We present a theoretical foundation and empirical findings demonstrating the effectiveness of personality-targeted design. Much like a medical treatment applied to a person based on his specific genetic profile, we argue that theorydriven, personality-targeted UI design can be more effective than design applied to the entire population. The empirical exploration focused on two settings, two populations and two personality traits: Study 1 shows that users' extroversion level moderates the relationship between the UI cue of audience size and users' contribution. Study 2 demonstrates that the effectiveness of social anchors in encouraging online contributions depends on users' level of emotional stability. Taken together, the findings demonstrate the potential and robustness of the interactionist approach to UI design. The findings contribute to the HCI community, and in particular to designers of social systems, by providing guidelines to targeted design that can increase online participation.
This paper investigates the feasibility of maintaining a social information system to support attendees at an academic conference. The main challenge of this work was to create an infrastructure where users' social activities, such as bookmarking, tagging, and social linking could be used to enhance user navigation and maximize the users' ability to locate two important types of information in conference settings: presentations to attend and attendees to meet. We developed Conference Navigator 3, a social conference support system that integrates a conference schedule planner with a social linking service. We examined its potential and functions in the context of a mediumscale academic conference. In this paper, we present the design of the system's socially enabled features and report the results of a conference-based study. Our study demonstrates the feasibility of social information systems for supporting academic conferences. Despite the low number of potential users and the short timeframe in which conferences took place, the usage of the system was high enough to provide sufficient data for social mechanisms. The study shows that most critical social features were highly appreciated and used, and provides direction for further research.
ARTICLE HISTORY
El entender y aplicar adecuadamente la criopreservación de material biológico es fundamental en laboratorios y bancos de células. Sin embargo aunque se han implementado protocolos para criopreservación, aún no se tienen los ideales en la mayoría de los casos.El objetivo de esta revisión es dar a conocer ciertos parámetros inherentes al proceso de criopreservación y la importancia de conocer ciertas características de la célula que pueden incidir con la viabilidad del producto congelado para lograr la técnica adecuada. Para alcanzar este propósito, el documento se basará en el conocimiento de las propiedades fisicoquímicas de la célula y/o el tejido, pues este proceso es afectado por diferentes variables como permeabilidad celular, volumen osmóticamente inactivo y relación superficie/área de la célula, la cual es variable de acuerdo a la especie, tipo y estadio de la célula a congelar. La estructura y composición de las membranas plasmáticas determinan los principales eventos celulares que tienen lugar durante los procesos de criopreservación; las bajas temperaturas afectan la difusión y ósmosis a través de las membranas y cada célula maneja su propio perfil biofísico el cual interactúa con diferentes criopreservantes celulares. El hallar el protocolo adecuado será lo que garantice la viabilidad y funcionabilidad celular.
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