Video – 糖心少女News /news Sun, 14 Jun 2026 19:05:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 UW’s Class of 2026 celebrated with ceremonies in Husky Stadium and ceremonies in the Tacoma Dome and HecEd /news/2026/06/08/uw-celebrates-class-of-2026-with-151st-commencement-in-husky-stadium-and-ceremonies-in-the-tacoma-dome-and-heced/ Mon, 08 Jun 2026 17:38:56 +0000 /news/?p=92068

糖心少女 President Robert J. Jones presided at the UW鈥檚 151st Commencement ceremony on Alaska Airlines Field at Husky Stadium on Saturday, June 13.

Graduates have profound potential and have capacity to combine purpose, skill and cooperation in ways that will change the world,聽 Jones said.聽

鈥淭hey are innovators, scientists, artists, educators, healers, entrepreneurs and storytellers who have made their mark on the 糖心少女and are poised to do the same in the world beyond,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ecause of that, I feel not just hope 鈥 but confidence 鈥 that the future is in their capable hands.鈥

About 7,500 糖心少女graduates of the Class of 2026 participated in Saturday鈥檚 ceremony. Officials said about 50,000 family members and friends cheered the graduates from the Husky Stadium grandstands. Families from 42 countries from every continent except Antarctica joined the ceremony virtually.

, Class of 鈥83, who shared the, was the featured speaker.听听

鈥淟eave yourself open to opportunities when they arise. Be willing to take a risk and to say yes to the unknown,鈥 Brunkow told the crowds in Husky Stadium. 鈥淵ou chose 糖心少女鈥 and succeeded here 鈥 because it is a place of discovery, collaboration and optimism. Carry those values with you out into the world. We can鈥檛 wait to see what you make of them.鈥

By Sunday evening, President Jones will have presented nearly 18,462 degrees to the Class of 2026 across all three 糖心少女campuses鈥 ceremonies. Members of the 糖心少女Board of Regents, deans and other representatives of the University鈥檚 24 colleges and schools across all three campuses also participated in the ceremonies.聽

The following聽data, drawn from preliminary information broken down by campus and prepared by the Office of the University Registrar, will be presented聽at the Board of Regents鈥 June 11 meeting:聽

  • For work completed at the聽Seattle聽campus, about 14,932 degrees will be conferred, specifically: 9,066 bachelor鈥檚 degrees, 4,372 master鈥檚 degrees, 615 professional degrees, 16 Educational Specialist degrees, and 863 doctoral degrees.聽
  • 础迟听糖心少女Bothell, about 1,886 degrees will be conferred, including 1,619 bachelor鈥檚 degrees and 267 master鈥檚 degrees.聽
  • And at聽糖心少女Tacoma,聽students will receive about 1,644 degrees, including 1,321 bachelor鈥檚 degrees, 304 master鈥檚 degrees, 10 Educational Specialist degrees and nine doctoral degrees.聽

Degrees are awarded to those who have completed academic requirements during the 2025-2026 academic year. Many colleges and schools also hold separate graduation programs and investiture ceremonies.聽

糖心少女Tacoma will hold its commencement June 12 at the Tacoma Dome. 糖心少女Bothell鈥檚 graduation ceremonies are scheduled for June 14 at Alaska Airlines Arena at Hec Edmundson Pavilion.

More information

糖心少女Tacoma鈥檚 is scheduled for 10 a.m. on Friday, June 12, at the Tacoma Dome. To watch a livestream, visit the . Doors open 60 minutes in advance.

The June 13 Commencement ceremony in Seattle will be streamed starting at 12:30 p.m. To watch, visit the 糖心少女commencement website. Doors to Husky Stadium open at 12:30 p.m. 鈥淧urple Carpet鈥 programming begins at 12:30 p.m., followed by the procession of graduates at 1:30 p.m. and the Commencement ceremony at about 2 p.m.

