Panel Proceedings
Watch the videos and slides of our panelists' remarks, or read the transcripts of each lecture.
Panel Members
Hiroshi Ishii, Maurizio Seracini, Paolo Galluzzi, Sergio Dulio, Fernanda Viegas and Benjamin Mako Hill
Organizers
Matthew Hockenberry and Leonardo Bonanni
Florence
A Professor of Media Arts and Sciences at the MIT Media Lab, Ishii's research focuses upon the design of seamless interfaces between humans, digital information, and the physical environment.

Hiroshi Ishii's research focuses upon the design of seamless interfaces between humans, digital information, and the physical environment.
Hiroshi Ishii is a tenured Associate Professor of Media Arts and Sciences, at the MIT Media Lab. He joined the MIT Media Laboratory in October 1995, and founded the Tangible Media Group to pursue a new vision of Human Computer Interaction (HCI): "Tangible Bits." His team seeks to change the "painted bits" of GUIs to "tangible bits" by giving physical form to digital information and computation.
Ishii and his students have presented their vision of "Tangible Bits" at a variety of academic, industrial design, and media art venues including ACM SIGCHI, ACM SIGGRAPH, Industrial Design Society of America, and Ars Electronica, emphasizing that the development of tangible interfaces requires the rigor of both scientific and artistic review. A display of many of the group's projects took place in "Tangible Bits" exhibition at the NTT InterCommunication Center (ICC) in Tokyo in summer 2000. A new, two-year-long exhibition "Get in Touch" that features the Tangible Media group's work opened at Ars Electronica Center (Linz, Austria) in September 2001.
Since July 2002, he has co-directed the Thing That Think Consortium at the MIT Media Lab.
He served as an Associate Editor of ACM TOCHI (Transactions on Computer Human Interactions) and ACM TOIS (Transactions on Office Information Systems). He also serves as a program committee member of many international conferences including ACM CHI, CSCW, UIST, SIGGRAPH, Multimedia, Interact, ISMAR, and ECSCW. He received B. E. degree in electronic engineering, M. E. and Ph. D. degrees in computer engineering from Hokkaido University, Japan, in 1978, 1980 and 1992, respectively. He was born in Tokyo in 1956, and started to play with PDA (Personal Digital Assistant) in 1958.
