Warr: Deborah is a sociologist at the University of Melbourne. Her research addresses the circumstances of populations and communities vulnerable to experiencing forms of socioeconomic disadvantage and marginalisation. ?She has particular interest in the potential of visual methods to promote participatory processes of knowledge construction. In addition to publishing findings from her research projects, Deborah has published papers discussing methodological innovations and ethical issues in community-based research.
Guillemin: Marilys is a health sociologist at the University of Melbourne. She has conducted research and published widely in the following: sociology of health and technology, visual and sensory methodologies, and ethical practice in research and health care. She is particularly interested in the ethical and methodological challenges of visual research.
Cox: Susan is Associate Professor in the W. Maurice Young Centre for Applied Ethics and the School of Population and Public Health at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. She is an interdisciplinary qualitative health researcher with interests in the relationship between the arts and health, especially the use of arts-based methods in health research and ethical challenges arising, and the experiences of human subjects participating in health research, including the implications for an evidence-based and participant-centred approach to ethical review. She is a member of the Research Ethics Board for Emily Carr University of Art and Design in Vancouver and is a member of the Advisory Board for the Arts Health Network Canada.
Waycott: Jenny is a lecturer in the Department of Computing and Information Systems at the University of Melbourne. She has conducted numerous projects and published widely in the fields of human-computer interaction and educational technology. Her research is broadly concerned with understanding the role new technologies play in people’s learning, work, and social lives, with her most recent work focusing on the design and use of photo-sharing tools and digital displays to support older adults and housebound people who are socially isolated,