糖心少女Bothell will host the on Sunday, June 14, at Alaska Airlines Arena at Hec Edmundson Pavilion in Seattle. The Purple Ceremony, beginning at 11 a.m., includes students from the Schools of Business, Educational Studies and Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences. The Gold Ceremony, beginning at 4 p.m., is for students from the schools of Nursing & Health Studies and of Science, Technology, Engineering & Mathematics. Doors open one hour prior to the ceremony.

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Washington students return to 糖心少女campus for Engineering Discovery Days 2026 /news/2026/04/30/engineering-discovery-days-2026/ Thu, 30 Apr 2026 22:08:00 +0000 /news/?p=91574

Discovery Days returns!

On April 30 and May 1, thousands of elementary and middle school students from across Washington state will arrive on the 糖心少女鈥檚 Seattle campus to explore more than . Hosted by the 糖心少女College of Engineering, Discovery Days gives students a chance to experience science and engineering concepts for themselves by building batteries, designing videogames, firing air vortex cannons and controlling plasma with their fingertips.聽

This year, more than 9,000 students from 109 schools registered to attend.

For journalists

and

Discovery Days gives K-12 students an opportunity to find the spark of a new interest in STEM fields. Kids, parents and teachers can mingle with 糖心少女engineering faculty, staff and students and learn about robotics, aerodynamics, superconductivity, infrastructure and much more. This year features new hands-on exhibits from sponsors Otis Elevator Company and Microsoft. Several timely activities will teach students about using AI responsibly and thoughtfully.

For more information, contact William Poor at wpoor@uw.edu.

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At quantum testbed lab, researchers across the 糖心少女probe 鈥榮pooky鈥 mysteries of quantum phenomena /news/2026/04/13/qt3-quantum-computing-testbed-lab-dilution-fridge/ Mon, 13 Apr 2026 23:09:13 +0000 /news/?p=91294 Three people stand next to a complex metal tube-shaped machine
Max Parsons (left), assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering, works with undergraduate staff members Reynel Cariaga (center) and Jesus Garcia (right) at the QT3 lab. The device in the foreground is a scanning tunneling microscope that can image individual atoms within a material by scanning an extremely fine needle 鈥 just one atom thick at the tip 鈥 across the sample. Photo: Erhong Gao/糖心少女

Even on a campus like the 糖心少女鈥檚 鈥 home to particle accelerators, wave tanks and countless other bespoke pieces of equipment 鈥 the machinery in the stands out. Take the dilution fridge, a large, white, cylindrical device that can cool a small chamber to one hundredth of a kelvin above absolute zero 鈥 the coldest possible temperature in the universe.聽

鈥淭his is the coldest fridge money can buy,鈥 said , a 糖心少女assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering and the former director of the lab, which goes by the nickname QT3. 鈥淲hen it鈥檚 running, the chamber inside this device is about 100 times colder than outer space. At that temperature, it鈥檚 much easier to study and manipulate a material鈥檚 quantum properties.鈥

The lab also houses a photon qubit tabletop lab: a nondescript set of boxes, lasers and lenses that can demonstrate the 鈥渟pooky鈥 鈥 a term scientists actually use 鈥 phenomenon known as quantum entanglement, where two particles appear to communicate instantaneously with each other despite being physically apart.

Or there鈥檚 the lab鈥檚 latest acquisition, the scanning tunneling microscope, which can image individual atoms within a solid material, allowing researchers to study the structure of materials at the smallest scales.

An interdisciplinary group of researchers has been marshalling resources and expertise to create QT3 for three years, and now, the lab is opening its doors as a unique one-stop shop resource for quantum researchers and educators at the UW.

鈥淭he idea of this lab is to improve access to quantum hardware,鈥 Parsons said. 鈥淚t’s rather hard to acquire equipment like this. And there are a lot of researchers that may have good ideas that they want to test, but don鈥檛 have the resources yet for their own equipment. So we鈥檙e inviting researchers, initially from across campus, but also from other universities and from industry, to come in and test their ideas. This can be a hub for quantum experts to share their ideas and collaborate.鈥

The lab also boasts hardware that can demonstrate known quantum principles and techniques, making it useful for students in quantum fields. In addition to the entanglement device, Parsons鈥 students developed a machine that can suspend charged particles 鈥 in this case, tiny grains of pollen 鈥 in midair using electric fields. Researchers use the same technique to trap single atoms and manipulate their quantum properties, making the lab鈥檚 ion-trapping machine good practice for more complex work.

