Academic Track
Full presentations (15 min. talk + 5 min. questions)
- AF1: Andrea Villanes, Dengue news reports cluster analysis using text mining
- AF2: Jazmine Maldonado, Vanessa Peña-Araya, Barbara Poblete, Spatio and Temporal Characterization of Chilean News Events in Social Media
- AF3: Maria Paula Bonaccorso Marinelli, Diego Nicolás Lara Bombal, Teleinformática para prevenir trastornos hipertensivos durante el embarazo
- AF4: Estefanía Tenorio, Desarrollo de dispositivo de rastreo ocular como medio de comunicación para personas con discapacidad motora
- AF5: Claudia Lopez, Participatory Information Systems for (and by) Urban Communities
- AF6: Ana Paula Ferreira, Thiago Silva, Antônio Loureiro, You Are Your Check-In: Understanding the Behavior of Tourists and Residents Using Data from Foursquare
- AF7: Mariana Varela, Katsuhiko Ogawa, Social Networking Service for Helping Each Other in the Neighborhoods
- AF8: Eveling Gloria Castro Gutierrez, Nancy Hitschfeld, A Systematic Literature Review on 3D Reconstruction Methods from a Limited Number of X-ray Images
- AF9: Cecilia Testart, Cybersecurity Policy Making: Mapping Concepts and Actors
- AF10: María Clara Gómez Álvarez, Carlos Mario Zapata Jaramillo, Formulación de una teoría general para la enseñanza de ingeniería de software
- AF11: Mar Pérez-Sanagustín, Isabel Hilliger, Pablo Schwarzenberg, Denis Parra, A framework for analyzing the impact of Hybrid MOOC-based pedagogies
Student research talks (5 min. talk)
- SR1: Alejandra Munoz Munoz, A Tool for Sustainable Residential Water Management for the Architectural Design Delivery Process
- SR2: Yensy Helena Gómez, Paralelizacion del método PIC 2D para resolver la ecuaciones de Vlasov-Poisson sobre GPUs
- SR3: Paulina Silva Ghio, Raúl Monge, Toward a Security Reference Architecture of the Browser
- SR4: Giannina Costa and Romina Torres, Guía de buenas prácticas en el uso de metodologías ágiles Scrum/XP orientada a equipos sin experiencia
- SR5: Andrea Vasquez, Miguel Nussbaum, Gabriel Vidal, Plataforma para shared workspaces co-localizados masivos
- SR6: Caterina Muñoz Vildósola, Real Time Analytics on DNS (RaTA-DNS)
Industry Track
Regular talks (15 min. talk + 5 min. questions)
- ID1: Carolina Rojas, Liliana Reyes, Coordinador de servicios
- ID2: Yesika Paola Hernández Córdova, sitiotours.com
- ID3: Pamela Ocampo, CSS and Kittens: Tips and tricks to keeping your front-end code DRY, easy to maintain, and adorable!
- ID4: Samantha Nunes, Letícia Bomfin, Integração contínua no desenvolvimento mobile utilizando TeamCity, Testfairy e Calabash
- ID5: Mara Ares, Videojuegos, construye tu empresa en 10 pasos
- ID6: Kattya Cuevas, Plataforma de educación online, DevAcademy
- ID7: Karen Da Cruz, All over the world: Agile distributed teams
Extended talks (25 min. talk + 5 min. questions)
- ED1: Cecilia Saint-Pierre, Tratando de modernizar el estado desde adentro
- ED2: Marta Alonso, Software libre para gobiernos abiertos – donde van mis impuestos (Argentina)
- ED3: Carolina Hadad, Qué es un laboratorio de gobierno?
- ED4: Lais Souza, Débora Lima, Yasmim Mello, Pricilla Chaves, Miriam Chaves and Ana Garcia, Uma proposta de repositório de dados para prover informações de Governo
- ED5: Louise Penna Poubel, Developing free open source software for robotics
Society Track
Panels
- SP1: Carolina Hadad, Camila Achutti, Patricia Peña and Maitetxu Larraechea, Lessons Learnt in WiT groups in Southern Latam (30 min.)
- SP2: Stephanie Frias, Andrea Villanes, Alicia Chong, Beatriz Astorga and Maira Samary, Formando la siguiente generacion de mujeres en STEM en Latinoamérica (60 min.)
- SP3: Nancy Hitschfeld, Salomé Martinez, Barbara Poblete, Martina Valenzuela, Rocio Duque and Felipe Alvarez, Atrayendo Mujeres a Ciencias, Ingeniería y Tecnología en la Universidad de Chile: Origen e Implementación de los Cupos de Equidad de Género (60 min.)
- SP4: Alicia Chong Rodriguez, Mónica Abarca, Mariana Fonseca, Mariana Vasconcelos, Ana Benatuil, Emilia Diaz, Bianca Alves de Almeida, Ana Karen Ramirez Tellez, Exponential Technologies Panel – Singularity University Latinas 2015 (60 min.)
