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Rachel Luginsky

Client Services Coordinator

Rachel utilizes her experience in auto sales and the hospitality industry to create a welcoming experience for clients and colleagues. Actively intrigued by human experience and interaction, she supports research teams to ensure they have everything needed to conduct research in a smooth and efficient manner. Rachel has a BFA from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design.

Bold facts

Learn more about

Rachel

Your favorite city in the world is...and why?

New York to visit. Chicago to reside. NYC has vast variety yet niche pockets for any unique interest. Chicago has the grounding roots and growth of home.

In your spare time (or if you had spare time), you would absolutely do this:

Is under water basket weaving still a thing?

Share an interesting fact:

I successfully completed a tandem skydive jump despite an unease with heights and would not hesitate another round.

Long-term personal goal:

I would like to learn and practice the art of surfing and snowboarding.

Favorite TV show:

The Simpsons.

Favorite quote:

"Do one thing every day that scares you." -Eleanor Roosevelt

Best piece of advice you’ve been given:

Balance is key.

What is your favorite way to give back to the community?

Supporting the arts!
Read Rachel's bold insights

Read our team’s latest bold insights

AI benefits from GPU, not CPU advancements

A quick follow-up to our blog posts about AI… The name of the game is no longer Moore's Law where we see processors getting exponentially faster. AI technology is driven not by computing processes of the past, but from an evolution beyond central processing unit (CPU)...

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Three things to improve acceptance of AI

To truly deliver on the promise of AI, developers need to keep the end users in mind. By integrating three components of context, interaction, and trust, AI can be the runaway success that futurists predict it will be.

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Recruiting methods and study logistics for human factors and user research

A stronger recruiting strategy that includes relationships with patient support groups and clinical treatment centers can provide better access to difficult-to-reach patient populations. Being intentional about how you plan the logistics of your human factors and user research can mitigate risks to validity introduced by biases.

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