Two tiny dots hover back and forth in a tube
The QT3 facility鈥檚 ion trapping lab gives students a chance to practice techniques used in quantum computing research. Here, students have suspended two tiny grains of pollen 鈥 the red dots hovering back and forth 鈥 in midair using electric fields. Photo: Robert Thomas

Some students even work at the lab through an undergraduate staffing program, and have helped install instrumentation, write code to power equipment and build parts for custom microscopes. The program provides yet another avenue for students to get hands-on experience with unusual machinery and techniques.聽

鈥淨uantum mechanics is inherently counterintuitive, and that makes it a powerful teaching tool,鈥 Parsons said. 鈥淚n the QT3 lab, students will encounter systems where their everyday intuition breaks down, and they must rely on careful reasoning and experimentation instead. They learn how to debug when results don鈥檛 match expectations, how to test simple cases and how to build understanding about hardware step by step.鈥

The cosmically cold dilution fridge remains something of a centerpiece, even as the lab fills up with specialized equipment. The extreme environment within the device strips heat, light and other stray energy away from materials, allowing researchers to observe the peculiar quantum properties that remain. One such property is superposition, or the ability of a particle like an electron to maintain multiple mutually exclusive properties at the same time. Scientists use superposition to create a powerful, tiny piece of technology: a quantum bit, or qubit.聽

鈥淭raditional computers use bits, which can only be one or zero. A qubit, on the other hand, we can make one plus zero,鈥 Parsons said. 鈥淚t’s both at the same time, and only when we measure it do we find out which one it is. We can use this unusual property to build a new class of computers that excel at tasks like communications and encryption.鈥

QT3 is part of a collaborative effort to solidify 糖心少女as a leader in quantum research and applications. Most of the lab hardware was funded by a congressional earmark championed by Senator Maria Cantwell鈥檚 office. Departmental funding from across the College of Engineering and the College of Arts and Sciences helped rehab the lab space. The National Science Foundation provided seed funding for the instructional lab equipment.

a repeating hexagonal pattern of small golden blobs
An image captured by the QT3 lab鈥檚 scanning tunneling microscope reveals a lattice of individual atoms in a sample of silicon. Photo: Rajiv Giridharagopal

The 糖心少女has also spent the past decade investing heavily in faculty with quantum expertise.

鈥淰ery few places have expertise across the full quantum stack, from materials up to algorithms,鈥 said , a 糖心少女professor of physics and founder of QT3. 鈥淭he 糖心少女has quantum faculty in electrical and mechanical engineering, physics, computer science, materials science and chemistry. Our faculty work on superconducting qubits, spin defects, photons, trapped ions, neutral atoms and topological qubits. Our advantage is the breadth of our investment.鈥

The lab is now available to researchers and students across the UW, and private companies are encouraged to reach out about partnering. Parsons has already used the lab to teach a graduate-level class in electrical and computer engineering for students who included employees from Boeing, Microsoft and quantum computing company IonQ. The lab is hiring for a full-time manager to maintain the equipment and help users make the most of the facility.聽

鈥淗ere in academia, we can improve the building blocks for applied technologies like quantum computing, and then transfer those learnings to industry for further scaling,鈥 Parsons said.

For more information, contact Parsons at mfpars@uw.edu.

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Video: How do plants know when to bloom? Spring flowering explained by 糖心少女chronobiologist /news/2026/03/17/how-do-plants-know-when-to-bloom-spring-flowering-explained-by-uw-chronobiologist/ Tue, 17 Mar 2026 22:49:56 +0000 /news/?p=90958

Plants, like people, have a circadian clock and they sense seasonal changes to light and temperature. Plants that bloom in the spring use the longer days and warmer temperatures as seasonal cues that it鈥檚 time to bloom.

