Improving over time... | | BIB | Full-Text | 5 | |
Ron Wakkary; Erik Stolterman |
Redesigning Interactions | | BIBA | Full-Text | 6-7 | |
Luke Hayman | |||
Luke Hayman, the award-winning graphic designer whose work has transformed
such titles as Time, The Atlantic, Consumer Reports, Cosmo, Travel + Leisure,
New York, Folio, and even Communications of the ACM, was presented with a
formidable task: Revitalize the look and presentation of a well-established
20-year-old magazine written by and for a community of designers working to
enhance the way humans and technologies interact.
Hayman, and his team from the prestigious global design firm Pentagram, including Shigeto Akiyama and Ellen Peterson, took to the mission readily, working with Interactions' editors-in-chief Ron Wakkary and Erik Stolterman, and the magazine's editorial staff to digest where this magazine has been and its vision for the future. Here, Hayman describes what he feels are the key ingredients to a successful redesign and the thought and selection process that went into the contemporary redesign you now hold. |
New vision by design | | BIB | 9 | |
Scott Delman |
Demo hour | | BIBA | Full-Text | 10-13 | |
Koray Tahiroglu; Valtteri Wikström; Simon Overstall; Thomas Svedström; Johan Kildal; Teemu Ahmaniemi; Kiel Long; John Vines; Hiromi Nakamura; Home Miyashita; Eunjin Kim; Romy Achituv | |||
The four projects shown here are from CHI 2013 Interactivity in Paris, France, selected to reflect the diversity of approaches to embodied interaction. HCI research commonly features contributions more keenly experienced through embodied engagement rather than via a presentation or video. CHI Interactivity provides the venue for such work, allowing attendees to touch, squeeze, hear, or even taste interactive visions for the future, be they research, invention, the arts, or design. -- Florian Mueller, Steve Benford, Danielle Wilde and Atau Tanaka, CHI 2013 Interactivity Chairs |
Christopher Le Dantec | | BIB | Full-Text | 15 | |
Christopher Le Dantec |
Thermobooth | | BIBA | Full-Text | 16-17 | |
Talia Radford; Jonas Bohatsch; Lena Gold | |||
Interactive photography adds a new take on the old photo booth experience. |
Interactivation Studio, University of Technology, Sydney | | BIBA | Full-Text | 18-21 | |
As told by Bert Bongers |
What's in a word? | | BIBA | Full-Text | 22-23 | |
Lone Koefoed Hansen | |||
Why natural isn't objectively better. |
The currencies of paper currency | | BIB | Full-Text | 24-25 | |
Elizabeth F. Churchill |
Making: movement or brand? | | BIB | Full-Text | 26-27 | |
Jonathan Bean; Daniela Rosner |
Slow change interaction design | | BIBA | Full-Text | 28-35 | |
Martin A. Siegel; Jordan Beck | |||
A theoretical sketch exploring the mindsets required for creating interactive technologies that facilitate attitudinal and behavioral change over time. |
Are you sure your software is gender-neutral? | | BIB | Full-Text | 36-39 | |
Gayna Williams |
Designing people | | BIB | Full-Text | 40-43 | |
Norene Kelly |
Special topic: Designing for and with vulnerable people | | BIBA | Full-Text | 44-46 | |
John Vines; Róisín McNaney; Stephen Lindsay; Jayne Wallace; John McCarthy | |||
HCI has started to explore the positive roles that technology can play in improving the lives of people facing cognitive, emotional, physical, and socioeconomic challenges. Despite this encompassing a large percentage of the population, an overarching characteristic that people facing such challenges likely share is that society considers them vulnerable in one way or another [1]. In these contexts, undertaking even the most fundamental aspects of research and design -- or even just meeting with potential participants in your project -- can present many unexpected and significant challenges to researchers and practitioners. This issue prompted us to organize the "Designing for and with Vulnerable People" workshop at CHI 2013 in Paris earlier this year [2]. |
Stories from my thanatosensitive design process | | BIBA | Full-Text | 47-49 | |
