About
I lead the Collaborative Intelligence group at Microsoft Research in Cambridge. As a group, we focus on how rapidly advancing ML-powered experiences can be designed in ways that augment and develop human capability, enable interconnectedness and collaboration, and support diverse needs and ways of working.
My key areas of interest are human-AI collaboration, content reuse and remix, and cross-application workflows. While knowledge work is the primary focus for my research, I am also interested in front-line work. Whilst at Microsoft I have also studied digital possessions (you can find out more by watching my TEDx talk), web use, technology for older adults, wearable cameras, messaging devices, and situated displays. I have a PhD in Psychology from the University of York and an MSc in Human-Centred Computing Systems from the University of Sussex. I was a Lecturer at UCL before joining Microsoft in 2007.
News:
- Building Knowledge through Action: Considerations for Machine Learning in the Workplace, co-authored with Denise Wilkins, has been published in ToCHI and will be presented at CHI 2024.
- Content Repurposing in Knowledge Work: Implications for Generative AI, co-authored with Chris Elsden, Hanna Moser, and Amid Ayobi, was presented at the CHI 2023 Workshop on Generative AI and HCI.
- Collaboration in relation to Human-AI Systems: Status, Trends, and Impact, first authored by António Correia, was presented at IEEE BigData 2023.