The CHI ’24 Dark Patterns Workshop received several high-quality submissions. After a blind review, the following 15 position papers were accepted into the workshop. The papers will be published in the CEUR Workshop Proceedings as archival materials.
| Sanju Ahuja and Jyoti Kumar. Layered Analysis of Persuasive Designs: A Framework for Identification and Autonomy Centric Evaluation of Dark Patterns |
| Ghada Alsebayel, Giovanni Troiano and Casper Harteveld. “Not Nice!”: Towards Understanding Dark Patterns in Commercial Health Apps |
| Vittoria Caponecchia. Voice-based virtual assistants design and European legislation: the interpretation of subliminality, manipulation and deception |
| Rohan Grover. A View From Somewhere: Shifting Expertise in Identifying and Evaluating Dark Patterns |
| Dominique Kelly and Jacquelyn Burkell. Disclosure by Design: How Dark Patterns Reduce Users’ Social Privacy |
| Kirill Kronhardt and Jens Gerken. Start Playing Around – Serious & Persuasive Games as a Viable Counter-Measure Against Deceptive Patterns? |
| Frank Lewis and Julita Vassileva. Lost in the Dark: Revealing the Relationships, Goals, and Harms of Dark Pattterns |
| Aryan Mamidwar and Ganesh Bhutkar. An Overview of Guidelines on Dark Patterns |
| Deborah Maria Löschner and Sebastian Pannasch. Measuring the Deceptive Potential of Design Patterns: A Decision-Making Game |
| Doris Rhomberg and Hauke Sandhaus. Towards Quantifying Ethical User Experience: Evaluating User Perceptions of Dark Patterns in Social Media |
| Lorena Sánchez Chamorro and Carine Lallemand. Towards a Second Wave of Manipulative Design Research: Methodological Challenges of Studying the Effects of Manipulative Designs on Users |
| Mathias Schlolaut, Olga Kieselmann and Arno Wacker. Comparing Nudges and Deceptive Patterns at a Technical Level |
| Katie Seaborn and Weichen Chang. Another Subtle Pattern: Examining Demographic Biases in Dark Patterns and Deceptive Design Research |
| Eszter Vigh. CounterSludge in Alcohol Purchasing on Online Grocery Shopping Platforms |
| Robert Wolfe and Alexis Hiniker. Expertise Fog on the GPT Store: Deceptive Design Patterns in User-Facing Generative AI |