Michael Massimi | |||
Reflections on working with the bereaved |
Fieldwork with vulnerable populations | | BIBA | Full-Text | 50-53 | |
Cosmin Munteanu; Heather Molyneaux; Susan O'Donnell | |||
Ethical implications for human-computer interaction research |
Engaging homeless young people in HCI research | | BIBA | Full-Text | 54-57 | |
Jill Palzkill Woelfer | |||
They are not just vulnerable, but also susceptible |
Persuasive technology for sustainable workplaces | | BIBA | Full-Text | 58-61 | |
Dan Lockton; Luke Nicholson; Rebecca Cain; David Harrison | |||
This forum presents innovative thought, design, and research in the area of interaction design and environmental sustainability. We explore how HCI can contribute to the complex, interdisciplinary efforts to address sustainability challenges. -- Elaine M. Huang, Editor |
The place we call home | | BIBA | Full-Text | 62-65 | |
Elad Ben Elul | |||
This forum aims to offer and promote a rich discussion at the intersection of art, performance, and culture that expands the boundaries of HCI while broadening our understanding of how things of the past come to matter in the present. -- Elisa Giaccardi, Editor |
Managing health with mobile technology | | BIBA | Full-Text | 66-69 | |
Predrag Klasnja; Wanda Pratt | |||
This forum is dedicated to personal health in all its many facets: decision-making, goal setting, celebration, discovery, reflection, and coordination, among others. We look at innovations in interactive technologies and how they help address current critical healthcare challenges. -- Gillian R. Hayes, Editor |
Sharing data while protecting privacy in citizen science | | BIBA | Full-Text | 70-73 | |
Anne Bowser; Andrea Wiggins; Lea Shanley; Jennifer Preece; Sandra Henderson | |||
Public policy plays an influential role in the work we do as HCI researchers, interaction designers, and practitioners. "Public policy," a broad term, includes both government policy and policy within non-governmental organizations. This forum focuses on topics at the intersection of human-computer interaction and public policy. -- Jonathan Lazar, Editor |
Introducing the business of UX | | BIBA | Full-Text | 74-76 | |
Daniel Rosenberg | |||
This forum is dedicated to maximizing the success of HCI practitioners within the frenetic world of product and service design. It focuses on UX strategy approaches, leadership, management techniques, and above all the challenge of bringing HCI to peer-level status with longstanding business disciplines such as marketing and engineering. -- Daniel Rosenberg, Editor |
To whom are we talking? | | BIB | Full-Text | 78 | |
Gerrit C. van der Veer |
Community Calendar: January -- April 2014 | | BIB | Full-Text | 79 | |
Ultrabark lapdog bag | | BIB | Full-Text | 80 | |
Eli Blevis |
Distant matters | | BIB | Full-Text | 5 | |
Ron Wakkary; Erik Stolterman |
In memory of Gary Marsden | | BIB | Full-Text | 6-7 | |
Matt Jones; Yvonne Rogers |
Feedback | | BIB | Full-Text | 9 | |
Demo hour | | BIBA | Full-Text | 10-13 | |
Sangtae Kim; Jaejeung Kim; Soobin Lee; Ivan Petkov; Gloria Ronchi; Claudio Benghi; Ben Bengler; Nick Bryan-Kinns | |||
Demo Hour highlights new prototypes and projects that exemplify innovation and novel forms of interaction. Audrey Desjardins, Editor |
Will Odom | | BIB | Full-Text | 15 | |
Will Odom |
Cell | | BIBA | Full-Text | 16-17 | |
Eunjin Kim; Romy Achituv | |||
Users breathe life into a pneumatically controlled installation and performance wearable. |
Ocean Industry Concept Lab, Oslo School of Architecture and Design | | BIB | Full-Text | 18-21 | |
Kjetil Nordby |
Interaction design research and the future | | BIB | Full-Text | 22-23 | |
Mikael Wiberg |
Efficiency: time and time again? | | BIB | Full-Text | 24-25 | |
Rogério de Paula |
Learning entrepreneurial hustle | | BIB | Full-Text | 26-27 | |
Jon Kolko |
How to make distance work work | | BIB | Full-Text | 28-35 | |
Judith S. Olson; Gary M. Olson |
Laser origami: laser-cutting 3D objects | | BIB | Full-Text | 36-41 | |
