People and Computers X:Proceedings of the HCI '95 Conference '95
著者紹介
内容
目次
1. Invited papers: history as tool and application: the journey fromHCI'91 John M. Carroll; 2. Support for HCI educators: a view from thetrenches Jean Gasen; 3. Looking through HCI Thomas Green; Part I. Time andSpace: 4. Time and the web: representing and reasoning about temporalproperties of interaction with distributed systems Chris Johnson; 5.Cyberspace: the HCI frontier. a new model in human-computer interaction AnaS. P. Almeida, Licinio G. Roque and Antonio D. de Figueiredo; 6. Evaluationof techniques for specifying 3-D rotations with a 2-D input device Ines JacobTaquet and Javier Oliver Bernal; Part II. Training and User Support: 7.Interactive task support on the shop floor - observations on the usability ofthe interactive task support systems and differences in orientation andhands-on training use Marko Nieminen, Jyrki Kasvi, Anneli Pulkkis and MattiVartiainen; 8. Hyperdoc: an interactive systems tool Harold Thimbleby andMark Addison; 9. A proper explanation when you need one Harold Thimbleby andPeter Ladkin; Part III. Metaphor and Everyday Design: 10. Everyday theories,cognitive anthropology and user-centred system design Ben Anderson and JamesL. Alty; 11. Metaphor reflections and a tool for thought Michael Smyth, BenAnderson and James L. Alty; 12. Which metaphor for which database? TizianaCatarci, Maria F. Costabile and Maristella Matera; Part IV. User ActionHistory: 13. A model for incremental construction of command trees PhillippeP. Piernot and Marc P. Yvon; 14. User requirements for undo support in CSCWReza Hazemi and Linda Macaulay; Part V. Formalism in HCI: 15. A taxonomy andevaluation of formalisms for the specification of interactive systemsPhillipe Brun and Michel Beaudoin-Lafon; 16. Formal specification andverification of CSCW using the interactive cooperative object formalism P.Palanque and R. Bastide; Part VI. Creativity and Design: 17. A support toolfor the conceptual phase of design Ralph Stuyver, Raghu Kolli and JimHennessy; 18. Interactive visualisation artifacts: how can abstractionsinform design? Lisa Tweedie; 19. I'll know what I want when I see it: towardsa creative assistant Eric Tatham; Part VII. Computer-Supported Communication:20. Computer interviews - an initial investigation using free text responsesD. Ramanee Peiris, Norman Alm and Peter Gregor; 21. What's the flamingproblem? or computer mediated communication - deindividuating ordisinhibiting? Rosalind Dyer, Ruth Green, Marian Pitts and Gill Millward;Part VIII. Visualisation: 22. Tight coupling: guiding user actions in adirect manipulation retrieval system Christopher Ahlberg and Staffan Truvae;23. Are visual query languages easier to use than traditional ones? Anexperimental proof Tiziana Catarci and Giuseppe Santucci; 24. An evaluationof open hypertext features for improved file access Jane M. Fritz and Ian D.Benest; Part IX. Task Analysis in Context: 25. The notion of task inhuman-computer interaction Graham Storrs; 26. Applying a structured methodfor usability engineering to domestic energy management user requirements: asuccessful case study Adam Stork and James Middlemas; 27. Theories of contextinfluence the system abstractions used to design interactive systems StevenClarke and Philip Gray; Part X. Sight and Sound: 28. Can we use music incomputer-human communication? James L. Alty; 29. Red faces over userinterfaces Dan Diaper and P. S. Sahithi.
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