Andrés Lucero is an Associate Professor of interaction design at the University of Southern Denmark in Kolding. His recent work at Nokia focused on the design and evaluation of novel interaction techniques for mobile collocated interactions. He has recently co- organized successful workshops on ‘Interactive City Lighting’ and ‘Organic Experiences’ at CHI ’13, and ‘Collaboration Meets Interactive Surfaces’ at ITS ’13.

Danielle Wilde is Associate Professor of Research at Mads Clausen Institute, at SDU Design, in Kolding, Denmark. Her research focuses on embodied creativity, wearable futures and convergence, bringing together textile crafts with interaction design and emerging science to investigate the future of wearable technologies.

Simon Robinson is a Research Officer at Swansea University. His work focuses on the human side of mobile interaction, arguing for heads-up and real world-focused approaches. His recent book (“There’s Not an App for That: Mobile User Experience Design for Life”, with Gary Marsden and Matt Jones) explores how we can create these types of interactions, rather than mobiles that get in the way of everyday life.

Joel Fischer is a Research Fellow at the Mixed Reality Lab at the University of Nottingham. His work has focused on designing mobile group experiences, particularly the role of group notifications and its social implications. He has co-organized related workshops on designing collocated group interactions at ECSCW ’13 and NordiCHI ’14, which has led to developing a design framework for collocated interaction (CSCW ’15).

James Clawson is a Post-Doc in the GVU Center and the School of Interactive Computing at the Georgia Institute of Technology. He is an active mobile HCI researcher, studying how collocated groups of people use mobile devices to augment their face-to-face experiences. He co-organized the first Mobile Collocated Interactions workshop at MobileHCI ’11.

Oscar Tomico is an Assistant Professor of the Designing Quality in Interaction Research Group and part of Wearable Senses at Eindhoven University of Technology. Current projects focus on the textile industry and involve stakeholders during the design process to foster cooperation and reflective practices between participants to frame the design space, collaboration space and reformulate their design opportunity.