Stefanie Mueller; Bastian Kruck; Patrick Baudisch |
Design for America: organizing for civic innovation | | BIB | Full-Text | 42-47 | |
Elizabeth Gerber |
Simplifying payments in emerging markets | | BIB | Full-Text | 48-52 | |
Lucia Terrenghi; Benedict Davies; Ethan Eismann |
Teaching design for development in computer science | | BIBA | Full-Text | 54-59 | |
Edwin Blake; Meryl Glaser; Adinda Freudenthal | |||
When undertaking a project in community-based co-design, students and their teachers must embrace uncertainty. |
Supporting the uninitiated in user-centered design | | BIBA | Full-Text | 60-65 | |
Maria Ralph; Petra Björndal | |||
Practicing UCD is vital to helping non-UX practitioners acquire an understanding of this new mindset. |
Beyond video games for social change | | BIBA | Full-Text | 66-68 | |
Michael S. Horn | |||
The boundaries between 'the digital' and our everyday physical world are dissolving as we develop more physical ways of interacting with computing. This forum presents some of the topics discussed in the colorful multidisciplinary field of tangible and embodied interaction. -- Eva Hornecker, Editor |
Reframing design culture and aging | | BIBA | Full-Text | 70-73 | |
Özge Subasi; Lone Malmborg; Geraldine Fitzpatrick; Britt Östlund | |||
Community + Culture features practitioner perspectives on designing technologies for and with communities. We highlight compelling projects and provocative points of view that speak to both community technology practice and the interaction design field as a whole. -- Christopher A. Le Dantec, Editor |
Computer supported collective action | | BIBA | Full-Text | 74-77 | |
Aaron Shaw; Haoqi Zhang; Andrés Monroy-Hernández; Sean Munson; Benjamin Mako Hill; Elizabeth Gerber; Peter Kinnaird; Patrick Minder | |||
Social media has become globally ubiquitous, transforming how people are networked and mobilized. This forum explores research and applications of these new networked publics at individual, organizational, and societal levels. -- Shelly Farnham, Editor |
Collaboratively designing assistive technology | | BIBA | Full-Text | 78-81 | |
Shaun K. Kane; Amy Hurst; Erin Buehler; Patrick A. Carrington; Michele A. Williams | |||
In this forum we celebrate research that helps to successfully bring the benefits of computing technologies to children, older adults, people with disabilities, and other populations that are often ignored in the design of mass-marketed products. -- Juan Pablo Hourcade, Editor |
Questioning assumptions: UX research that really matters | | BIBA | Full-Text | 82-85 | |
Susan M. Dray | |||
This forum addresses conceptual, methodological, and professional issues that arise in the UX field's continuing effort to contribute robust information about users to product planning and design. -- David Siegel and Susan Dray, Editors |
CHI Poland -- a network of local chapters | | BIB | Full-Text | 86 | |
Aga Szostek; Tuomo Kujala |
Community calendar | | BIB | Full-Text | 87 | |
DIY repair | | BIB | Full-Text | 88 | |
Eli Blevis |
What's in the details? | | BIB | Full-Text | 5 | |
Ron Wakkary; Erik Stolterman |
Demo hour | | BIBA | Full-Text | 6-9 | |
M. Emre Karagozler; Ivan Poupyrev; Gary K. Fedder; Yuri Suzuki; Lining Yao; Ryuma Niiyama; Jifei Ou; Sean Follmer; Hiroshi Ishii; John Brosz; Miguel A. Nacenta; Richard Pusch; Sheelagh Carpendale; Christophe Hurter; Jun Rekimoto | |||
UIST is a premier forum for innovations in the software and hardware of human-computer interfaces. The UIST demo program enables attendees to experience firsthand the most interesting next-generation user interface technologies. The UIST 2013 demo program featured technologies ranging from energy-harvesting interactive paper to pneumatically actuated materials, providing attendees a vivid preview of some of the interactive systems that might shape our daily lives in the future. -- Per Ola Kristensson and T. Scott Saponas, UIST 2013 Demo Chairs |
Charlotte Lee | | BIB | Full-Text | 10-11 | |
