I study how technologies designed for older adults and their caregivers reshape the moral dimensions of care — questions about what good care looks like, who gets to define it, and what happens when those definitions get encoded into algorithms and interfaces.

My work sits at the intersection of HCI, CSCW, and the sociology of morality. I draw on qualitative methods and critical theory to examine what I call justification work — the interpretive labor people do when technologies surface new moral challenges in everyday caregiving.


Developing my dissertation proposal on justification work in care technologies. Previously at MIT AgeLab and AARP Foundation.