app | University of Hawai驶i System News /news News from the 东精影业 Fri, 24 Apr 2026 21:12:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 /news/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/cropped-UHNews512-1-32x32.jpg app | University of Hawai驶i System News /news 32 32 28449828 HS interns use AI, develop expense-tracking app in 48 hours /news/2023/09/12/project-hokulani-resheipt-app/ Wed, 13 Sep 2023 00:48:52 +0000 /news/?p=183376 The students created the app through an internship with Project H艒k奴lani at 东精影业 惭腻苍辞补鈥檚 Center on Disability Studies.

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high school students with mentors

Utilizing artificial intelligence (AI) to its fullest potential, seven high school students developed a mobile app that tracks expenses—all within a two-week timeframe. Through an internship with U.S. Department of Education Native Hawaiian Education Act grant grantee, , at the (CDS) in the University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 (COE), this second cohort of students gained a unique computer science experience that enabled them to advance their STEM skills.

During summer 2023, the student interns built a mobile application named RESHEIPT at the 东精影业 Laboratory of Applications in Informatics and Analytics. The students were each paid a $1,000 stipend for 48 hours of work at the computer lab.

Designed to gather expenses one receipt at a time, they created the app using ChatGPT under the guidance of Assistant Professor Mahdi Belcaid (Information and Computer Sciences, Hawaiʻi Institute of Marine Biology, Hawaiʻi Data Science Institute) and Akib Sadmanee, a research graduate assistant with Pacific Ocean Science and Technology.

Students used ChatGPT to complete tasks that would have traditionally required much more time from machine learning experts or programmers.

“The group wanted to include artificial intelligence in their computer studies, and the app delivers just that,” said CDS Assistant Specialist Lisa Galloway. “The app allows users to scan their receipts, providing them with an itemized overview of their transactions. AI comes in when users are processing and itemizing their receipts with ChatGPT.”

They also learned how to use no-code platforms, including Amazon Web Services, to construct the features of the app, such as authentication and storage.

“This product highlights the impact of AI and specifically large language models on technology,” said Belcaid. “If high school students can develop such a complex application in just 40 hours—much of which was devoted to education rather than coding—imagine the technological possibilities that await us as ChatGPT and similar technologies continue to mature over the next two to three years.”

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New app: You can help thwart a bug that鈥檚 devastated 176k+ acres /news/2022/11/14/twolined-spittlebug-app/ Mon, 14 Nov 2022 18:00:04 +0000 /news/?p=168884 The College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources develops a smartphone app to manage the invasive twolined spittlebug.

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bug
Twolined spittlebug (TLSB)

贬补飞补颈ʻ颈鈥檚 general public may not know the twolined spittlebug (TLSB), but scientists at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa have been intensely fighting the invasive insect since its discovery in Hawaiʻi in 2016. Within a scant eight generations, TLSB has spread to infest more than 176,000 acres of rangeland on the Big Island. In highly infested areas, the result was nearly 100% die back of key range forages, including kikuyu and pangola grasses. Their loss exposed the land to invasive plants such as pāmakani, wild blackberry and fireweed. Livestock producers faced devastating economic losses.

Within a scant eight generations, TLSB has spread to infest more than 176,000 acres of rangeland on the Big Island.

To combat the problem, the (CTAHR) Extension鈥檚 twolined spittlebug team has released a new reporting and decision-support smartphone app for the management of TLSB in Hawaiʻi. The tool allows users to learn about and correctly identify TLSB, giving landowners the ability to locate, map and manage outbreaks on their properties. Users can also assist experts as citizen-scientists by using the app鈥檚 reporting tool to geolocate sightings of the pest.

Tracking and documenting the spread of TLSB

twolined spittlebug app screen

“The app has four main features,” explains Mark Thorne, a CTAHR specialist. “First, an information guide that provides an overview of TLSB biology and ecology. Next, it helps users identify TLSB in the field and distinguish it from other, non-pest species. Third, users can report sightings of TLSB. Fourth, it allows users to determine the size of the TLSB population, and then, based on the potential damage threshold calculated, select from a series of integrated pest management decisions.”

The CTAHR team, which includes Specialist Mark Wright, Graduate Assistant Shannon Wilson and Assistant Extension Agent Melelani Oshiro, and Daniel Peck from Vestaron Corporation noted the reports include a geo-referenced picture and basic details about the habitat and geographical location of the pest. The reported data is then captured in a database and displayed on a web-based mapping tool.

