Ulm University, Germany
 

Anke Huckauf has published more than 100 research articles on basic perception as well as on applied topics of eye input and gaze-based interaction. She has organized several international and national events, and has served as member of editorial boards. Anke Huckauf studied psychology at universities of Frankfurt/Main, Mainz, and RWTH Aachen, where she also received her PhD. She headed a Juniorprofessorship at the faculty Media, Bauhaus-University in Weimar. Since 2009, she holds a full professorship for General Psychology at Ulm University, Germany. Her main research interests are on perception out of focus and gaze-based interaction.

 

Technical University of Munich TUM, Germany
 

Enkelejda Kasneci is a Distinguished Professor (Liesel Beckmann Distinguished Professor) of Human-Centered Technologies for Learning and Director of the TUM Center for Educational Technologies. She received her MSc in computer science from the University of Stuttgart and her PhD in computer science from the University of Tübingen in 2013. Afterwards, she was a Margarete von Wrangell Fellow (2013-2015), assistant professor of Perception Engineering (2015-2019), and professor of Human-Computer Interaction (2019-2022) at the University of Tübingen. Her research evolves around human-centered technologies, emphasizing the crossroads between multimodal interaction and cutting-edge technological tools, such as VR, AR, and eye-tracking methodologies. Her research incorporates artificial intelligence to foster and facilitate the emergence of innovative learning paradigms. By investigating these interdisciplinary areas, Prof. Kasneci aims to enhance educational experiences and promote a more profound understanding of the intricate interplay between humans and technology.

Bielefeld University, Germany
 

Gernot Horstmann is a cognitive psychologist at the Department of Psychology at Bielefeld University. He studied psychology and received his PhD (2001) and Habilitation (2007) in Bielefeld. Between 2006 he was stand-in professor at the universities of Erlangen-Nürnberg and Bielefeld. Since 2014 he is ausserplanmäßiger Professor at the Department of Psychology. His research focusses on attention, visual search, and eye movements, and more recently on the perception of gaze. He published a high number of  research papers on topics of cognition, perception, vision science, and emotion.