There are a few ways that plants can sense these cues. Plants with leaves are more sensitive to sunlight and use increasing daylight as a cue to bloom. Plants where the flower comes straight out of the ground or a branch, such as cherry trees and tulips, use temperature as their main cue to bloom.

, 糖心少女professor of biology, studies the genes that plants use to monitor seasonal changes. In this video, he shares more details about how plants sense seasonal changes.

For more information, contact Imaizumi at takato@uw.edu.

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Peak bloom predictions are in for UW’s cherry trees /news/2026/03/06/peak-bloom-predictions-are-in-for-uws-cherry-trees/ Fri, 06 Mar 2026 19:17:05 +0000 /news/?p=90885

[April 6] UPDATE: Flower petals are falling on the Quad as the trees lose their blossoms. The waning bloom is still quite a site but it’ll be a while before the trees are back on full display.

[March 23] UPDATE: The cherry trees are officially in peak bloom! Visit campus anytime in the next week or so to see the blossoms in all their glory.

[March 18] UPDATE: Recent temperature swings have slowed bud development for the Quad cherries. About half of the trees are still in peduncle elongation stage while half have moved on to the 鈥減uffy white鈥 stage that precedes full bloom. Cool temperatures in the coming days may delay peak bloom as trees gradually blossom. Warm weather could produce a sudden transition. Check the live cams for updates.

[March 13] UPDATE: It’s snowing but the blossoms are still growing! The Quad cherries are now in the “peduncle elongation” stage, where the flower-bearing stalk extends from the bud. Some have also begun to flower.

Each spring, large crowds gather on the 糖心少女 Quad to admire 29 puffy pink cherry trees making their seasonal debut. The trees begin to wake up as the weather warms, and this year, estimates suggest that they will reach 鈥減eak bloom鈥 on March 20.

The UW鈥檚 iconic cherry trees achieve peak bloom when 70% of the blossoms have opened, but the week before and after still offer visitors an optimal viewing experience.

The cherry blossom visitors鈥 website provides updates on bloom status as well as details on transportation, activities and amenities. The cherry blossoms also have live video feeds for virtual viewing and their own social media accounts on and .

The cherry trees are both beautiful and ecologically significant. Tracking when the buds burst each year helps researchers predict peak bloom and determine how climate warming is impacting the trees, which were planted in the Washington Park Arboretum in 1936 and then relocated to 糖心少女in 1962.

This year, many plants began to emerge early as a mild winter gave way to spring. Recent 糖心少女research described how plants rely on both temperature and light cues to time their flowering. Temperature is particularly important to cherry trees, which estimate the arrival of spring based on how cold it has been. They accrue 鈥渃hilling units鈥 as winter progresses and 鈥渉eating units鈥 as it yields to spring.

鈥淭he buds need to accumulate a specific amount of chilling units before they can start accumulating the heating units. When it is not as cold, the chilling units accumulate much slower, so it takes them longer to wake up from dormancy, which is very counterintuitive,鈥 said , a 糖心少女doctoral student of environmental and forest sciences.

Theil is now overseeing data collection on campus, with the help of approximately 20 undergraduate students. The researchers make observations as the trees begin to wake up and feed the data into a computer model that incorporates weather forecasts to predict peak bloom.

Historically, the onset of peak bloom has fallen between March 12 and April 3, with an average date of March 23. While the weather impacts peak bloom year to year, climate change drives longer term trends over multiple decades.

An aerial shot of the cherry trees on the 糖心少女Quad in bloom last year. Photo: 糖心少女

Research shows that bloom time has shifted approximately two days earlier each decade since the 1960s. Researchers began monitoring the trees in 2012 and referenced newspaper archives to estimate peak bloom dates for the preceding years.