Users have the option to enter data on TLSB population density and provide estimates on spatial extent and observed damage in their report. Data on TLSB populations is determined by following sampling protocols provided in the fourth tool.

“We spent two years drafting content and working with developers to get the app released, and we鈥檙e confident it will facilitate tracking and documenting the spread of this pest and lead to better pest management decisions for rangeland managers,” said Thorne.

To keep track of TLSB sightings, the team has created an administrative that displays a map of TLSB sighting reports by app users.

Go to the or to download the app.

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东精影业 professor creates app to stop you from touching your face /news/2020/03/16/jalapeno-app/ Tue, 17 Mar 2020 02:20:33 +0000 /news/?p=113895 东精影业 Mānoa professor creates app to stop face touching during COVID-19

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Just say, “JalapeNO!”

Professor Kim Binsted has created an app to stop you from touching your face amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The works for the Fitbit Ionic. The device will vibrate anytime your hand comes near your face.

“I hope it will be a fun way for people to practice good discipline when it comes to hygiene and face touching,” Binsted said.

Jalapeno app on Fitbit

She is currently teaching a class on Design for Mobile Devices in the , but designed JalapeNO! as a personal project. According to Binsted, on average, office workers touch their faces 23 times per hour.

Binsted said, “What we often do is we brainstorm around a problem and think about how could mobile devices help with that problem?”

JalapeNO! for Fitbit Ionic is currently available for $0.99 at . Next up, Binsted is developing a version of JalapeNO! for the Apple Watch.

If her name sounds familiar, it may be because she is the principal investigator leading the Hawaiʻi Space Exploration Analog and Simulation (HI-SEAS) project. That research program, funded by NASA, operated five long-duration planetary surface missions on the Mars-like flank of Mauna Loa to investigate crew composition and cohesion.

—By Kelli Trifonovitch

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Audio description app studied by field-research team at Muir Woods National Monument /news/2018/05/07/unidescription-app-muir-woods/ Mon, 07 May 2018 18:00:32 +0000 /news/?p=79311 The app is designed to make brochures at national parks accessible to those who have trouble seeing them.

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people field testing audio description of Muir Woods
Muir Woods field test, April 27, 2018 (Photo courtesy of the 东精影业 惭腻苍辞补 College of Social Sciences)

A research team from the project, which aims to create digital audio spaces and more accessible places, recently conducted another major field study of in-situ audio description at Muir Woods National Monument in California, near San Francisco.

The team, under the direction of principal investigator of the in the 东精影业 惭腻苍辞补 , tested the new audio description of Muir Wood’s park brochure featured in the free and open-source UniD app. The app is designed to make brochures at national parks accessible to those who have trouble seeing them. Audio description is the translation of visual media, such as photographs and maps, into acoustic media in an effort to allow the ear to hear what the eye might not be able to see.

With coordination support from the team’s research partners at Muir Woods and the , the study included participation by nine members of the Silicon Valley Council of the Blind and seven members from the San Francisco Chapter (16 total participants who are blind or visually impaired, plus friends and family, and companion animals).

Co-Principal Investigator Thomas Conway, from the , was on site to coordinate and observe the activities and to conduct the research, including field experiments with the UniD app and a focus group. The UniD app received high marks for ease of use and the quality of audio descriptions, including a consensus opinion that the audio descriptions were properly located, the correct length and added depth to the experience. This field research, including Conway’s participation in the event, was sponsored by Google and the American Council of the Blind as part of a larger grant project focused upon audio describing National Park Service sites throughout California. Last November, the team conducted a similar study of audio description at Yosemite National Park.

The UniD app is available for both and Android smart phones and contains audio description of more than 50 National Park Service brochures so far, including those for Everglades National Park, Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park, the Statue of Liberty National Monument, Yellowstone National Park and the Washington Monument.

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Study provides insight into making a mobile app to encourage routine HIV testing /news/2018/04/30/making-a-mobile-app-to-encourage-routine-hiv-testing/ Tue, 01 May 2018 02:17:13 +0000 /news/?p=78837 Researchers asked potential users what features they look for in apps, and what aspects of an app would make them likely to use it.

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Jason Mitchell

A mobile app that aims to encourage getting tested for HIV on a regular basis among men who have sex with men should include an HIV test location finder and help them track their sexual activities, according to research by the (OPHS) in collaboration with the University of Minnesota.

Public health researchers conducted in-depth interviews with Spanish-speaking men who are homosexual, bisexual, questioning their sexual identity or orientation, or heterosexual but have sexual encounters with other men. The researchers asked the men what features they look for in apps, and what aspects of an app would make them likely to use it.

