
Juan Jiménez Garcia
Assistant Professor
| Building: | Mackenzie, Room 2496 |
| Department: | |
| Degrees: | Industrial Design, MSc. Interaction Design, PhD. Human Computer Interaction |
| Website: |
Biography
My background is in industrial design. I obtained my BA from Universidad de Los Andes in Colombia. Following this, I completed my advanced studies at the MSc. program ‘Design for Interaction’ of Delft University of Technology (TUDelft), the Netherlands with Cum Laude degree. I received my PhD in Human-Computer Interaction at the Faculty of Industrial Design Engineering, TUDelft. After graduating, I worked as a post-doctoral researcher.
Research and education have been for me a journey of discovery, of who I am, the world around me, and my contribution to society. ThisÌýjourneyÌýso far has opened the doors toÌýshare and implement my design perspectives and tools across cultures with an interdisciplinary focus. I work closely with TUDelft in The Netherlands, Beijing Normal University in China, and The Hong Kong Polytechnic University in Hong Kong.
Research
I’m passionate about human-centered design for personal informatics systems. My work is conducted through ethnographically informed design, human-centered design, and participatory design. My interest is to create social impact by designing socio-technical systems that deliver meaningful experiences between people, technology, and data, understanding and representing real human needs through digital interactions that improve people’s daily life.
I focus on:
- Understanding as the initial stage in the development of technological systems
- Designing for user empowerment
- Designing for personal reflective and persuasive informatics
- Integrating qualitative and quantitative data
- Designing for healthcare and wellness scenarios
Current research directions:
- Enhancing the accessibility of healthcare digital technology by closing the gap between design requirements and people’s localized needs and values.
- Developing and applying HCD methods in a real context in order to understand people’s daily life experiences and their impact on the design of solutions.
- Studying the notion of global north vs. global south for best practices in the design of context-oriented solutions.
- Studying behavioral change strategies in developing reflective, persuasive, or coercive personal informatics systems.


