2021 Bests and Worsts
I drew up my list of Best and Worst for 2021 and to make it balanced, it has 3 on each side. Here we go:
Best
1. Meeting Sriya Chintalapalli.
I count meeting Sriya as a golden moment of 2021. I actually haven't had long chats with her. But I was given a small heads-up for a student XR conference that I was supporting that a speaker was coming that was going to be amazing. I think the 'knock socks off' phrase might have been used. I was under FERPA regulations to know that she needed extra protection at the conference and I volunteered to give it. That means I stood on the virtual stage with her, playing the role of direct tech support but also crowd control if necessary.
But what did happen meant something much more to me.
Sriya gave her presentation. It was a great topic and very forward looking. Then, she took questions from the audience. Because the topic was on brain-computer interfaces (BCI), it didn't take long before questions of invasion of privacy questions came from what were obviously professors in the audience.
I've seen these verbal examinations before. I've seen them break college seniors and Master's Degree students. It's just enough questioning to find where the student does not know the answer. That's the push point. Several men in the audience were going right for her, directly and academically.
Standing on stage with her, without her knowing it, I would have thrown up a shield if she needed it and blocked those men from getting to her/embarrass her/humiliate her by making some excuse that we'd run out of time, audio wasn't working, etc.
But, she held the stage. She held her ground. More than once she said "The data doesn't say."
Good line! Don't let them pin you where you have not staked a claim. She'd been trained well to enter an academic fight.
When she was done, I let out my breath.
Were those men plants in the audience? Not sure. Maybe. Either way, my hackles were real.
And the lesson for me that day was: if I can do anything to help women like Sriya...even if it is only shouting "Make a path!", I will. It's very hard to be a woman in the technological sciences. The road ahead will shape her in ways I'm sorry to contemplate. May she always find a woman like me standing by, ready to help.
Please follow her. Great things are ahead.
2. A small unheralded research paper, HMD Type and Spatial Ability: Effects on the Experiences and Learning of Students in Immersive Virtual Field Trips.
(Image source: https://about.fb.com/news/2021/08/introducing-horizon-workrooms-remote-collaboration-reimagined/)
P. Sajjadi, J. Zhao, J. O. Wallgrün, P. C. La Femina and A. Klippel, "HMD Type and Spatial Ability: Effects on the Experiences and Learning of Students in Immersive Virtual Field Trips," 2021 IEEE Conference on Virtual Reality and 3D User Interfaces Abstracts and Workshops (VRW), 2021, pp. 546-547, doi: 10.1109/VRW52623.2021.00155. https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/9419337
3. Equal Entry and XR Women
- Equal Entry has a strong drive for accessibility and has a section of work dedicated just for VR, AR, and XR.
- XR Women's mission is dedicated to getting women's voices up on stage as part of the narrative about the ongoing and future directions of XR.
- Both organizations stay focused on their task and welcome listeners, newcomers, and allies.
Worst
1. Not necessarily restricted to 2021 sadly, say the phrase "Women in XR" and you will likely get this image:
This woman is taking money to have herself videoed/green screened playing Beat Saber in a short skirt. Don't tell me that the Patron isn't begging for that skirt to fly up at some point. I know what you can see through that black skirt by outline. In these videos, women have not only lost body space control, they are selling it.
2. Major immersive learning researcher responds to an accessibility question with "I don't know why a blind person would ever use VR."
Screenreader Experience of a Virtual Reality Conference by Rhea Althea Guntalili
and
Virtual Reality in the Dark: VR Development for People Who Are Blind | Accessibility VR Meetup Recap by Aaron Gluck (YouTube link and transcript available at this link)
Which groups tend to be targeted by microaggressions?
According to Derald Wing Sue, any group in society may become targeted, including women, people of different gender
identities, those with disabilities, religious minorities, among
others. For example, a forthright white woman might be labeled a bitch
just because she exercises assertiveness. https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/basics/microaggression