鈥淲ith the climate warming more rapidly in the spring, I expected to see the flowers blooming earlier,鈥 said lead author , a recent doctoral graduate from the 糖心少女school of environmental and forest sciences. 鈥淏ut as we dove into the literature and examined the data, we saw a delay in bloom, as a result of winter warming in Seattle.鈥

The study focused on the Somei-yoshino, or Yoshino, cherry tree cultivar. These trees, sometimes called the Japanese flowering cherry, are found throughout Japan. They also line the National Mall in Washington D.C. and paint many Seattle neighborhoods pink in the springtime.

The bloom delay Maust observed applies only to Yoshino cherry trees in Seattle. In colder climates, such as Washington D.C., the trees have ample time to accrue chilling units. Still, the two populations are quite similar, genetically.

Propagation, or breeding more trees, occurs by grafting one tree onto another. This process limits genetic variability in favor of consistency. Because all Yoshino cherry trees are sterile clones of one another, they do not produce fruits or seeds, but they do reliably bloom in beautiful pink hues each spring.

Related

Even so, there is still enough variation between trees in different places to trace their history. To figure out where the UW鈥檚 trees may have come from, 糖心少女researchers and students . They compared the results to Yoshino cherry trees at sites throughout Japan and found a cluster of close relatives, with approximately 85% genetic overlap, near Shimane University in the city of Matsue.

The work, led by , a 糖心少女associate professor of biology, sheds light on the origin of the trees, some of which may be nearly 100 years old.

For more information on bloom time, contact Theil at mtheil@uw.edu or Maust at聽 amaust@uw.edu. For information about the Yoshino Genome Project, contact Steinbrenner at astein10@uw.edu.

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New marine energy tech is put to the test at Harris Hydraulics Lab /news/2026/03/06/marine-energy-turbines-harris-hydraulics-uw-pnnl/ Fri, 06 Mar 2026 17:29:14 +0000 /news/?p=90849

At the 糖心少女 Harris Hydraulics Lab, an odd scene plays out. Over and over again, researchers from the 糖心少女and the (PNNL) pass a small rubber model of a marine animal through a large tank filled with flowing water and fitted with a spinning turbine. On some runs, the model bonks against the turbine blades; on others, it receives a glancing blow or sails past undisturbed. When bonks or knicks occur, a small collision sensor on one of the turbine鈥檚 blades detects the impacts and plots the interactions in a computer program.

The researchers are repeatedly simulating something that they hope will rarely happen in the wild: a collision between marine wildlife like a seabird, seal, fish or whale 鈥 or submerged debris like logs 鈥 and an underwater turbine.聽

鈥淲e want to make sure we鈥檙e minimizing the chances of a collision in the first place,鈥 said Aidan Hunt, a senior research engineer in mechanical engineering at the 糖心少女and member of the (PMEC). 鈥淏ut if a collision were to occur, we want to be able to detect it, and potentially avoid it, in real time. The available evidence suggests that collisions are rare, but we鈥檙e taking a 鈥榯rust-but-verify鈥 approach.鈥

Marine energy 鈥 power harvested from tides, waves and currents 鈥 has enormous potential as a clean, renewable resource. But more information is needed about how large, commercial installations of underwater turbines or power-generating buoys could affect marine wildlife, whether through increased noise in the environment, habitat change or direct interactions with equipment.聽

The marine collision experiments are part of the , a collection of projects led by PNNL to study the environmental impact of marine energy.聽

The work at Harris Hydraulics follows a by PNNL and the 糖心少女Applied Physics Lab using a four-foot-tall prototype turbine installed at the entrance to Sequim Bay. In that study, researchers trained an underwater camera on the turbine for 109 days and then catalogued every instance of an animal approaching or interacting with the turbine. The camera captured more than 1,000 instances of fish, birds and seals approaching the turbine blades. There were only four collisions, and all were small fish.聽

鈥淭his study was a first step, but a promising one,鈥 said co-author , a research scientist at the 糖心少女Applied Physics Lab. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 see any endangered species in our study, and the risk of collision for seals and sea birds seemed to be quite low. We鈥檙e excited to get back out there with the camera and learn even more.鈥

The Sequim Bay experiment generated hours of valuable data, but that degree of intense monitoring may not be practical in large commercial installations in the future. Cheaper impact sensors, like the ones logging bath toy impacts at Harris Hydraulics, could be a solution, researchers say.听听

The project is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy鈥檚 Hydropower & Hydrokinetics Office, through the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory鈥檚 Triton Initiative and the TEAMER program.