Charlotte Lee |
Polymetros | | BIBA | Full-Text | 12-13 | |
Ben Bengler; Nick Bryan-Kinns | |||
A beautiful collaborative music-making system enchants both novices and professionals alike. |
WHCI Lab, Wellesley College | | BIB | Full-Text | 14-17 | |
Big data, diminished design? | | BIB | Full-Text | 18-19 | |
Jonathan Bean; Daniela Rosner |
Reasons to be cheerful | | BIB | Full-Text | 20-21 | |
Elizabeth F. Churchill |
Design and ethics in the era of big data | | BIB | Full-Text | 22-24 | |
Elizabeth Goodman |
The ubiquitous button | | BIB | Full-Text | 26-33 | |
Lars-Erik Janlert |
Playful or Gameful?: creating delightful user experiences | | BIB | Full-Text | 34-39 | |
Andrés Lucero; Evangelos Karapanos; Juha Arrasvuori; Hannu Korhonen |
Reducing legacy bias in gesture elicitation studies | | BIB | Full-Text | 40-45 | |
Meredith Ringel Morris; Andreea Danielescu; Steven Drucker; Danyel Fisher; Bongshin Lee; m. c. schraefel; Jacob O. Wobbrock |
Reflecting our better nature | | BIB | Full-Text | 46-49 | |
Deborah Tatar |
Real-time captioning with the crowd | | BIB | Full-Text | 50-55 | |
Walter S. Lasecki; Jeffrey P. Bigham |
Integrating color usability components into design tools | | BIB | Full-Text | 56-61 | |
Montgomery Webster |
Fast, cheap, and powerful user research | | BIBA | Full-Text | 62-65 | |
Jennifer McGinn; Christopher LaRoche | |||
Whether you have to recruit fellow employees or leverage your wider personal networks, there is no longer any excuse to skip this vital step. |
Designing for dream spaces | | BIBA | Full-Text | 66-69 | |
Kasia Warpas | |||
This forum aims to offer and promote a rich discussion at the intersection of art, performance, and culture that expands the boundaries of HCI while broadening our understanding of how things of the past come to matter in the present. -- Elisa Giaccardi, Editor |
Public policies and multilingualism in HCI | | BIBA | Full-Text | 70-73 | |
Loïc Martínez Normand; Fabio Paternò; Marco Winckler | |||
Public policy plays an influential role in the work we do as HCI researchers, interaction designers, and practitioners. "Public policy," a broad term, includes both government policy and policy within non-governmental organizations. This forum focuses on topics at the intersection of human-computer interaction and public policy. -- Jonathan Lazar, Editor |
Design leadership for mergers and acquisitions | | BIBA | Full-Text | 74-76 | |
Janaki Kumar; Philip Haine; Michael Brown | |||
This forum is dedicated to maximizing the success of HCI practitioners within the frenetic world of product and service design. It focuses on UX strategy approaches, leadership, management techniques, and above all the challenge of bringing HCI to peer-level status with longstanding business disciplines such as marketing and engineering. -- Daniel Rosenberg, Editor |
See you next year in Seoul | | BIB | Full-Text | 78 | |
Gerrit C. van der Veer |
Community calendar | | BIB | Full-Text | 79 | |
Belongings considered harmful | | BIB | Full-Text | 80 | |
Eli Blevis |
WELCOME: The pervasive vision | | BIB | Full-Text | 5 | |
Ron Wakkary; Erik Stolterman |
Feedback | | BIB | Full-Text | 7 | |
Demo hour | | BIBA | Full-Text | 8-11 | |
Caleb Charland; Matthias Dörfelt; Janet Echelman; Aaron Koblin; Miao Song; Serguei A. Mokhov; Peter Grogono | |||
Demo Hour highlights new prototypes and projects that exemplify innovation and novel forms of interaction. Audrey Desjardins, Editor |
Eva Deckers | | BIB | Full-Text | 13 | |
Eva Deckers |
PneUI | | BIBA | Full-Text | 14-15 | |
Lining Yao | |||
An elastic pneumatic interface takes its cues from living things. |
Wearable Senses, Department of Industrial Design, TU Eindhoven | | BIBA | Full-Text | 16-19 | |
Oscar Tomico; Stephan Wensveen; Kristi Kuusk; Martijn ten Bhömer; René Ahn; Marina Toeters; Maarten Versteeg | |||
As told by Oscar Tomico, Stephan Wensveen, Kristi Kuusk, Martijn ten Bhömer, René Ahn, Marina Toeters, and Maarten Versteeg |
