9 Papers
40 Citations
Lee Boot is an academic researcher from University of Maryland, Baltimore County. The author has contributed to research in topics: Online community & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 7 publications. Previous affiliations of Lee Boot include University of Maryland, College Park.
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Papers
"Girls don't waste time": pre-adolescent attitudes toward ICT
Weimin Hou,Manpreet Kaur,Anita Komlodi,Wayne G. Lutters,Lee Boot,Shelia R. Cotten,Claudia Morrell,A. Ant Ozok,Zeynep Tufekci +8 more
- 21 Apr 2006
TL;DR: This study revealed four key dimensions which foreground the significant gender differences in how students of this age approach and interact with technology.
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Validation of a Virtual Reality Buffet environment to assess food selection processes among emerging adults.
Charissa S. L. Cheah,Salih Barman,Kathy T. T. Vu,Sarah E. Jung,Varun Mandalapu,Travis D. Masterson,Ryan J. Zuber,Lee Boot,Jiaqi Gong +8 more
TL;DR: The validity and acceptability of the highly immersive and realistic VR buffet for assessing food selection that is generalizable to RW food settings one-week apart without precisely matched foods are demonstrated.
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A view from Mount Olympus: the impact of activity tracking tools on the character and practice of moderation
David Gurzick,Kevin F. White,Wayne G. Lutters,Lee Boot +3 more
- 10 May 2009
TL;DR: Investigating the role of moderation through the lens of the moderators in a nascent online community for adolescents reveals a need for design considerations that take into account the appropriateness of match between the tools and work processes from a moderator perspective.
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Neurophysiological Variations in Food Decision-Making within Virtual and Real Environments
Charissa S. L. Cheah,Stephen P. Kaputsos,Varun Mandalapu,Truc Tran,Salih Barman,Sarah E. Jung,Kathy T. T. Vu,Travis D. Masterson,Ryan J. Zuber,Lee Boot,Jiaqi Gong +10 more
- 19 May 2019
TL;DR: Findings revealed that the left inferior frontal gyrus demonstrated significant differential activation when subjects chose high compared to low density food in both settings, suggesting that VR simulations may provide similar neural response to real world environments, particularly in control regions of the brain.
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Extending CoNavigator into a Collaborative Digital Space
Mark Murnane,Don Engel,Stephen J. Freeland,Lee Boot,Mark Jarzynski,Katrine Lindvig,Line Hillersdal,David Earle +7 more
- 06 Jan 2020
TL;DR: An extension of the existing CoNavigator collaboration system that allows for persistence of in-person collaboration sessions through a digitally projected overlay and camera system and by combining features traditionally found only in digital space with the intuitive nature of a tactile physical environment is presented.
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