Updates

June 2021

I am starting a new HCI research group at the Max Planck Institute for Informatics called sensorimotor interaction. We will be conducting research on tactile and kinesthetic perception, sensory augmentation and on-body systems. I am looking for PhD students and PostDocs to join me (you can find the call on the group website).

June 2020

I will be serving in the Program Comittee for CHI2021. I will also be reprising my role as Program Chair for AHs2021.

May 2020

My PhD thesis was awarded the SIGCHI Outstanding Dissertation Award. I am flattered and honoured and Proud. I'm honoured to be a SIGCHI Award recepient next to the liks of my supervisor, Kasper Hornbæk, who was induced into the CHI-Acadamy.
I was also part of a last-minute effort to switch the Augmented Humans 2020 conference to an online model. A big shout out especially to Bo Zhou and Thomas Kosch as well as all the others who made it happen. Special thanks also to Stelarc for his support.

February 2020

This is the year of committee service for me. I am currently program chair for Augmented Humans 2020 in Kaiserslautern. I’m serving on the program comittee for both TEI 2020 and UIST 2020. I will also be acting as Workshop Chair for TEI 2021 in Salzburg.

July 2019

I succesfully defended my thesis “Shaping Material Experiences — Designing Vibrotactile Feedback for Active Perception” and have just started as a Post-Doc at the HCI Group of Saarland University. I also served on the Program Comittee of Augmented Human’19.

August 2018

I’m currently acting as a Program Committee member for TEI 2019.

There appears to be a recognition amongst various HCI researchers that we must actively address post-human visions of human-computer fusion. I was invited to the Dagstuhl on “On-Body Interaction: Embodied Cognition Meets Sensor/Actuator Engineering to Design New Interfaces” which discussed strategies of how such fusion might be achieved, and what they might mean for research and for society at large. I was also invited to a second and very similar Dagstuhl event titles “Human-Computer Integration” which felt very similar. Unlike the first event I attended this one focused much more on the role of agency in such systems.

Both events were a blast, and I felt honored to spend prolonged time with such amazing groups of people.

May 2018

I presented work on the perception of vibrotactile information at CHI this year. After an amazing Nordic-Party on Tuesday night (which apparently went on until after 4am) I was super pleased to present to a full room at 9am the next morning :-). The paper was titled From Pulse Trains to “Coloring with Vibrations”: Motion Mappings for Mid-Air Haptic Textures and is work done together with Sebastian Boring and Kasper Hornbaek.

Cedric Honnet and I also submitted a Position Paper on motion tracking & haptic feedback to the In-Touch Workshop we attended together.

March 2018

Slowly recovering from an amazing week in Stockholm at TEI 2018, where I co-hosted a workshop and presented a paper on sensor design & firmware for wearable fabric input.

Feel free to take a look at the workshop proposal and the workshop website. Thanks to Sophia Brueckner, Jarrod Kibbe, Cedric Honnet and Rachel Freire for being amazing co-hosts!

Also, check out our zPatch paper and the project website. This was work done at the HCC with Jarrod Knibbe, Sebastian Boring and Kasper Hornbaek. We also created an instructables. We were super pleased by the reception we got both at the conference and online. During the demo sessions multiple people decided to make their own sensors right then and there, and it was super nice to demo something that people were interested in because of how useful to their own projects they thought it might become. Online, Arduino tweeted about our project and posted it to Facebook, hackster.io featured it in their newsletter and Hackaday wrote about it.



Things I really enjoyed at TEI 2018 included an exceptionally diverse crowd of curious, engaged and helpful people willing to share. TEI is typically good this way, but this year felt like it had a better gender balance than last year and was most certainly younger. I also enjoyed how the demos and exhibits were organized. Having new demos each day, rather than having them basically all at once allowed me to engage with many more projects than in previous versions of the conference.

Another thing I enjoyed was that there was a serious effort by many authors to make their work accessible. There were at least four papers that provided instructables on how to recreate their hardware and many others that open sourced their design or code in some way.

There were three presentations that left an especially strong impression. The first was by Irene Posch on the design of tools that are inspired by and shape etextile craft. The visual presentation was beautiful, the work was discussed in a clear and easy-to-follow way, and Irene both had me nodding my head in approval where she described situations and practices I am familiar with, while at the same time surprising me with ideas and solutions that I had never considered, but now want to implement in my own practice.

The keynote by Anna Lundh was haunting and beautiful.

I also really enjoyed the talk by Daniel Reinhart and Jörg Hurtienne. They staged their work on evaluation of tangible props as if it was a dramatic reading of a play, full of intrigue and suspense (though I’d still need a lot more discussion for them to convince me of their findings…).

My favorite demos included MacroScope by Dorothe Smit and colleagues from Salzburg, Mechamagnets by Clement Zhang and Ellen Do, and Loominary by Anne Sullivan. What I especially enjoyed about Anne Sullivan’s work, was that we were able to look at finished woven scarves and I could point to the weaving and ask ‘What happened here?’. Anne could then recall which narrative and what choices led to the pattern in question. The whole thing had something akin to a lost arcane art.

So, in summary, I had an amazing week. Thanks to everyone who helped make it happen!

January 2018

I am currently visiting the Responsive Environments group at the MIT Media Lab. I’ve been expanding on my haptic feedback work, as well as helping out with a robotics project as part of the Media Labs Space Initiative.

I will be co-hosting an eTextiles workshop at TEI in Stockholm. I’m looking forward to presenting a paper on some of my own textile work at TEI as well as presenting work on Mid-Air Haptics at CHI.

Somehow, someone decided to publish some of my grumblings about telerobotics and how I was unhappy about how last years CHI organizing committee responded to the travel ban.

2017

I am proud to have received an honorable mention for my CHI paper “Generating Haptic Textures with a Vibrotactile Actuator”.

I also feel honored to collaborate with some extremely talented textile artists and researchers: Rachel Freire, Cedric Honnet & Maurin Donneaud. We presented a demo at TEI on designing eTextiles for the body and will be presenting a full paper at NIME on a textile music controller.

My recent publications:

Paul Strohmeier & Kasper Hornbæk. Generating Haptic Textures with a Vibrotactile Actuator. CHI ’17
Maurin Donneaud, Cedric Honnet & Paul Strohmeier. Designing a Multi-Touch eTextile for Music Performances. NIME ’17
Rachel Freire, Cedric Honnet, & Paul Strohmeier. Second Skin: An Exploration of eTextile Stretch Circuits on the Body. Demo, TEI ’17.
Strohmeier. Coupling Motion and Perception in Body Based UI. Graduate Student Consortium, TEI ’17