Kori Marie Inkpen (also published as Kori Inkpen Quinn) is a Canadian computer scientist specializing in human-computer interaction at Microsoft Research.[1] A consistent theme of her research has been the interaction of children with computers.[2]
Inkpen is a 1992 graduate of Dalhousie University,[3] and completed her Ph.D. in 1997 at the University of British Columbia (UBC).[1] At UBC, she credits Maria Klawe and a project led by Klawe on educational electronic games for sparking her interest in human-computer interaction and encouraging her to continue in academic computer science.[2] Her dissertation, Adapting the Human-Computer Interface to Support Collaborative Learning Environments, was jointly supervised by Klawe and Kellogg S. Booth.[4]
After postdoctoral research at the University of Washington,[3] she was a faculty member at Simon Fraser University from 1998 to 2001 and at Dalhousie University from 2001 to 2007 before joining Microsoft in 2008.[1]
In 2017 the Canadian Human-Computer Communications Society gave her their CHCCS/SCDHM Achievement Award "for her many contributions to the field of human-computer interaction, especially her work on collaboration technologies".[3]
References
edit- ^ a b c Kori Inkpen, Senior Principal Researcher, Microsoft Research, retrieved 2019-09-19
- ^ a b Inkpen, Kori (2017), "A Conversation with the CHCCS 2017 Achievement Award Winner", Proceedings of Graphics Interface 2017, vol. Edmonton, Canadian Human-Computer Communications Society, pp. 1–7, doi:10.20380/gi2017.01
- ^ a b c "CHCCS/SCDHM Achievement Award: Kori Inkpen, Achievement Award 2017", Graphics Interface: Conference on Graphics, Visualization & HCI, retrieved 2019-09-19
- ^ Kori Inkpen at the Mathematics Genealogy Project