“We know from previous research that there is a need to improve HIV prevention efforts, including testing rates, for Latino men who have sex with men in the U.S., and to help these men get tested for HIV and other sexually transmitted infections,” said lead author , an OPHS assistant professor. “Mobile apps are a great way to get information and resources out to people but, prior to our research, there weren’t any studies that asked these men what they wanted in an app, and what might motivate them to download an app and keep using it over time.”

Using Facebook ads and flyers the researchers recruited men in the Miami area whose primary language was Spanish. They interviewed 15 men and then analyzed the transcripts of the interviews, looking for common themes.

When asked what they looked for in apps in general, all of the study participants said that it was very important to keep their personal information secure and confidential. Most said they were willing to pay for apps that were useful to them. The men also said they tended to download apps that their friends had used and liked.

As for an HIV testing app, almost all of the men said they would like an app to send them reminders to get tested for HIV on certain dates and to show them the nearest location where they could get tested. Most also said they would like the app to send them information about HIV prevention, either through text messages or alerts, and that they would want a feature in the app that would help them keep track of how many sexual partners and encounters they had.

“These findings have applications for prevention, and could be used to help guide future efforts toward developing HIV testing apps for Spanish-speaking men who have sex with men,” Mitchell said.

The study is in the . Mitchell’s co-authors include Maria Beatriz Torres of Gustavus Adolphus College in Minnesota, Lucy Asmar of the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine in Florida, and Thu Danh and Keith Horvath, both at the University of Minnesota.

—By Theresa Kreif

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Mobile app for visually impaired field tested at Yosemite National Park /news/2017/11/30/unid-mobile-app-field-tested-at-yosemite/ Thu, 30 Nov 2017 19:09:44 +0000 http://www.hawaii.edu/news/?p=71527 Researchers at 东精影业 惭腻苍辞补 conducted user testing at Yosemite National Park of the UniD mobile app, which is is designed to make national parks brochures accessible to those who have trouble seeing them.

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Veronica Hernandez, Joey Ruiz, Nikki Richards, Chenier Derrick, back from left, and Sajja Koirala and Martha Espitia, front from left, testing UniD mobile app in Yosemite, November 2017. Photo by: Jamie Gibson-Barrows.

In continuing efforts to “audio describe the world,” researchers at the took part in a project that brought 26 blind and visually impaired people to for user testing of the UniD mobile app.

Associate Professor in the in the is the principal investigator of the project.

The group tested the new audio description of Yosemite鈥檚 brochure featured in the app. The research-instrument app is designed to make brochures at national parks accessible to those who have trouble seeing them.

The effort was coordinated with the California Council of the Blind鈥檚 Fresno chapter, the national organization and .

More about the UniDescription Project

Martha Espitia, Nikki Richards and Sarah Harris testing the UniD mobile app in Yosemite. Photo by: Jamie Gibson-Barrows.

The UniD app (available for both and ) contains audio description of more than 50 National Park Service brochures so far, including those for Everglades National Park, Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park, the Statue of Liberty National Monument, Yellowstone National Park and the Washington Monument.

The research team, led by Oppegaard and from 东精影业 惭腻苍辞补鈥檚 , started the UniDescription project in the fall of 2014 as a way to improve and encourage better audio description. Audio description is the translation of visual media, such as photographs and maps, into acoustic media in an effort to allow the ear to hear what the eye might not be able to see.

  • Related 东精影业 News stories:
    , December 4, 2014
    , August 10, 2017

A long-range goal of this project is to audio-describe all of the more than 400 park sites throughout the United States.

This field research was sponsored by Google and the American Council of the Blind as part of a larger grant project focused upon audio describing National Park Service sites throughout California.

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Helping California national parks become more accessible for visually impaired /news/2017/08/10/california-national-parks-accessible-for-visually-impaired/ Thu, 10 Aug 2017 22:55:11 +0000 http://www.hawaii.edu/news/?p=63627 Researchers will collaborate with Google, the American Council of the Blind and the National Park Service to audio describe print brochures at 15 park sites.

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Megan Conway examines media accessibility during a recent visit to Haleakal膩 National Park.

In their continuing efforts to “audio describe the world,” researchers at the will collaborate with , the (ACB), and the to audio describe print brochures at 15 park sites throughout the state of California.