For more information, contact Hunt at ahunt94@uw.edu or Emma Cotter at emma.cotter@pnnl.gov.

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Q&A: 糖心少女researchers create a smart glove with its own sense of touch /news/2026/01/27/smart-glove-electronic-touch-pressure-sensor-engineeering-soft-robotics/ Tue, 27 Jan 2026 21:19:51 +0000 /news/?p=90498 Two pieces of an electronic glove lie on a table.
Inside the OpenTouch Glove (right) is a grid of wires (left) that allows the glove to sense the location and degree of any pressure applied to it. Photo: 糖心少女

Yiyue Luo鈥檚 at the 糖心少女 is full of machinery that鈥檚 oddly cozy. Here, soft and pliable sensors are sewn, knit and glued directly into clothing to give everyday garments new capabilities.聽

One of the lab鈥檚 newest curiosities is a nondescript gray work glove embedded with sensors that enable it to 鈥渇eel鈥 on its own. An array of small wires hidden inside the glove report the location and degree of pressure anywhere along its surface. When in use, the signals from the glove inform a realtime 鈥渉eat map鈥 of pressure that could one day help physical therapy patients track their progress, teach robots to grasp objects, and more.

The project, as it鈥檚 officially known, is led by 糖心少女electrical and computer engineering doctoral student as part of a collaboration with the and at MIT. 糖心少女News caught up with Murphy to learn more about the glove and its potential uses.

What inspired you to create this glove?

Devin Murphy: Our hands are arguably our greatest tools as humans. We interact with the world through our hands in so many different ways. But the nature of how we grasp and manipulate things in our environment is super nuanced and complex, and it鈥檚 hard to capture. We have very mature electronics that record sight and sound 鈥 think of the cameras and microphones in your smartphone. But there aren鈥檛 many electronic devices that record our other senses 鈥 like touch. That鈥檚 what I鈥檝e been working to remedy with the OpenTouch Glove.

How does the glove work? What are its capabilities?

DM: There are two flexible circuit boards inside each glove that form a grid of wires across the gripping surface of the glove. We can measure pressure at any point in that mesh where two wires meet. The circuit boards connect to a little box of electronics at the user鈥檚 wrist, which processes the signals and sends them wirelessly to a laptop.

We can then generate a 鈥渉eat map鈥 image showing where force is being applied on the hand, where the hand is applying force to different objects and how much force the hand is applying.聽

This kind of data gives us extra nuance that a camera can’t capture. For example, if your hand is in a bag or behind an object while it鈥檚 grasping things, a camera wouldn鈥檛 be able to tell what your hand is doing, whereas this glove can follow along.

What are some potential applications for the glove?

DM: I’m particularly excited about how this technology might help patients recovering from an injury. Physical therapists have patients perform a variety of tasks to regain mobility in their hands 鈥 if we can measure how much force people apply during this process, we can provide them with concrete feedback. The patient and therapist can both track progress by monitoring grip strength of the patient over time.聽

We鈥檙e also seeing lots of new companies invest in physical intelligence for robotics 鈥 basically recording how robots interact with the physical world. If we can record human hand grip signals, we might be able to teach robotic hands how to mimic human behavior.聽

One other interesting application is in augmented reality or virtual reality. If we replaced traditional controllers with these gloves, it could give users a more natural way to interact with virtual objects and scenery 鈥 though we鈥檇 need some additional technology for users to feel pressure when gripping virtual things.

How can other researchers access this technology?

