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@article{dingler2016ieee,
 abstract = {The recent rise of lifelogging technologies and wearable computing gadgets lets us
create comprehensive records of our daily lives. Data collected by wearable sensors
is often cumbersome to access and poorly presented. To make such digital personal
data accessible, the authors propose a system of memory displays that aim to support
human memory. This article reports on a series of explorative studies designed to
understand the requirements for peripheral memory displays deployed in people's homes
and the displays' utility as memory aids. Thereby, the authors explore different display
locations, content types, presentation modalities, and two memory-support approaches:
priming and retrospective information summaries. Based on initial findings from an
online survey, student design task, and explorative system deployment, they discuss
different design parameters and the feasibility of memory displays.},
 address = {USA},
 author = {Dingler, Tilman and Wahju, Philipp and Knierim, Pascal and Schmidt, Albrecht},
 doi = {10.1109/MITP.2016.106},
 issn = {1520-9202},
 issue_date = {November 2016},
 journal = {IT Professional},
 month = {nov},
 number = {6},
 numpages = {8},
 pages = {42–49},
 publisher = {IEEE Educational Activities Department},
 title = {Memory Support through In-Home Display Deployment},
 url = {https://www.unibw.de/usable-security-and-privacy/publikationen/pdf/dingler2016ieee.pdf},
 volume = {18},
 year = {2016}
}

