


Остановите войну!
for scientists:


default search action
Interactions, Volume 12
Volume 12, Number 1, January + February 2005
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
Hello! 4-5
- Fred Sampson:
User experience: why do so many organizations believe they own it? report from a Silicon Valley gathering. 7-9
- Ask Dr. Usability. 9
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
Not ready for prime-time voting. 11
- Deborah Gill-Hesselgrave, Mark Hall:
Ease your design anguish. 12-17
- Aaron Marcus:
User-centered design in the enterprise. 18-23
- Austin Henderson:
The innovation pipeline: design collaborations between research and development. 24-29 - Jim Miller:
Storytelling evolves on the web: case study: EXOCOG and the future of storytelling. 30-47
- William Hudson:
A tale of two tutorials: a cognitive approach to interactive system design and interaction design meets agility. 49-51
- Richard Douglass:
Books. 53-55
- Shirley Ann Becker:
Seeking online health resources: a study of web usability for older adults. 57-58
- CHI 2005. 59-61
- Julie Stanford, Ellen R. Tauber, Laura Klein:
AIGA National Design Conference: an interaction design perspective. 62-63
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
Business software gets it. 64
Volume 12, Number 2, March + April 2005
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
In this issue. 4
- Tom Chi, Kevin Cheng:
Infinite loop. 7
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
Usability as science. 7-8
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
Letters to the editor. 8
- Fred Sampson:
Why do I want ambient intelligence? 9-10
- Greeking and internationalization. 10
- Jean Scholtz:
Have robots, need interaction with humans! 12-14 - Corinna E. Lathan, Amy Brisben, Charlotte Safos:
CosmoBot levels the playing field for disabled children. 14-16 - Jodi Forlizzi:
Robotic products to assist the aging population. 16-18 - Cynthia Breazeal:
Socially intelligent robots. 19-22 - Alan C. Schultz, J. Gregory Trafton:
Towards collaboration with robots in shared space: spatial perspective and frames of reference. 22-24 - Candace L. Sidner, Christopher Lee:
Robots as laboratory hosts. 24-26 - Marjorie Skubic:
Qualitative spatial referencing for natural human-robot interfaces. 27-30 - Emily Hamner, Mark Lotter, Illah R. Nourbakhsh, Skip Shelly:
Case study: up close and personal from Mars. 30-36 - Robin R. Murphy:
Humans, robots, rubble, and research. 37-39 - Jill L. Drury, Holly A. Yanco, Jean Scholtz:
Using competitions to study human-robot interaction in urban search and rescue. 39-41 - Terrence Fong, Illah R. Nourbakhsh:
Interaction challenges in human-robot space exploration. 42-45 - Jean Scholtz:
An interview with Dr. Corinna Lathan of AnthroTronix. 45-47
- Lars Erik Holmquist:
Prototyping: generating ideas or cargo cult designs? 48-54
- Whitney Quesenbery:
Designing theatre, designing user experience. 55-57
- David A. Siegel, Susan M. Dray:
Avoiding the next schism: ethnography and usability. 58-61
- Manfred Tscheligi:
What else?: people, disciplines, contexts, stories, occurrences. 62-63
- Donald A. Norman:
Robots in the home: what might they do? 65
- Dustin Beltram:
Too many cooks. 66-67
- Aaron Marcus:
Dreaming of robots: an interview with Bruce Sterling. 68-70
- William Hudson:
The cost of more: psychology of choice in interaction design. 71
- Karen Landis:
Book review. 72-74 - Gerard Torenvliet:
New & upcoming titles. 74
- Nico MacDonald:
Beyond human-centered design? 75-79 - Jean Scholtz:
Robot rescue camp. 79-80 - Cory D. Kidd:
Robots in Italy: beyond da Vinci. 80-82 - Michael A. Goodrich
:
HRI 2006. 82-83 - Julie A. Adams:
14th IEEE International Workshop on Robot and Human Interactive Communication. 82 - Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
From fiction to science: swissnex explores the interfaces. 83-87
- Event planner. 77
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
User research as kool-aid. 88-
Volume 12, Number 3, May + June 2005
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
In this issue. 4
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
It's mine... 7-9
- Tom Chi, Kevin Cheng:
Who owns it? 8
- Distressed in a cube. 9-11
- Richard H. Karpinski:
Jef Raskin, pioneer. 10-11
- Fred Sampson:
Back to school for UX? 12-13
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
Letters to the editor. 13-14
- Pabini Gabriel-Petit:
Introduction: sharing ownership of UX. 16-18 - Dirk Knemeyer:
Who owns UX?: not us! 18-20 - John C. Ferrara:
Building positive team relationships for better usability. 20-21 - David Hawdale:
The vision of good user experience. 22-23 - Peter Bogaards, Ruurd Priester:
User experience: back to business. 23-25 - Bob Goodman:
Making UX an engaging process for prospective user experience adopters. 25-26 - Jeremy Ashley, Kristin Desmond:
Success with user-centered design management. 27-32 - Bruce "Tog" Tognazzini:
Why engineers own user experience design. 32-34 - Elizabeth Bacon:
