD students and Postdocs for Fall 2011!