Talks (15 min. talk + 5 min. questions)
- ST1: Carla Suárez, Desarrollando desarrolladoras
- ST2: Elizabeth Vidal, Eveling Castro Gutierrez, Integrando el Aprendizaje de Habilidades “Profesionales” y de “Conciencia” de ABET: Experiencia y Lecciones Aprendidas
- ST3: Jessica Cotrina Revilla, “Dame una mano”: Una esperanza impresa en 3d
- ST4: Julianah Diaz, Arquitectura para la contextualizacion y consolidación de iniciativas tecnológicas inclusivas
- ST5: Sandra Céspedes, Empoderamiento de las Mujeres en Ingeniería: IEEE WIE
- ST6: Gláucia Braga E Silva, Thais Regina De Moura Braga Silva, Janaína Mendes De Oliveira, Taís Batista Dos Santos, Apoiando à formação de meninas em tecnologia – extensão universitária no interior do Brasil
- ST7: María Celeste Medina, Cerrando la brecha de género desde la industria
- ST8: Daniela Gonzalez, Ana Ramirez, Epic Queen: Impulsando a niñas y mujeres en la Tecnología
- ST9: Kemly Camacho, Crisly Gonzalez Sanchez, TIC-as: creando condiciones y oportunidades para la integración de mujeres rurales en el sector de tecnologías de información y comunicación en Costa Rica
- ST10: Camila Gaitán, Ser mujer en tecnología es una cuestión de género y capacidad
- ST11: Sergio Celis, Nicolas Bonilla, Understanding the academic experience of first-year women engineering students: Perspectives in the midst of a change
- ST12: Wendy María Ramírez González, ¿Por qué ingresan tan pocas mujeres a la carrera de Informática Empresarial del Recinto de San Ramón de la Universidad de Costa Rica?
- ST13: Camila Gaitán, Codies (code + ladies) Mujer, Tecnología y Empoderamiento
- ST14: Elizabeth Vidal, Hacia la mejora de la retencion de estudiantes mujeres durante el Primer Curso de Programacion: Experiencias y Lecciones Aprendidas
- ST15: Marianna Villarroel, Jorge Maturana, Yasna Barrientos, Construyendo una comunidad informática femenina en el sur de Chile
- ST16: Andrea Villanes, Stephanie Frias, Karen Da Cruz, Women in Technology Peru: lecciones aprendidas
- ST17: Gabriele Lamarck Silveira, Women@Comp
- ST18: Isabel Yepes, Juliana Hernández, Las voces del SI, vivencias de mujeres que crean tecnología
Entrepreneurship Workshop
Getting started on the entrepreneurship journey
Latinity is proud to invite you to the entrepreneurship workshop on November 9th led by Manish Singhal, a renowned entrepreneur and an angel investor, founder-mentor of Women Entrepreneur Quest held annually during Grace Hopper India, and Jagruti Bhikha, Associate Consultant People Lead at Thoughtworks, who has worked with promoting women in tech in US and India.
If you are new to entrepreneurship, this workshop is for you. Some of the discussion points will be:
- I want to explore the entrepreneurship world. Is this for me?
- I have many ideas, where do I start? How do I know which idea has good potential?
- What considerations should I keep in mind in early stages of an entrepreneurship project? (from a financial, legal and tech perspective)
- How do I set up a realistic goal for my start up project? (learning about exit strategies)
- How do I prepare a powerful pitch to present my idea to potential investors?
- I want to grow the team, how do I identify the right skills needed?
- How do I attract talent and reward them accordingly? (equity, salary, etc.)
- Since it may take some time to monetize my project, how do I survive in the meantime?
- Lessons learned from successful projects vs. failed attempts
Product Visioning #LatinityChallenge
Discovering tech-driven innovative solutions to support women around the world
Latinity is happy to invite you to participate in a 6-8 hour challenge that spans across 2 days where teams will organize around the below challenges to find tech-driven innovative solutions to support women around the world through technology. The challenge will be based on a product visioning workshop that will provide some guidance on how you can approach the challenge while learning the core essence of prototyping techniques.
Each category will have a subject matter expert available to answer questions and provide more context if necessary. Moreover, within each category, a 200 USD prize will be awarded to the winning solution. Winning solutions will be selected by a panel of judges, and more information about requirements and logistics will be announced 2 months prior-to the challenge.
Twitter: #LatinityChallenge
Challenges
- A solution to unite and strengthen the voices speaking out on behalf of girls and women around the world.
- A solution to assess and enhance their career skills about a specific area such as programming, finance etc.
- A solution to track the impact of individual women leaders that can be shared with a larger global network and inspire the world around them.
Eligibility
Teams must be a maximum of 5 team members (at least 3 members should identify as female participants). Teams must be present to pitch to our judges and receive their prize at the awards ceremony.
Judging Criteria
- Design
- Fulfills the challenge
- Potential for impact
Rules
- Non-transferability: #LatinityChallenge is by application only. Your invitation is non-transferrable. Please notify the event organizer if you can no longer attend so that we can accommodate wait-list attendees. Additionally, due to limited space, attendees will not be allowed to bring guests to this event.
- Team size: Maximum 5 members per team to be eligible for the prizes.
- No harassment: #LatinityChallenge is dedicated to providing a harassment-free event experience for everyone regardless of age, gender, sexual orientation, disability, physical appearance, race, or religion. We will not tolerate harassment of conference participants in any form, including overly sexualized or demeaning comments during talks or anything that threatens personal safety. #LatinityChallenge participants violating these rules may be sanctioned or expelled from the conference at the discretion of the conference organizers.
- Teams must be present to pitch to our judges and receive their prize at the end of the Day2 session.
CODE: Debugging the Gender Gap Documentary
LATINITY Organizing Committee is happy to announce a great surprise closing activity on Tuesday night! For the FIRST TIME in Latin America! LATINITY will host a screening of “CODE: Debugging the gender gap” documentary! Premiered at the TRIBECA FILM FESTIVAL, CODE documentary exposes the dearth of American female and minority software engineers and explores the reasons for this gender gap. CODE raises the question: what would society gain from having more women and minorities code? What best way to close our conference than this! Hope to see you at the screening!