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XRDS, Volume 25
Volume 25, Number 1, Fall 2018
- Diane Golay:

The expanding landscape of computer science. 5-6
- Anne-Kathrin Peters, Judeth Oden Choi:

The making of a computer scientist. 7-8
- Parang Saraf:

Words of wisdom from one computer scientist to another. 9
- Anshuman Majumdar:

ACM USF: determined students revitalize an inactive chapter. 10-11
- Alok Pandey:

Notable computer scientists. 11
- Anukruti Mathur:

A paradigm shift: how CS has intrinsically changed society. 12-13
- Amit P. Sheth:

What do you have that others don't?: succeeding in academia or industry. 14-15
- Gustavo Fortes Tondello:

How to publish research results for academic and non-academic audiences. 16-17
- Matti Tedre:

Computing as an evolving discipline. 18-21 - Marian Petre, André van der Hoek:

Beyond coding: toward software development expertise. 22-26 - Judith Uchidiuno:

The search for my computer science. 27-29 - Sadhana Deshpande:

Gender and inclusiveness. 30-33 - Bryan S. Kim

:
The human manual. 34-37 - María Andreína Francisco Rodríguez

:
Computer science as a global language. 38-41 - Josefin Ahlkrona:

How much are the greenland and antarctic ice sheets melting? 42-47 - Elina Eriksson:

What is the role of a computer scientist in shaping a sustainable future? 48-51 - Simon Winter:

Human values in a digital society. 52-55 - Tony Clear:

The arbitrary nature of computing curricula. 56-59 - Anja Bechmann:

Computer scientists in action: Anja Bechman, data science. 60-61 - Sauvik Das:

Computer scientists in action: Sauvik Das, usable security & privacy. 61-62 - Christina N. Harrington:

Computer scientists in action: Christina Harrington, inclusive technology design. 62-63 - Åsa Cajander:

Computer scientists in action: Åsa Cajander, complex systems for society. - Lining Yao:

Computer scientists in action: Lining Yao, fabrication. 63-64 - Jean Luca Bez:

Computer scientists in action: Jean Luca Bez, high performance computing. 64-65 - Alexandra Jimborean

:
Computer scientists in action: Alexandra Jimborean, computer architecture. 65
- Bryan Knowles:

Aubrey Blanche: Atlassian global head of diversity. 66-67
- Sepideh Maleki:

Programming languages in security: principles of programming group, Carnegie Mellon University. 68-69
- Vasileios Kalantzis:

The CS generation. 69
- Oana Niculaescu:

Applying data science for anomaly and change point detection. 70-73
Volume 25, Number 2, Winter 2018
- Diane Golay:

The winding road toward innovation. 5-6
- Gierad Laput, Adrian Scoica:

Untangling hype and innovation. 9-11
- Parang Saraf:

Navigating through the hype that surrounds machine learning. 12-13
- Alok Pandey:

The evolution of augmented reality. 13
- Anshuman Majumdar:

How WACM prepares women for success. 14-15
- Kiarash Asar:

Ex-Googler Kiarash Asar on optimizing for passion. 16-17
- Maria Gaci:

A world full of emojis. 18-19
- George E. Gerpheide:

Giving birth to touch devices. 22-27 - Amy X. Zhang:

Considering social factors in new technologies. 28-31 - Bengt L. Sandblad, Thomas Lind

:
Why digital systems do not reach their full potential in organizations. 32-37 - Siddharth Kumar Sah, Soumya Jindal:

The benchtop human. 38-41 - Johanna Schacht:

Artificial intelligence technologies: eight viewpoints. 42-45 - Jas Brooks:

Promises of the virtual museum. 46-50
- Bryan Knowles:

Florence Hudson: on maturity and the internet of things. 52-53
- Vasileios Kalantzis:

Personalizing health care. 54-55
- Vasileios Kalantzis:

The hype of big thinking. 55
- Pushkaraj Bhirud:

The holy grail of online identity. 56-59
Volume 25, Number 3, Spring 2019
- Gierad Laput:

Opening the black box. 5-6
- Christine T. Wolf, Ezinne Nwankwo:

Interpreting AI and its place in our worlds. 8-9
- William Herrera:

Best practices for reproducible research. 10-11
- Daniela Zieba:

AI then and now. 11
- Anshuman Majumdar:

BPDC ACM: Using social media marketing to bolster membership. 12-13
- Shekhar Patankar:

Do you want to become an AI and machine learning software engineer? 14-15
- Michael Hind:

Explaining explainable AI. 16-19 - Tim Miller:

"But why?" Understanding explainable artificial intelligence. 20-25 - Kush R. Varshney:

Trustworthy machine learning and artificial intelligence. 26-29 - Lionel P. Robert Jr.:

The future of pedestrian-automated vehicle interactions. 30-33 - Hoa Khanh Dam:

Artificial intelligence for software engineering. 34-37 - Talia Kohen:

The AI revolution: from interpretation to meaning. 38-40 - Christine T. Wolf:

Co-creating the future of work: Lessons from workplace automation. 41-43 - Deborah Raji:

That's not fair! 44-48 - Luke Stark

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Facial recognition is the plutonium of AI. 50-55 - Joanna J. Bryson:

Robot, all too human. 56-59
- Bryan Knowles:

Profile: Janelle Shane: Steering light, steering AI. 60-61
- Sepideh Maleki:

Faster computers for all: Efficient Computing Laboratory, Texas State University. 62-63
- Daniela Zieba:

Today's data-driven age. 63
- Oana Niculaescu:

Neural networks and how machines learn meaning. 64-66
Volume 25, Number 4, Summer 2019
- Gierad Laput:

Play ball. 5-7
- Patrick Carrington, Eliezer E. Bernart:

Computer science and sports: The digital evolution of physical competition. 8-9
- Victoria Holt

:
How to stay motivated during a Ph.D. 10-11
- Jovian Anthony Jaison:

Technical innovations in sports. 11
- Anshuman Majumdar:

USC ACM: Encouraging networking via interactivity. 12-13
- Jason Benn:

Finding the team where you'll grow the fastest. 14-15
- Pawel W. Wozniak, Pascal Knierim, Matthias Hoppe

:
Health, fun, and engagement: Computing technologies that support physical activity. 16-20 - Kyle Rector:

Computing technologies to increase access to physical activity for people with visual impairments. 21-25 - Luciana P. Nedel, Rodrigo Moni, Mateus Bisotto Nunes:

Running Wheel: How an exergame can motivate people to perform repetitive, tedious exercises. 26-29 - Rushil Khurana:

The past, the present, and the future of fitness tracking. 30-33 - Katta Spiel

:
Body-positive computing as a means to counteract normative biases in fitness trackers. 34-37 - Kai Kunze, Stephan G. Lukosch:

Superhuman sports - a testing ground for augmenting our senses. 38-43 - Abigail Zimmermann-Niefield, R. Benjamin Shapiro, Shaun K. Kane:

Sports and machine learning: How young people can use data from their own bodies to learn about machine learning. 44-49 - Melissa Perez, Stephanie T. Jones, JaCoya Thompson

, Marcelo Worsley:
Data in motion: Supporting youth interest in athletics through multimodal data analytics. 50-53 - Je Seok Lee

, Constance Steinkuehler:
Esports as a catalyst for connected learning: the North America Scholastics Esports Federation. 54-59
- Bryan Knowles:

Profile: Dennis Bishop: The psyche of athletes. 60-61
- Sepideh Maleki:

Taking it to the extreme: Microsoft Research India. 62-63
- Daniela Zieba:

The modernization of sports spectatorship. 63
- Oana Niculaescu:

What's formal software verification? 64-65

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