Let's resist the temptation to solve problems | | BIB | Full-Text | 20-21 | |
Nynke Tromp |
Running an entrepreneurial pilot to identify value | | BIB | Full-Text | 22-23 | |
Jon Kolko |
Smart energy in everyday life: are you designing for resource man? | | BIB | Full-Text | 24-31 | |
Yolande Strengers |
From critical design to critical infrastructure: lessons from turkopticon | | BIB | Full-Text | 32-35 | |
Lilly Irani; M. Six Silberman |
Undesigning interaction | | BIB | Full-Text | 36-39 | |
James Pierce |
Toward optimal menu design | | BIB | Full-Text | 40-45 | |
Gilles Bailly; Antti Oulasvirta |
Supporting media bricoleurs | | BIB | Full-Text | 46-49 | |
Scott Carter; Matthew Cooper; Laurent Denoue; John Doherty; Vikash Rugoobur |
Collaboration with distributed teams | | BIBA | Full-Text | 50-53 | |
Charles Yiu | |||
To ensure the benefits of collaborating in distributed UX teams outweigh the costs, keep these seven best practices in mind. |
Tangible augmented reality for air traffic control | | BIB | Full-Text | 54-57 | |
Jean-Luc Vinot; Catherine Letondal; Rémi Lesbordes; Stéphane Chatty; Stéphane Conversy; Christophe Hurter |
Building belonging | | BIBA | Full-Text | 58-61 | |
Carl DiSalvo; Melissa Gregg; Thomas Lodato | |||
Community + Culture features practitioner perspectives on designing technologies for and with communities. We highlight compelling projects and provocative points of view that speak to both community technology practice and the interaction design field as a whole. -- Christopher A. Le Dantec, Editor |
Social media and college access | | BIBA | Full-Text | 62-65 | |
Nicole B. Ellison; D. Yvette Wohn; Michael G. Brown | |||
Social media has become globally ubiquitous, transforming how people are networked and mobilized. This forum explores research and applications of these new networked publics at individual, organizational, and societal levels. -- Shelly Farnham, Editor |
Social awareness in HCI | | BIBA | Full-Text | 66-69 | |
M. Cecília C. Baranauskas | |||
In this forum we celebrate research that helps to successfully bring the benefits of computing technologies to children, older adults, people with disabilities, and other populations that are often ignored in the design of mass-marketed products. -- Juan Pablo Hourcade, Editor |
Applying user-centered design to research work | | BIBA | Full-Text | 70-74 | |
Jean Scholtz; Oriana Love; William Pike; Joseph Bruce; Dee Kim; Arthur McBain | |||
Evaluation and usability as a practice area has diversified its approaches, broadened the spectrum of UX issues it addresses, methodological, and professional issues that arise in the field's continuing effort to contribute robust information about users to product planning and design. -- David Siegel and Susan Dray, Editors |
SIGCHI local chapters in 2014 | | BIB | Full-Text | 77 | |
Tuomo Kujala |
Community calendar: July -- October 2014 | | BIB | Full-Text | 79 | |
Maker paper: folded light art + design | | BIB | Full-Text | 80 | |
Eli Blevis |
WELCOME: HCI and nature | | BIB | Full-Text | 5 | |
Ron Wakkary; Erik Stolterman |
Demo hour | | BIBA | Full-Text | 6-9 | |
Rong-Hao Liang; Liwei Chan; Hung-Yu Tseng; Han-Chih Kuo; Da-Yuan Huang; De-Nian Yang; Bing-Yu Chen; Tobias Grosse-Puppendahl; Sebastian Beck; Daniel Wilbers; Arjan Kuijper; Heejeong Heo; Hyungkun Park; Seungki Kim; Jeeyong Chung; Geehyuk Lee; Woohun Lee; Carl Unander-Scharin; Åsa Unander-Scharin; Kristina Höök; Ludvig Elblaus | |||
Interactivity is a unique forum of the ACM CHI Conference that showcases hands-on demonstrations, novel interactive technologies, and artistic installations. At CHI 2014, we aimed to create a "one of a CHInd" Interactivity experience with more than 60 interactive exhibits to highlight the diverse group of computer scientists, sociologists, designers, psychologists, artists, and many more that make up the CHI community. Julie Rico Williamson and Steven Benford, CHI Interactivity Chairs |
Pernille Bjørn | | BIB | Full-Text | 11 | |
Pernille Bjørn |
Vigour | | BIBA | Full-Text | 12-13 | |