DM: It鈥檚 really important to us that the glove is accessible to other researchers and anyone else who might want to use it for their own applications. You can order all of the components of the glove directly from commercial manufacturers, and we have released all of the manufacturing files and instructions for putting the glove together yourself.聽

We’ve also shown some demos of the glove 鈥渋n the wild鈥 to showcase the different kinds of data it can collect, and we鈥檙e planning to release an open source data set collected with the glove in partnership with researchers at MIT.聽

I鈥檓 really excited about developing new wearable technologies that allow people to record less popular sensing modalities like touch. I want to figure out how we can capture the nuances of touch-based interactions, so that ultimately we can get better insights into our daily lives.

For more information, contact Murphy at devinmur@uw.edu.

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Video: Drivers struggle to multitask when using dashboard touch screens, study finds /news/2025/12/16/video-drivers-struggle-to-multitask-when-using-dashboard-touch-screens-study-finds/ Tue, 16 Dec 2025 17:00:09 +0000 /news/?p=90099

Once the domain of buttons and knobs, car dashboards are increasingly home to large touch screens. While that makes following a mapping app easier, it also means drivers can鈥檛 feel their way to a control; they have to look. But how does that visual component affect driving?

New research from the 糖心少女 and Toyota Research Institute, or TRI, explores how drivers balance driving and using touch screens while distracted. In the study, participants drove in a vehicle simulator, interacted with a touch screen and completed memory tests that mimic the mental effort demanded by traffic conditions and other distractions. The team found that when people multitasked, their driving and touch screen use both suffered. The car drifted more in the lane while people used touch screens, and their speed and accuracy with the screen declined when driving. The effects increased further when they added the memory task.聽

These results could help auto manufacturers design safer, more responsive touch screens and in-car interfaces.

The team Sept. 30 at the ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology in Busan, Korea.聽

鈥淲e all know ,鈥 said co-senior author , a 糖心少女professor in the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering. 鈥淏ut what about the car鈥檚 touch screen? We wanted to understand that interaction so we can design interfaces specifically for drivers.鈥

As the study鈥檚 16 participants drove the simulator, sensors tracked their gaze, finger movements, pupil diameter and electrodermal activity. The last two are common ways to measure mental effort, or 鈥渃ognitive load.鈥 For instance, pupils tend to grow when people are concentrating.聽

Related:

  • Story from

While driving, participants had to touch specific targets on a 12-inch touch screen, similar to how they would interact with apps and widgets. They did this while completing three levels of an 鈥淣-back task,鈥 a memory test in which the participants hear a series of numbers, 2.5 seconds apart, and have to repeat specific digits.聽

The participants鈥 performance changed significantly under different conditions:

  • When interacting with the touch screen, participants drifted side to side in their lane 42% more often. Increasing cognitive load had no effect on the results.
  • Touch screen accuracy and speed decreased 58% when driving, then another 17% under high cognitive load.
  • Each glance at the touchscreen was 26.3% shorter under high cognitive load.
  • A 鈥渉and-before-eye鈥 phenomenon, in which drivers鈥 reached for a control before looking at it, increased from 63% to 71% as memory tasks were introduced.

The team also found that increasing the size of the target areas participants were trying to touch did not improve their performance.聽

鈥淚f people struggle with accuracy on a screen, usually you want to make bigger buttons,鈥 said , a 糖心少女doctoral student in the Allen School. 鈥淏ut in this case, since people move their hand to the screen before touching, the thing that takes time is the visual search.鈥

Based on these findings, the researchers suggest future in-car touch screen systems might use simple sensors in the car 鈥 eye tracking, or touch sensors on the steering wheel 鈥 to monitor drivers鈥 attention and cognitive load. Based on these readings, the car鈥檚 system might adjust the touch screen鈥檚 interface to make important controls more prominent and safer to access.