Defining interaction design. 34-35 - Victor Lombardi:
The adaptive user experience organization. 36 - Fred Sampson:
STC and user experience. 37-38 - Paul Sherman, Whitney Quesenbery:
Engineering the user experience: UX and the Usability Professionals' Association. 38-40 - Richard Anderson, Keith Instone, Dirk Knemeyer, Beth Mazur, Whitney Quesenbery:
User experience network: a passion for collaboration. 40-41
- Elizabeth A. Buie:
There once was a whiteboard in verse... 42-44
- John Scooter Morris:
Professional societies and business relevance. 45-47
- Manfred Tscheligi:
More experiences: other sides of the profession story. 48-49
- Donald A. Norman:
Whose profession is this?: everybody's, nobody's. 51
- Dustin Beltram:
Virtual bridges: creating successful designs in a distributed development environment. 52-53
- Aaron Marcus:
The out-of-box home experience: remote from reality. 54-56
- William Hudson:
Fitts at 50: for link design, size does matter. 57
- Lars Erik Holmquist:
The robots are coming. 58-59
- Jeff Horvath, Tim Cartwright:
Book review. 60-62 - Gerard Torenvliet:
New & upcoming titles. 61
- UX events. 63
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
Do good, then do better. 64-
- Nevin Berger:
Attitudes towards testing. 64
Volume 12, Number 4, July + August 2005
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
In this issue. 4
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
CHI and the practitioner dilemma. 5-9
- Tom Chi, Kevin Cheng:
HAT9000. 5
- John Scooter Morris:
Why doesn't SIGCHI eat its own dog food? 8-10
- Fred Sampson:
Brand UX. 10-11
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
Letters to the editor. 11-12
- Seeing is believing. 13
- Donald A. Norman:
Human-centered design considered harmful. 14-19
- Manfred Tscheligi:
Introduction. 20-21 - Norbert A. Streitz
, Carsten Magerkurth, Thorsten Prante, Carsten Röcker:
From information design to experience design: smart artefacts and the disappearing computer. 21-25 - Leonardo Bonanni, Ernesto Arroyo, Chia-Hsun Lee
, Ted Selker:
Exploring feedback and persuasive techniques at the sink. 25-28 - Jukka Vanhala, Frans Mäyrä, Ilpo Koskinen:
Living in metamorphosis: proactive computing in the home environment. 28-31 - Paul Dourish, Johanna Brewer, Genevieve Bell
:
Information as a cultural category. 31-33 - Stefan Agamanolis:
New technologies for human connectedness. 33-37 - Panos Markopoulos, Boris E. R. de Ruyter, Privender Saini, Albert J. N. van Breemen:
Case study: bringing social intelligence into home dialogue systems. 37-44 - Marianne Graves Petersen:
Interactive spaces: towards a better everyday? 44-45 - Pattie Maes:
Attentive objects: enriching people's natural interaction with everyday objects. 45-48 - Ingelise Nielsen, Graham Pullin:
A simple secret for design. 48-50 - Marco Susani:
Interaction contextualized in space. 50-54 - Mike Kuniavsky:
Projections into the world: service avatars as ambient intelligence objects. 55-57 - Steve Benford:
Pushing the boundaries of interaction in public. 57-58
- Douglas W. Anderson:
Designers don't hurt people; designs do. 60-61
- Scott Weiss:
An alternative business model for addressing usability: subscription research for the telecom industry. 62-64
- Emile H. L. Aarts:
Ambient intelligence drives open innovation. 66-68
- Donald A. Norman:
Do companies fail because their technology is unusable? 69
- Dustin Beltram:
Compromising positions. 70-
- Lars Erik Holmquist:
Ubiquitous music. 71-
- Aaron Marcus:
Usability grows up: the great debate. 72-73
- J. R. McNeill:
Book review. 74-77 - Gerard Torenvliet:
New & upcoming titles. 75
- Event planner. 77
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
The case for case studies. 80-
- Atticus Wolrab:
Postcards from the future. 80
Volume 12, Number 5, September + October 2005
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
In this issue. 4
- Tom Chi, Kevin Cheng:
Infoaction education. 5
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
Hello, goodbye in the line of HCI. 5-9
- Jonathan Arnowitz, Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
Letters to the editor. 8-10
- Fred Sampson:
If your prototype explodes in the forest, will anyone notice? 10-11
- Growing designers. 13
- Russell Beale:
University HCI---squeezed into where? 15-16 - Elizabeth F. Churchill, Jonathan Sykes, Todd Zazelenchuk:
Recognizing student designers: ACM CHI's Student Design Competition. 16-19 - Frank E. Ritter, Andrew R. Freed, Onida L. M. Haskett:
Discovering user information needs: the case of university department web sites. 19-27 - Randolph G. Bias:
The University of Texas at Austin School of Information: deep in the heart of the information age. 27-28 - Bonnie E. John:
The Human Computer Interaction Institute at Carnegie Mellon University. 28-29 - Terry Winograd, Scott R. Klemmer:
HCI at Stanford University. 30-31 - Judith S. Olson:
The HCI program at the School of Information at the University of Michigan. 31-32