Martijn ten Bhömer; Pauline van Dongen | |||
A knitted garment for rehabilitation reinvents the grandpa cardigan. |
The computer-mediated living group, Microsoft Research Cambridge | | BIB | Full-Text | 14-17 | |
How green building is redesigning the user | | BIB | Full-Text | 18-19 | |
Jonathan Bean |
Scrupulous, scrutable, and sumptuous: personal data futures | | BIB | Full-Text | 20-21 | |
Elizabeth F. Churchill |
Design fictional interactions: why HCI should care about stories | | BIB | Full-Text | 22-23 | |
Joshua Tanenbaum |
Nature vs. smartphones | | BIB | Full-Text | 24-31 | |
Richard Coyne |
HCI for personal genomics | | BIB | Full-Text | 32-37 | |
Orit Shaer; Oded Nov |
In big data we trust? | | BIB | Full-Text | 38-41 | |
Juha Lehikoinen; Ville Koistinen |
Tangible 3D tabletops | | BIB | Full-Text | 42-47 | |
Peter Dalsgaard; Kim Halskov |
Compassion vs. empathy: designing for resilience | | BIB | Full-Text | 48-53 | |
Dorian Peters; Rafael Calvo |
Stupidity, ignorance, and nonsense as tools for creative thinking | | BIB | Full-Text | 54-59 | |
Dimitris Grammenos |
Online ethnography | | BIBA | Full-Text | 60-65 | |
Valérie Bauwens; Patrick Genoud | |||
A tool for creative dialogue between state and citizens. |
Next steps for sustainable HCI | | BIBA | Full-Text | 66-69 | |
M. Six Silberman; Lisa Nathan; Bran Knowles; Roy Bendor; Adrian Clear; Maria Håkansson; Tawanna Dillahunt; Jennifer Mankoff | |||
In this forum we highlight innovative thought, design, and research in the area of interaction design and sustainability, illustrating the diversity of approaches across HCI communities. -- Lisa Nathan and Samuel Mann, Editors |
House memory: on activity traces as a form of cultural heritage | | BIBA | Full-Text | 70-73 | |
Tao Dong; Mark W. Newman; Mark S. Ackerman | |||
This forum aims to offer and promote a rich discussion at the intersection of art, performance, and culture that expands the boundaries of HCI while broadening our understanding of how things of the past come to matter in the present. -- Elisa Giaccardi, Editor |
The invisible work of health providers | | BIBA | Full-Text | 74-77 | |
Yunan Chen; Karen Cheng; Charlotte Tang; Katie A. Siek; Jakob E. Bardram | |||
This forum is dedicated to personal health in all its many facets: decision-making, goal setting, celebration, discovery, reflection, and coordination, among others. We look at innovations in interactive technologies and how they help address current critical healthcare challenges. -- Gillian R. Hayes, Editor |
HCI public policy issues in U.S. libraries | | BIBA | Full-Text | 78-81 | |
Jonathan Lazar; Mega Subramaniam; Paul Jaeger; John Bertot | |||
Public policy plays an influential role in the work we do as HCI researchers, interaction designers, and practitioners. "Public policy," a broad term, includes both government policy and policy within non-governmental organizations. This forum focuses on topics at the intersection of human-computer interaction and public policy. -- Jonathan Lazar, Editor |
Professional UX credentials: are they worth the paper they're printed on? | | BIBA | Full-Text | 82-84 | |
Anna Wichansky | |||
This forum is dedicated to maximizing the success of HCI practitioners within the frenetic world of product and service design. It focuses on UX strategy approaches, leadership, management techniques, and above all the challenge of bringing HCI to peer-level status with longstanding business disciplines such as marketing and engineering. -- Daniel Rosenberg, Editor |
Reaching out | | BIB | Full-Text | 86 | |
Gerrit C. van der Veer |
Community calendar | | BIB | Full-Text | 87 | |
Hired | | BIB | Full-Text | 88 | |
Cassiopeia Winslow-Edmonson |
WELCOME: Co-desired futures | | BIB | Full-Text | 5 | |
Ron Wakkary; Erik Stolterman |
Feedback | | BIB | Full-Text | 7 | |
Demo hour | | BIBA | Full-Text | 8-11 | |
Joanna Maria Dauner; Emre Karagozler; Matthew Glisson; Chris Speed; Mark Hartswood; Eric Laurier; Siobhan Magee; Fionn Tynan-O'Mahony; Martin de Jode; Andrew Hudson-Smith; Jiffer Harriman; Anna Maria Feit; Antti Oulasvirta | |||