鈥淭ouch screens are widespread today in automobile dashboards, so it is vital to understand how interacting with touch screens affects drivers and driving,鈥 said co-senior author , a 糖心少女professor in the Information School. 鈥淥ur research is some of the first that scientifically examines this issue, suggesting ways for making these interfaces safer and more effective.鈥

, a 糖心少女doctoral student in the Information School, is co-lead author. Other co-authors include , , and of TRI. This research was funded in part by TRI.

For more information, contact Wobbrock at wobbrock@uw.edu and Fogarty at jfogarty@cs.washington.edu.

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Video: The UW’s 2025 storytelling highlights /news/2025/12/03/video-the-uws-2025-storytelling-highlights/ Thu, 04 Dec 2025 00:30:17 +0000 /news/?p=90014

Choosing highlights from 2025 for a video roundup is a tough task. 糖心少女 video producers meet students, faculty and community members during some of the most exciting moments of their lives 鈥 from earning a degree to finding answers that will impact the world.

This year at the UW, we saw cosmic images from a brand new telescope and supercharged a . We used a novel device to regain mobility, and sent a robot out of the lab to help feed people who can鈥檛 eat on their own. We launched an aeronautics professor into the sky in a Blue Angels Navy jet and we learned about using nuisance seaweed to help grow healthy crops. We reached out across our state to help solve problems, from calming traffic in Yakima to giving tribal fisheries on the Columbia River critical water temperature data. We welcomed a new president, new students and celebrated commencement. We were also inspired and heartbroken by 糖心少女women鈥檚 soccer player Mia Hamant鈥檚 brave fight with kidney cancer and effort to raise awareness of the disease before she passed in November.

Over the course of 2025, the 糖心少女News office, the and our Be Boundless site shared these stories and more from across the UW, including our researchers鈥 impactful work, and how we prepare students for successful careers and share our knowledge in teaching and in partnerships all over Washington and the world.

You can follow us and find more stories on the 糖心少女News website, , , and , as well as the , , and .

For more information, contact Kiyomi Taguchi, 糖心少女News video producer: ktaguchi@uw.edu or 206-685-2716. Happy New Year!

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Video: Halloween concert highlights spooky organ classics /news/2025/10/30/video-halloween-concert-highlights-spooky-organ-classics/ Thu, 30 Oct 2025 20:46:24 +0000 /news/?p=89759

The Halloween Organ Concert will take place at 7:30 p.m. in Kane Hall鈥檚 Walker-Ames Room. The event is free.

, artist in residence and head of organ studies at the 糖心少女, will be joined by students and colleagues on Friday, Oct. 31, to perform a concert of spooky organ classics and Halloween fun.

The concert will open with 鈥淭occata and Fugue in D minor,鈥 which Price will play on the organ. Most likely written by Johann Sebastian Bach in the Baroque period, the composition is strongly associated with Halloween and spooky films, including the Disney movie 鈥淔antasia.鈥

鈥淧eople will recognize that piece and sort of expect it,鈥澛 Price said. 鈥淲e will then have vocal students and instrumentalists from the 糖心少女School of Music, which will show how the organ can be an accompanying instrument, outside of just being a solo instrument. Each organist will bring their own character and style to their performances.鈥

Other concert selections include 鈥淭he Ballad of Sweeney Todd,鈥 鈥淧ink Panther,鈥 the Mexican folk song 鈥淟a Llorona,鈥 , and the American folk tune 鈥淭he House of the Rising Sun.鈥澛

鈥淓vents like this are important because they expose people to organ music that may not ever take the chance to go and hear an organ concert,鈥 Price said. 鈥淚t is a very popular event, and it’s oriented around popular music and familiar music. That makes it a fun experience.鈥

After graduating from Western Connecticut State University, Price received a Fulbright Scholarship to Toulouse, France, where he studied historical and modern performances practices of French organ music. He went on to earn a master鈥檚 degree and a doctoral degree in music.

I have a colleague here in Seattle who believes the instrument chooses you, and I think there may be some truth to that,鈥 Price said. 鈥淭he first time I saw an organist play, I knew instantly that’s what I wanted to do.鈥

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