Agenda

PhD defense Madalina Nicolae : Prototyping Interactive Systems with Biomaterials: New Approaches for Human-Computer Interaction

Monday 27 April, 2026, at 13:00 (Paris time) at Télécom Paris

Télécom Paris, 19 place Marguerite Perey F-91120 Palaiseau [getting there], amphi Thévenin and in videoconferencing

Jury

  • Wendy MACKAY, Research Director, Université Paris-Saclay (UMR 9015), France — President
  • Gregory ABOWD, Professor, Northeastern University, USA — Reviewer
  • Andrea BIANCHI, Associate Professor, KAIST, South Korea — Reviewer
  • Céline COUTRIX, Research Director, Université de Grenoble (UMR 5217), France — Examiner
  • Sarah FDILI ALAOUI, Associate Professor, Université Paris-Saclay (UMR 9015), France — Examiner
  • Samuel HURON, Associate Professor, Télécom Paris (UMR 9217), France — Thesis Supervisor
  • Jürgen STEIMLE, Full Professor, Saarland University, Germany — Thesis Co-Supervisor
  • Anna Maria FEIT, Assistant Professor, Saarland University, Germany — Guest
  • Marc TEYSSIER, Assistant Professor, De Vinci Higher Education, France — Guest

Abstract

This dissertation explores the integration of biomaterials and biological processes into Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), within biofabrication practices, as a lever for designing interactive systems. Dominant HCI paradigms have historically been built around stable, predictable, and controllable materials. In this model, behaviors are fully specified and controlled by the designer, who imposes a predefined form and function onto passive substrates. Design outcomes, therefore, remain confined to what can be anticipated, modeled, and controlled.
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While effective, this approach limits the consideration of materials whose properties evolve over time, react to the environment, or actively participate in artifact formation. Biomaterials, ranging from processed biopolymers to living systems, offer an alternative material logic based on growth, transformation, and degradation. Yet, their integration into interactive systems is hindered by fabrication logics, methodologies, and evaluation frameworks, ill-suited to dynamic, transient, or agentic materials.
To address these challenges, this research proposes translating biomaterial properties and biological processes into design and fabrication frameworks for HCI. This work moves beyond the role of a substitute to demonstrate how the specific properties of biomaterials and the activity of biological systems condition the design process. These dimensions redefine design temporality: the process no longer aims for a fixed result. It shifts toward process-oriented practices, where material transformation becomes a design resource.
This dissertation broadens the integration levels of biomaterials and living systems in interactive device fabrication through several fabrication frameworks. « Interactive Bioplastics » demonstrates the viability of processed biomaterials to support essential electronic functions. « SoftBioMorph » mobilizes intrinsic biopolymer behaviors as design resources, articulating material sensitivity and reactivity as continuous interaction modalities. « Biohybrid Devices » deepens this logic by integrating biological activity as a design parameter: a lifecycle-based approach where growth, stabilization, and post-processing co-determine form and interaction. Complementarily, « RG-Joint » explores how growth can modulate and transform the mechanical properties of hybrid structures, paving the way for fabrication logics where the living material continues to evolve well beyond the initial production phase. These frameworks and the resulting artifacts act as epistemic devices, revealing challenges and opportunities inherent to designing with biomaterials.
Finally, adopting a reflexive posture, this manuscript examines the systemic implications of biofabrication in HCI. By crossing retrospective reflections with expert interviews, it identifies major tensions related to evaluation, infrastructures, and disciplinary values. These frictions are not isolated technical limitations, but symptoms of a deeper mismatch between the realities of the living and HCI’s inherited paradigms of stability and control. By articulating these divergences, this work proposes a forward-looking research agenda in which biofabrication emerges as a transformative fabrication paradigm that invites the field to rethink how interactive systems are made, evaluated, maintained, and allowed to change over time.