Name
Affiliation
Papers
KAY H. CONNELLY
Indiana University Computer Science Department Bloomington IN USA Bloomington IN USA
41
Collaborators
Citations 
PageRank 
111
489
42.61
Referers 
Referees 
References 
1326
858
344
Search Limit
1001000
Title
Citations
PageRank
Year
Challenges, Tensions, and Opportunities in Designing Ecosystems to Support the Management of Complex Health Needs00.342022
Older Adults’ Experiences of Autonomy During COVID-19 Pandemic00.342021
Design for Discordant Chronic Comorbidities (DCCs): A DC $$^3$$ Model00.342021
Can I Take a Break? Facilitating In-Home Respite Care for Family Caregivers of Older Adults.00.342020
HomeSHARE - Implementing Multi-Site Smart Technology Infrastructure.00.342019
Conveying Situational Information to People with Visual Impairments.00.342019
Strategies for Inclusion in the Design of Pervasive Computing for Health and Wellbeing00.342019
Design hotspots for care of discordant chronic comorbidities: patients' perspectives.10.362018
"Be Grateful You Don't Have a Real Disease": Understanding Rare Disease Relationships.40.432017
Leveling the playing field for Visually Impaired using Transport Assistant.00.342017
Investigating the Suitability of the Asynchronous, Remote, Community-based Method for Pregnant and New Mothers.40.572017
A Guide to Using Asynchronous Remote Communities (ARC) for Researching Distributed Populations50.502017
The Future of Pervasive Health.10.362017
Understanding the Physical Safety, Security, and Privacy Concerns of People with Visual Impairments.00.342017
Boosting for Postpartum Depression Prediction20.472017
Addressing Physical Safety, Security, and Privacy for People with Visual Impairments.40.432016
Asynchronous remote communities (ARC) for researching distributed populations10.342016
Ethical considerations in pervasive health research00.342016
Identifying Rare Diseases from Behavioural Data: A Machine Learning Approach00.342016
Evaluation of a Food Portion Size Estimation Interface for a Varying Literacy Population.20.422016
Forget me not: an ambient display to increase communication between partners by enabling feeling expression and increasing awareness00.342016
Rare World: Towards Technology for Rare Diseases180.702015
Limited but satisfied: low SES older adults experiences of aging in place00.342015
Privacy Concerns and Behaviors of People with Visual Impairments180.942015
From checking on to checking in: designing for low socio-economic status older adults120.702014
Privacy concerns in assisted living technologies.10.362014
Understanding the needs of low SES patients with type 2 diabetes20.382013
Consumer engagement in health technologies special interest group00.342013
Text messages for encouraging physical activity Are they effective after the novelty effect wears off?91.172012
Mobile interface design for low-literacy populations241.352012
ScaleMirror: a pervasive device to aid weight analysis10.352011
Enhancing learning: a study of how mobile devices can facilitate sensemaking321.852010
Evaluating Pervasive and Ubiquitous Systems151.492008
Encouraging physical activity in teens Can technology help reduce barriers to physical activity in adolescent girls?445.392008
Exploring evaluation methods for ambient information systems100.552008
Why It's Worth the Hassle: The Value of In-Situ Studies When Designing Ubicomp794.752007
Pride and prejudice: learning how chronically ill people think about food192.902006
Mobile applications that empower people to monitor their personal health181.442006
Reality testing: HCI challenges in non-traditional environments30.582006
When Do We Eat? An Evaluation of Food Items Input into an Electronic Food Monitoring Application313.432006
Fat finger worries: how older and younger users physically interact with PDAs1295.662005