Biography
John S. Seberger is an interdisciplinary theorist of information and interaction. Through such lenses as creepiness, alienation, difference, and joy, his work concerns the negotiation and maintenance of historically human values like privacy, agency, and identity alongside rapidly changing sociotechnical infrastructures of daily life. Equally comfortable with quantitative, qualitative, and conceptual methods of inquiry, Seberger conducts work in humanistic and feminist human-computer interaction (HCI) to understand what the human in “human-computer interaction’’ and “human-centered computing” is and may be.
Research Areas
Research Interests
Humanistic Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), Social Informatics, Theories of the Archive, Computational Ubiquity
Academic Distinctions
- PhD in Information and Computer Science, University of California, Irvine (UCI)
- MLIS, Library and Information Science, University of Pittsburgh
- MSc Research Methods in the Psychology of Music, Keele University
- BA Psychology, Kenyon College