This latest phase of the will focus on description of the primary print brochures available in California’s national parks, distinguishing it as the first state in the country to feature such widespread accessibility for people who are visually impaired or blind. This research project’s funding, $75,000, will be shared between 东精影业 惭腻苍辞补 and ACB, with the National Park Service adding significant in-kind support at each of the involved sites. Google, which operates out of headquarters in Mountain View, California, was founded under a mission “to organize the world’s information and make it聽聽and useful.” Toward that purpose, it offers various grants for聽.

More about the UniDescription Project

Philipp Jordan examines 3-D fiber-optic map at the Monocacy National Battlefield.

The 东精影业 惭腻苍辞补 research team—led by associate professor and principal investigator in the 聽in the College of Social Sciences, and faculty members in the —started the in the fall of 2014, as a way to improve and encourage better audio description. Audio description is the translation of visual media, such as photographs and maps, into acoustic media in an effort to allow the ear to hear what the eye might not be able to see. This 东精影业 team already has audio described brochures at 40 National Park Service sites, throughout the country—including at Yellowstone National Park, Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park and the Washington Monument—with that description planned for release later this year. For its contribution to this phase of the project, the 东精影业 team will translate print brochures using the web tool it has created, which includes distribution through mobile apps and websites, while simultaneously studying and refining best practices in the field.

The ACB—including Executive Director Eric Bridges, President Kim Charlson and Dan Spoone, chair of the organization’s Audio Description Project—will be providing multiple quality-control services, including usability and site testing at each park.

The National Park Service, through the service of Michele Hartley, media accessibility coordinator at Harpers Ferry Center, has supported the UniDescription project from its inception. A long-range goal of this project is to audio-describe all of the 400-plus park sites throughout the United States.

—By Lisa Shirota

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Honolulu Community College goes mobile /news/2016/09/07/honolulu-community-college-goes-mobile/ /news/2016/09/07/honolulu-community-college-goes-mobile/#_comments Wed, 07 Sep 2016 18:55:33 +0000 http://www.hawaii.edu/news/?p=49745 Campus mobile application developed by Kapiʻolani Community College.

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Honolulu Community College app advertisement

is on the go thanks to the information technology mobile development team at . The Honolulu CC mobile app, found on the and , will allow students to keep track of their class schedules, find their way around campus and have contact information at their fingertips to student support services. The mobile app will make its campus debut the first full week in September.

“The idea for a mobile application arose as a suggestion from the student council in November 2014,” said Craig Spurrier, developer and programmer at Kapiʻolani CC. “We started working on the application in January of 2015 and by fall of that year we released the app to Kapiʻolani Community College.”

The other members of the mobile application development team include Raphael Lowe, interface designer; Kevin Andreshak, tech operations coordinator; and Brett Botbyl, cartographer. The team worked closely with at the University of Hawaiʻi System’s office to integrate student information for the app.

Since the app launched in the fall of 2015 there have been 2,100 downloads on the iOS and 908 on Android. Approximately 20 percent of Kapiʻolani CC students use the mobile app. Some of the main features that student users mentioned using includes an informational campus map, access to class availability and the ‘how do I’ section.

“In the upcoming year most of the focus will be a full System rollout with Honolulu Community College as the second campus to adopt the application,” said Lowe. “As our ability to collaborate with the developers of STAR, the online registration and advising platform for the 东精影业 System, and other 东精影业 groups expand, we’re hopeful the app will function as a new bridge for students to get vital information they need in this mobile format.”

—By Billie Lueder

Craig Spurrier and Raphael Lowe
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Benefits and risks of fish consumption provided by new app /news/2016/08/25/benefits-and-risks-of-fish-consumption-provided-by-new-app/ Thu, 25 Aug 2016 23:41:22 +0000 http://www.hawaii.edu/news/?p=49069 东精影业 Mānoa’s Catherine Pirkle developed BeneFISHiary in response to a study on fish consumption and mercury levels in pregnant women in Bermuda.

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Screenshots of the BeneFISHiary app
Catherine Pirkle

, an app created in part by University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Assistant Professor , provides location-specific data and the risks and benefits of Bermudian fish species. Pirkle worked in close collaboration with Philippe Rouja of the in Bermuda and Tidjane Tall of .

App users can search or browse fish and get detailed information about the mercury concentrations and nutrients such as selenium and omega-3 fatty acids in that particular species. The app also provides information about the sustainability of local and imported fish, as well as which lower mercury level fish can substitute for their higher relatives.

The BeneFISHiary app was recognized with a 2016 . The app is in a beta version with plans for scale-up to other communities and enhanced features including updated fish inventories.