During DIS 2014 Experience Night, conference attendees experienced a thought-provoking set of interactive systems, artworks, and techno-crafts. We selected interactive works that explore the reemergence of craft in the design of interactive systems, the role of craft in democratizing design, and the role of makers in interactive technology design. Alissa Antle and Steven Dow, DIS 2014 Demo Chairs |
What are you reading? | | BIB | Full-Text | 12-13 | |
Steve Voida |
The vocal chorder | | BIBA | Full-Text | 14-15 | |
Carl Unander-Scharin; Åsa Unander-Scharin; Kristina Höök; Ludvig Elblaus | |||
Probing stamina in an interactive artifact through opera rehearsals. |
Urban informatics research lab, Queensland University of Technology | | BIB | Full-Text | 16-19 | |
Mark Bilandzic; Marcus Foth |
The need for design history in HCI | | BIB | Full-Text | 20-21 | |
Carl DiSalvo |
Why I teach theory | | BIB | Full-Text | 22-23 | |
Jon Kolko |
From designing to co-designing to collective dreaming: three slices in time | | BIB | Full-Text | 24-33 | |
Liz Sanders; Pieter Jan Stappers |
Billions of interaction designers | | BIB | Full-Text | 34-41 | |
Eli Blevis; Kenny Chow; Ilpo Koskinen; Sharon Poggenpohl; Christine Tsin |
The fog phone: water, women, and HCID | | BIB | Full-Text | 42-45 | |
Sarah Revi Sterling; Leslie Dodson; Hawra Al-Rabaan |
The Hawthorne studies and their relevance to HCI research | | BIB | Full-Text | 46-51 | |
Xeljko Obrenovic |
Building a world of habitable bits | | BIB | Full-Text | 52-57 | |
Yuichiro Takeuchi |
Are mobile users more vigilant? | | BIB | Full-Text | 58-63 | |
M. Giles Phillips |
Manufacturing for makers: from prototype to product | | BIBA | Full-Text | 64-67 | |
Amanda Williams; Bruno Nadeau | |||
The boundaries between 'the digital' and our everyday physical world are dissolving as we develop more physical ways of interacting with computing. This forum presents some of the topics discussed in the colorful multidisciplinary field of tangible and embodied interaction. -- Eva Hornecker, Editor |
Anti-oppressive design | | BIBA | Full-Text | 68-71 | |
Thomas Smyth; Jill Dimond | |||
Community + Culture features practitioner perspectives on designing technologies for and with communities. We highlight compelling projects and provocative points of view that speak to both community technology practice and the interaction design field as a whole. -- Christopher A. Le Dantec, Editor |
Antisocial computing: exploring design risks in social computing systems | | BIBA | Full-Text | 72-75 | |
David W. McDonald; David H. Ackley; Randal Bryant; Melissa Gedney; Haym Hirsh; Lea Shanley | |||
Social media has become globally ubiquitous, transforming how people are networked and mobilized. This forum explores research and applications of these new networked publics at individual, organizational, and societal levels. -- Shelly Farnham, Editor |
Designing for sustainable development in a remote Mexican community | | BIBA | Full-Text | 76-79 | |
Mario Alberto Moreno Rocha; Carlos Alberto Martínez Sandoval | |||
In this forum we celebrate research that helps to successfully bring the benefits of computing technologies to children, older adults, people with disabilities, and other populations that are often ignored in the design of mass-marketed products. -- Juan Pablo Hourcade, Editor |
The usefulness of traditional usability evaluation methods | | BIBA | Full-Text | 80-82 | |
Gitte Lindgaard | |||
This forum addresses conceptual, methodological, and professional issues that arise in the UX field's continuing effort to contribute robust information about users to product planning and design. -- David Siegel and Susan Dray, Editors |
HCI Korea and the SIGCHI Korea chapter | | BIB | Full-Text | 84 | |
Tuomo Kujala; Geehyuk Lee; Hwanyong Lee; Youn-kyung Lim |
Community calendar | | BIB | Full-Text | 85 | |
Group selfie | | BIB | Full-Text | 88 | |
Eli Blevis |