From desktops and laptops to phones and tablets to virtual reality, wearable devices, the Internet of Things, and robotics, technologies based on computing are all around us. The field of human-computer interaction (HCI) studies how we interact with these technologies, and how those technologies in turn shape our world. HCI researchers seek to improve how humans interact with technology, to understand the societal impact of technologies, and to invent new technologies that alter the way we perceive and navigate the world around us.
UChicago CS includes many researchers and lab groups that investigate these angles using interdisciplinary, user-centered, and physical-computing approaches. Faculty and students design more usable privacy and security tools, improve how users interact with robots, programming languages, and IoT devices, and make technologies more inclusive for marginalized and underserved populations. Other groups design wearable devices and user interfaces that augment human abilities and create more seamless integration between the virtual and natural environments.
Labs & Groups
CANON (Computing for Anyone) Lab
Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) Lab
SUPER (Security, Usability, & Privacy Education & Research) Group
3DL
Network Operations and Internet Security (NOISE) Lab
Amyoli Internet Research (AIR) Lab
Human-Computer Integration Lab
Chicago Human + AI (CHAI) Lab
AxLab – Actuated Experience Lab
Related Faculty
News & Events

Innovation at the Forefront: UChicago CS Researchers Make Significant Contributions to CHI 2025

The University of Chicago Hosts the First Great Lakes Graphics Workshop

University of Chicago’s Fred Chong Awarded $2 Million for Innovative Quantum Computing Cancer Research Project

Helping Elementary School Children Learn About Digital Privacy and Security With Micro-Lessons

Jasmine Lu on Sustainable Computing: Rethinking E-Waste and Innovation

Pedro Lopes Honored with 2025 IEEE VGTC Virtual Reality Significant New Researcher Award

University of Chicago Researchers Revolutionize Network Traffic Generation with AI Breakthrough

Federal budget cuts threaten to decimate America’s AI superiority—and other countries are watching