The app was developed following a study on the consumption of fish by pregnant women in Bermuda and the effectiveness of public health messaging on mercury in fish. The study, “” was published in PLOS One. It found that public health messaging warning of the dangers of mercury exposure from consumption of certain fish appeared to be effective, but adjustments needed to be made to promote consumption of healthy and sustainable fish with lower mercury levels. The BeneFISHiary app was created to help consumers make those adjustments, as well as healthcare providers who counsel pregnant women.

The data for the app was collected in Bermuda, however, with additional funding, Pirkle sees the potential to expand the use of the app to Hawaiʻi and other coastal communities with strong ties to their local environments.

BeneFISHiary is available for free at the and the .

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东精影业 Hilo team compete in Microsoft U.S. Imagine Cup 2016 /news/2016/03/22/uh-hilo-team-to-compete-in-microsoft-us-imagine-cup-2016-finals/ Tue, 22 Mar 2016 21:40:39 +0000 http://www.hawaii.edu/news/?p=44136 东精影业 Hilo computer science students develop a program that helps people choose plant species most beneficial for restoration projects

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东精影业 Hilo’s Team No_Sleep at the 2016 Microsft Imagine Cup U.S. Finals in San Francisco, from left, Bryson Fung, Anthony Vizzone, Reuben Tate and Pauleen Pante. (photos from Microsoft Imagine on flickr, Pre-Day and Competition Day)

April 8 update from 东精影业 Hilo Stories: The team took part in the championships, March 30–April 1, in San Francisco, California. Although the team was unable to win the national championship, they performed exceedingly well in their booth demo segment and in all around sportsmanship during the event. .

Team No Sleep, from left, Anthony Vizzone, Pauleen Pante, Bryson Fung and Reuben Tate. (photo credit: Casey Pearring)

Four seniors from the are on their way to the held March 31 in San Francisco. Team No Sleep members Bryson Fung, Pauleen Pante, Reuben Tate and Anthony Vizzone are participating in the advanced division of the competition, under the category of World Citizenship. This division of the Imagine Cup is a global competition, with efforts specifically geared toward changing the world for the better.

Tate, a and major and the team’s mathematics coordinator, says their program is designed with the intent of improving restoration efforts.

Restoring Ecosystems Services Tool

“We have developed a program that guides users in choosing what species of plants are most beneficial for their restoration goals,” he says. “It does this by looking at properties of each plant species, called functional traits, and seeing which plants are functionally similar to one another via a statistical approach called .”

Fung, a computer science major and the lead programmer elaborates, “(The program is) called , or REST for short. Depending on your purpose, the program can help you build ecosystems that are more fire resistant, more preventative of invasive species, or having more carbon storage (giving ecosystems longer lifespans). The list goes on.”

The tool uses trait and data restoration goals to help build ecosystems tailored to the need of the client.

“Biologists will be using the program to help restore the functionality of the local environment,” says Vizzone, a computer science student and the database manager of the team.

Pante is the team leader. She believes their project could do some serious good for Hawaiʻi and eventually have a global impact.

“Around the world, various plant ecosystems are in decline due to factors such as invasive plants, human activity, and plant disease,” she explains. “Restoring these ecosystems is a difficult task since more times than not, it is nearly impossible to restore the ecosystem back to its original state. As a solution, researchers can instead restore ecosystem function by introducing non-native yet non-invasive plants that are similar to their native counterparts as a means of maintaining such ecosystem function. Still, finding similar plants with similar functional traits is not trivial. That is where our program comes in.”

For the full story, see the .

A 东精影业 Hilo Stories article by Shalyn Lewis, a student writer for the 东精影业 Hilo Marketing Office.

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Digital gardening tool helps island gardeners and farmers /news/2015/06/25/digital-gardening-tool-helps-island-gardeners-and-farmers/ /news/2015/06/25/digital-gardening-tool-helps-island-gardeners-and-farmers/#_comments Thu, 25 Jun 2015 18:02:41 +0000 http://www.hawaii.edu/news/?p=35954 The Seed Variety Selection Tool for the Hawaiian Islands helps farmers select crop varieties most likely to succeed in their geographic area

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Online tool helps gardeners and farmers identify their climate zone before providing information about which crops grow well in their locations.

A graduate student in tropical conservation biology and environmental science at the has developed an online tool to help Hawaiʻi gardeners and small-scale farmers select crop varieties most likely to succeed in their specific geographic areas.

东精影业 Hilo graduate student Ilana Stout began to develop the as a final project in a geographic information systems or GIS class. She started by combining elevation data—a proxy for temperature—with moisture-zone data that had been gathered based on rainfall and vegetation by Jonathan Price, assistant professor of geography at 东精影业 Hilo.

By combining the two, Stout ended up identifying 18 different climate zones for Hawaiʻi Island. With grant support in the summer of 2014, she expanded the map to include all islands and built a search function so that users could enter their addresses and learn their specific climate zones.

Ryan Perroy, assistant professor of geography, and Sylvana Cares at the 东精影业 Hilo , provided assistance and resources to develop the Seed Variety Selection Tool.

Increasing crop success

The Seed Variety Selection Tool is intended to help novice and even experienced gardeners identify their specific plant hardiness zones and select varieties to increase the chance of success in their area, potentially helping them grow food more rapidly and reduce the risk of crop failure.

The new tool, developed through ’s , also offers a detailed representation of local plant hardiness zones based on Hawaiʻi’s diverse microclimates.

Stout and colleague Lyn Howe, coordinator of the Seed Initiative, surveyed experienced gardeners throughout the islands about their successes in growing different plant varieties. Starting with seven food crops commonly planted in Hawaiʻi—lettuce, tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, beans, squash/pumpkins, and kalo (taro)—Stout and Howe collected performance data from experienced gardeners and small-scale farmers and input them into a searchable database, tagging each data set by crop variety, climate zone, island and whether the variety was grown using organic or conventional method.

“What’s unique about the Hawaiian Islands is how abruptly our microclimates change,” says Howe. “A difference of just a mile or two, or a slight increase in elevation, can mean very different soil and growing conditions. This tool is meant to help anyone in Hawaiʻi determine their specific climate zone and learn from the success of other growers who garden or farm in similar conditions.”

The Seed Variety Selection Tool for the to help seed savers, gardeners and small-scale farmers share information about which crops perform well in their locations.

Gardeners and small-scale farmers from all islands with at least two years of successful experience growing specific varieties are encouraged to submit their crop-performance data . Names, physical addresses and contact information of contributors are kept confidential and are not published on the website.

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Hackathon set for this weekend /news/2015/02/10/att-uh-hackathon-set-for-this-weekend/ Wed, 11 Feb 2015 02:24:27 +0000 http://www.hawaii.edu/news/?p=31627 The AT&T-University of Hawaiʻi Hackathon challenges students to develop their own mobile apps in 24-hour competition.

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The will be hosting the this Friday, February 13 through Saturday, February 14, 6 p.m. at ʻIolani School’s Sullivan Center. This 24-hour competition challenges participants to build their own mobile apps while learning about the latest cutting edge tools.

东精影业 students from across the system and other community participants will have the opportunity to work together to build mobile apps from conception to implementation. Students will also design business plans for their apps, strategizing how their products will make money and be maintained.

Competing teams have a chance to win $5,000 in gift card prizes provided by . The mobile apps will be judged on originality, function, performance and the teams’ ability to articulate what their app does.

Former 东精影业 student Governer David Ige will serve on the judge’s panel. Ige earned a bachelor of science degree in electrical engineering and a master of business administration degree in decisions sciences from 东精影业 Mānoa.

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Free mobile app brings back stories of the Blackfeet Nation /news/2015/01/26/free-mobile-app-brings-back-stories-of-the-blackfeet-nation/ /news/2015/01/26/free-mobile-app-brings-back-stories-of-the-blackfeet-nation/#_comments Tue, 27 Jan 2015 00:19:54 +0000 http://www.hawaii.edu/news/?p=31052 Blackfoot ’64 app documents the 1964 flood on the Blackfeet Reservation, the worse national disaster in Montana history

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screen shot of the blackfeet app showing options to choose

Montana suffered its worst natural disaster in June 1964 when two dams collapsed and flooded Two Medicine River, killing 29 people and destroying the homes of hundreds of others. Media coverage at the time was extensive, and earned the state its first Pulitzer Prize, to The Hungry Horse News. In retrospect, the coverage had a major hole—the people most affected by the tragedy, the Blackfeet tribal members, were difficult to reach in the aftermath and their stories were left untold for decades.

Last year, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the flood, a research team of independent journalists and scholars from the , and the joined forces and interviewed more than 20 witnesses, both survivors and rescuers. Those interviews were converted into journalistic videos and shared via a prototype mobile app during the ceremonies. Through feedback and use, this free has been redesigned and reprogrammed during the past six months for a broader public audience and was released through both the Apple and Android markets.

The app development and distribution portion of the project was led by Brett Oppegaard, an assistant professor at 东精影业 Mānoa in the . He studies mobile technologies and ubiquitous computing.

More on Oppegaard’s work:

  • January 21, 2015
  • December 4, 2014

“The stories of the Blackfeet were lost to time, and in danger of disappearing altogether,” said Oppegaard. “Our team’s first priority was to document these stories and tell the bigger narrative of the ’64 flood more fully, through the perspectives of the people who actually lost their lives, family members and homes. My hope for the mobile portion of this project was to also reopen the discussion of the flood for contemporary participation. I wanted this to be a story about today, too, not just a historical piece.”

Users of the app can watch the flood-related videos—created by award-winning journalists and filmmakers—and witness the disaster’s effects on the Blackfeet population. In addition, they can also directly comment on those videos in many media forms, including text, audio and video, and share those thoughts via their social media channels. Discussion prompts accompany each video in this app, and the sharing options match the social media apps on each individual’s smartphone. Both tribal and non-tribal members are encouraged to offer reflections and interpretations.

The videos in the app were produced by Benjamin Shors, a clinical assistant professor at The at ; David Grewe, a WSU clinical assistant professor of communication; Torsten Kjellstrand, a visiting assistant professor at the ; Blackfeet journalist Lailani Upham; and Blackfeet/Salish filmmaker Brooke Swaney. Oppegaard served as mobile media director, leading the development and design team.

For more information, visit the or read the . To download the app visit for Android devices or the for Apple devices.

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Yellowstone geysers tracking app released /news/2015/01/21/yellowstone-geysers-tracking-app-released/ /news/2015/01/21/yellowstone-geysers-tracking-app-released/#_comments Wed, 21 Jan 2015 20:48:59 +0000 http://www.hawaii.edu/news/?p=30894 New mobile app developed by 东精影业 Mānoa team allows users to watch Old Faithful eruptions in real time

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national park service app

When people throughout the world want to watch the iconic Old Faithful eruption at in real time, they now can turn to their smartphones, through a free app, courtesy of a -led research team studying mobile media and communication.

Brett Oppegaard, an assistant professor in the , has led the development and production of the Geysers mobile app as part of his ongoing investigations of ubiquitous computing. Working with National Park Service staff on site in Wyoming this summer, Oppegaard and the team of designers and developers started with the idea that time in this park was predicated on when Old Faithful erupted.

  • More on Oppegaard’s work: December 4, 2014

“People in Yellowstone don’t want to know if it’s noon or 1 p.m. Mountain Standard Time; they want to know how long it will be until Old Faithful erupts again,” Oppegaard said. “That shifting of a community to Old Faithful time is fascinating, and represented in many analog forms at the park, such as on white boards, and on hand-spun clocks. We wanted to start building our research project on the idea that Old Faithful time reflects a new way of looking at the world. And then we wanted to open that perspective up to people both inside and outside of the park, through the affordances of mobile technologies.”

The mobile app features a live web cam of the Upper Geyser Basin, which includes views of several of the park鈥檚 predictable geysers, including Old Faithful. It also instantly shares ranger predictions of when the next eruptions will happen at those geysers, including Grand, Castle, Great Fountain, Daisy and Riverside. With a notification sound, the app can alert users to when Old Faithful is within its eruption cycle window, which, at minimum, allows more efficient viewing of it either in person or online.

“At its best, the app allows users to become aligned with Old Faithful time,” Oppegaard said. “Even the person just sitting at a desk in some cubicle maze somewhere can be alerted that Old Faithful is about to erupt, turn on the mobile cam, and then join the real-time party of people around the globe enjoying this majesty of nature. These eruptions are fun to watch, and they bring people together.”

Yellowstone’s social media feeds from , and are included in the app as well, allowing easy access to the park’s most up-to-date news and media, including photos and videos. Future phases of the project will add interactivity and learning games to the app.

To download the app visit for Android devices or the for Apple devices.

For more information, read the 东精影业 Mānoa .

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东精影业 Hilo team wins Microsoft Imagine Cup challenge /news/2014/12/23/uh-hilo-team-wins-microsoft-imagine-cup-challenge/ Tue, 23 Dec 2014 21:09:29 +0000 http://www.hawaii.edu/news/?p=30455 Team Hōkū won the 2015 Imagine Cup pitch video challenge in the games category.

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Team from the won the 2015 Imagine Cup pitch video challenge in the games category—the first challenge in the 2015 .

Team members Brian Hall, Theodore DeRego, Lucas DeRego and Casey Pearring created reForge, a casual 2D online sci-fi sandbox game where players command highly customizable ships in tactical battles. Players collect resources, trade in a player-driven economy and team up to competitively control various aspects of the game universe.

Although not official members of the Imagine Cup Team, Kristin Pederson and Kelli Yamane worked on documentation aspects of the game as part of their 东精影业 Hilo software engineering course.

Team Hoku received a $3,000 cash prize and will move on to the blueprint and user experience challenges in the 2015 Imagine Cup competition, a global student technology competition.

From a 东精影业 Hilo and

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Making national parks more accessible for visually impaired /news/2014/12/04/making-national-parks-more-accessible-for-visually-impaired/ Thu, 04 Dec 2014 23:50:49 +0000 http://www.hawaii.edu/news/?p=29969 A team of 东精影业 惭腻苍辞补 researchers to develop technologies to aid national parks’ visually impaired visitors

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Brett Oppegaard

A team of researchers has received a $278,300 National Park Service grant for the development of new technologies to provide dynamic experiences for visually impaired visitors of national parks. Led by Assistant Professor Brett Oppegaard from the , the group will explore the use of digital communication to convert traditional “unigrid” brochures used at all national parks into an audio description-format that better serves visually impaired audiences.

“We want to make national parks more accessible to all audiences, including those who prefer audio alternatives to the traditional printed brochure,” said Oppegaard. “Visually-impaired people deserve the same access to our parks as every other citizen, and audio formats enrich the media ecosystem of the parks, to include more people, in different ways.”

Fostering an enriching media experience

By exploring various aspects of digital communication including media forms and storytelling styles, the research team hopes to provide a dynamic set of audio-described brochures in flexible delivery formats for pilot testing at selected park sites. These audio files could be particularly effective for the visually impaired, especially for those who do not read braille, and for those who have other print-related disabilities, such as dyslexia.

Targeted for completion within three years, the project will involve the creation of various prototypes based at five parks throughout the nation—including one in Hawaiʻi—complementary research studies at those parks and the development of a web tool expected to enable more audio description files to be built at even more park sites throughout the country.

Along with Oppegaard, other members of the 东精影业 Mānoa interdisciplinary research team include Assistant Professor Megan Conway and Media Coordinator Thomas Conway, both in the within the . Rounding out the group is Sean Zdenek, an associate professor in the at .

“The impact of this project has broader implications beyond just the National Park Service,” said School of Communications Chair and Professor Ann Auman. “A successful model can be replicated at other public venues, such as museums, zoos and other state and local recreational sites, allowing individuals with disabilities to have a more engaging experience.”

Read the 东精影业 Mānoa for the full story.

—By Lisa Shirota

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东精影业 Hilo app wins prestigious Imagine Cup /news/2013/05/14/uh-hilo-app-wins-prestigious-imagine-cup/ /news/2013/05/14/uh-hilo-app-wins-prestigious-imagine-cup/#_comments Wed, 15 May 2013 03:17:03 +0000 http://www.hawaii.edu/news/?p=16811 A 东精影业 Hilo student team’s Help Me Help app won Microsoft’s Imagine Cup U.S. Finals and will compete in Russia for the world finals.

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A student team from the beat out dozens of other teams, from universities across the country, to take the top prize in the 2013 Imagine Cup U.S. Finals in San Jose, California.

The is sponsored by Microsoft and is considered the world’s premier student technology competition.

东精影业 Hilo students Mike Purvis, Ryder Donahue, Kayton Summers and Wallace Hamada created an app called Help Me Help. The app allows users to share photos and information about hazards they may encounter in emergency situations like fires, floods or roadblocks.

“During disasters, people are often panicked and they might not be able to describe very well over the phone, the exact details of the situation,” said Purvis. “Virtually everyone has a smart phone these days and so that’s really why we want to tap into the camera for this purpose.”

Help Me Help is getting attention nationally and could have a real impact locally.

“We’ve already talked to a local civil defense representative and he said they are very interested in the application, they have ideas in the past that are similar to it,” said Donahue.

东精影业 Hilo administrators and faculty are bursting with pride that a group of 东精影业 Hilo students created something to help their own community, and the world. Not bad for an idea that grew out of a senior project to design software that could track native and invasive plant species.

“We realized tracking that kind of information could be applied to a larger scale with more impact,” said Purvis. “So we decided to rewrite our entire idea for disaster response.”

The 东精影业 Hilo team will travel to St. Petersburg, Russia for the Imagine Cup Worldwide Finals in July.

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