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INTERCHI (INTERACT+CHI) 1993: Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- Stacey Ashlund, Kevin Mullet, Austin Henderson, Erik Hollnagel, Ted N. White:

Human-Computer Interaction, INTERACT '93, IFIP TC13 International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction, 24-29 April 1993, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, jointly organised with ACM Conference on Human Aspects in Computing Systems CHI'93, Adjunct Proceedings. ACM 1993, ISBN 0-89791-574-7 - Michel Beaudouin-Lafon:

Verbal presentation visual languages and virtual reality. 1-2 - Jeffrey D. McWhirter, Gary J. Nutt:

Generation of visual language environments. 3-4 - Ian Rogers, Jonathan Cunningham, Aaron Soloman:

A visual language for designing and implementing user interfaces. 5-6 - Tiziana Catarci, Shi-Kuo Chang, Maria Francesca Costabile, Stefano Levialdi, Giuseppe Santucci:

A multiparadigmatic visual environment for adaptive access to databases. 7-8 - Stephanie Houde, Gitta Salomon:

Working towards rich and flexible file representations. 9-10 - Gerda Smets, Kees C. J. Overbeeke, Pieter Jan Stappers:

Designing in virtual reality: perception-action coupling and form semantics. 11-12 - Randy Pausch, Matthew Conway, Robert DeLine, Rich Gossweiler, Steve Miale:

Alice and DIVER: a software architecture for building environments. 13-14 - Alvin Ellman, Magdi Carlton:

Computer-human interface technology at deep space network. 15-16 - Harriet J. Fell, Linda J. Ferrier:

A baby babble-blanket. 17-18 - Zeenet Jetha, Armin Bruderlin, Tom Calvert, Sang Mah:

On the edge of the creative process: an analysis of human figure animation as a complex synthesis task. 19-20 - Gerhard Weber

:
Adapting direct manipulation for blind users. 21-22 - Monique Noirhomme-Fraiture, Clairette Charrière, Jean Vanderdonckt, Claudy Bernard:

ERGOLAB: a screen usability evaluation tool for children with cerebral palsy. 23-24 - Monique Noirhomme-Fraiture, Jean Vanderdonckt:

Screen usability guidelines for persons with disabilities. 25-26 - Dag Svanaes:

COMSPEC: a software architecture for users with special needs. 27-28 - Peter Brusilovsky

:
Program visualization as a debugging tool for novices. 29-30 - Louis A. Blatt, Anna Zacherl:

User interface requirements for the representation of examples in a user interface design guidance system. 31-32 - Peter Eisenberg, Anna Zacherl:

Teaching product designers new tricks: inexpensive but effective prototyping. 33-34 - François Bodart, Jean Vanderdonckt:

Expressing guidelines into an ergonomical styleguide for highly interactive applications. 35-36 - Harry J. Saddler:

Making it Macintosh: an interactive human interface instructional product for software developers. 37-38 - Greg Siegle:

The CLIM prototyping environment (CPE). 39-40 - Kevin Schlueter, Marilyn M. Mantei:

Formalizing user interface requirements. 41-42 - Simon Buckingham Shum

, Allan MacLean, Justin Forder, Nick Hammond:
Summarising the evolution of design concepts within a design rationale framework. 43-44 - Martin B. Curry, Andrew F. Monk, K. Choudhury, Paul Seaton, T. F. M. Stewart:

Summarising task analysis for task-based design. 45-46 - Daniel Felix, Helmut Krueger:

Designing the look. 47-48 - Charlie Hill, Gillian Crampton Smith, Eleanor Curtis, Stephen Kamlish, Michael Scaife:

Designing a visual database for fashion designers. 49-50 - Leslie G. Tudor, Michael J. Muller, Tom Dayton:

A C.A.R.D. game for participatory task analysis and redesign: macroscopic complement to PICTIVE. 51-52 - S. Ali, J. Heuer, M. Hollender, G. Johannsen:

Participative design of human-machine interfaces for process control systems. 53-54 - Marian G. Williams:

Translation in participatory design: lessons from a workshop. 55-56 - Susan Harker:

Using case studies in the iterative development of a methodology to support user-designer collaboration. 57-58 - Eileen C. Schwab, Amy L. Schwartz:

Using cluster analysis to guide interface design for audiotext services. 59-60 - Raghu Kolli:

Using video scenarios to present consumer product interfaces. 61-62 - Jonathan Cohen:

"Kirk here: ": using genre sounds to monitor background activity. 63-64 - Kristinn R. Thórisson, Karen Donoghue:

Synthetic synesthesia: mixing sound with color. 65-66 - Christophe Mignot, Claude Valot, Noelle Carbonell:

An experimental study of future "natural" multimodal human-computer interaction. 67-68 - Minh Tue Vo, Alex Waibel:

Multi-modal HCI: combination of gesture and speech recognition. 69-70 - Alexander I. Rudnicky

:
Mode preference in a simple data-retrieval task. 71-72 - Steve Whittaker, Brid O'Conaill:

An evaluation of video mediated communication. 73-74 - Stephen W. Draper, Stephen B. Barton:

Learning by exploration and affordance bugs. 75-76 - Daniel P. Lopresti

, Andrew Tomkins:
Pictographic naming. 77-78 - Dag Svanaes:

Interaction is orthogonal to graphical form. 79-80 - Eileen C. Schwab, Jenny DeGroot:

Listener response to time-compressed speech. 81-82 - David G. Hendry, Thomas R. G. Green:

Spelling mistakes: how well do correctors perform? 83-84 - Marta A. Miller, Catherine O'Donnell:

Usability testing on a shoestring. 85-86 - Tedde van Gelderen, Anthony Jameson, Arne L. Duwaer:

Text correction in pen-based computers: an empirical comparison of methods. 87-88 - Masaki Nakagawa, Kimiyoshi Machii, Naoki Kato, Toshio Souya:

Lazy recognition as a principle of pen interfaces. 89-90 - James A. Landay, Brad A. Myers:

Extending an existing user interface toolkit to support gesture recognition. 91-92 - Yacine Bellik, Daniel Teil:

A multimodal dialogue controller for multimodal user interface management system application: a multimodal window manager. 93-94 - Daniel Salber, Joëlle Coutaz:

A Wizard of Oz platform for the study of multimodal systems. 95-96 - Jörn Nilsson

, Dipak Khakhar:
Application of living book in medical education. 97-98 - Kaisa Väänänen:

Multimedia environments: supporting authors and users with real-world metaphors. 99-100 - Lynda Hardman, Dick C. A. Bulterman, Guido van Rossum:

Authoring multimedia in the CMIF environment. 101-102 - Christopher M. Hoadley

, Sherry Hsi:
A multimedia interface for knowledge building and collaborative learning. 103-104 - Michael J. Muller, David S. Miller, John G. Smith, Daniel M. Wildman, Ellen A. White, Tom Dayton, Robert W. Root:

Assessing a groupware implementation of a manual participatory design process. 105-106 - John Boyd:

Floor control policies in multi-user applications. 107-108 - Maximilian Ott, John P. Lewis, Ingemar J. Cox:

Teleconferencing eye contract using a virtual camera. 109-110 - Clifford Nass, Jonathan Steuer, Ellen R. Tauber, Heidi Reeder:

Anthropomorphism, agency, and ethopoeia: computers as social actors. 111-112 - Robert Spence:

A taxonomy of graphical presentation. 113-114 - David R. Airth:

Navigation in pop-up menus. 115-116 - Matjaz Debevc:

Adaptive bar. 117-118 - Kimiya Yamaashi, Masayuki Tani, Koichiro Tanikoshi:

Fisheye videos: distorting multiple videos in space and time domain according to users' interests. 119-120 - Franz Penz, Manfred Tscheligi:

The FeelMouse: an interaction device with force feedback. 121-122 - Shumin Zhai, Paul Milgram, David Drascic

:
An evaluation of four 6 degree-of-freedom input techniques. 123-125 - Eric Justin Gould:

Relativity controller: reflecting user perspective in document spaces. 125-126 - Yin Yin Wong:

Layer tool: support for progressive design. 127-128 - Matt Belge, Ishantha Lokuge, David Rivers:

Back to the future: a graphical layering system inspired by transparent paper. 129-130 - Michael Chen:

A framework for describing interactions with graphical widgets. 131-132 - David Vronay, James C. Spohrer:

Pins, grooves, and sockets: a direct manipulation interface to a graphical constraint system. 133-134 - Oryx Cohen, Shawna Meyer, Erik Nilsen:

Studying the movement of high-tech Rodentia: pointing and dragging. 135-136 - Catherine G. Wolf, James R. Rhyne:

Gesturing with shared drawing tools. 137-138 - Kristinn R. Thórisson:

Dialogue control in social interface agents. 139-140 - Batya Friedman, Helen Nissenbaum:

Discerning bias in computer systems. 141-142 - Mayumi Hiyoshi, Hideo Shimazu, Yosuke Takashima:

A construction tool for context-sensitive guidance system. 143-144 - Frances M. T. Brazier, Zsófia Ruttkay:

A compositional, knowledge-based architecture for intelligent query user interfaces. 145-146 - Rita L. Danielsen, A. Brady Farrand, Susan J. Wolfe:

Searching for help vs. having it handed to you: the relative advantages of index-accessed help and context-sensitive help. 147-148 - Thomas Kühme, Uwe Malinowski, James D. Foley:

Facilitating interactive tool selection by adaptive prompting. 149-150 - Mathilde M. Bekker:

Representational issues related to communication in design teams. 151-152 - Richard Cox, Paul Brna:

Reasoning with external representations: supporting the stages of selection, construction and use. 153-154 - Charles C. Wood:

The cognitive dimensions of mediating representations. 155-156 - Robert M. Fein, Gary M. Olson, Judith S. Olson:

A mental model can help with learning to operate a complex device. 157-158 - Rory Stuart, Gareth Gabrys:

A speech compression proposal for directory assistance operators: GOMS predictions. 159-160 - Martin R. Frank, James D. Foley:

Model-base user interface design by example and by answering questions. 161-162 - Peter Aberg, Robert Neches:

Supporting implementation of semantic-level user interaction paradigms. 163-164 - J. H. Eggen, Reinder Haakma, Joyce H. D. M. Westerink:

Layered protocols in user interfaces for consumer equipment. 165-166 - Clive Warren:

The task oriented modelling (TOM) approach to the development of real-time safety-critical systems. 167-168 - Berardina Nadja De Carolis, Sebastiano Pizzutilo, Fiorella de Rosis:

User tailored hypermedia explanations. 169-170 - Smadar Kedar, Catherine Baudin, Lawrence Birnbaum, Richard Osgood, Ray Bareiss:

Ask how it works: an intelligent interactive manual for devices. 171-172 - Doug Schaffer, Saul Greenberg:

Sifting through hierarchical information. 173-174 - Greg Chwelos, Marilyn M. Mantei:

Design space of a generic interface for filtering and displaying database query results. 175-176 - Jean-David Sta:

Information filtering: a tool for communication between researchers. 177-178 - Patrick A. Holleran, Kristin G. Bauersfeld:

Vertical spacing of computer-presented text. 179-180 - W. T. Hunt, Laura Rintjema, Tom T. Carey:

User acceptance of complementary tables of contents for access to online information. 181-182 - Victor Kaptelinin:

Item recognition in menu selection: the effect of practice. 183-184 - Michael J. Muller, Tom Dayton, Robert W. Root:

Comparing studies that compare usability assessment methods: an unsuccessful search for stable criteria. 185-186 - J. M. Christian Bastien, Dominique L. Scapin:

Preliminary findings on the effectiveness of ergonomic criteria for the evaluation of human-computer interfaces. 187-188 - Edward A. Edgerton, Stephen W. Draper

, Stephen B. Barton:
Feature checklists in HCI: some basic results. 189-190 - Bengt Ahlström, Hans Marmolin, Thomas Marmolin:

Ongoing evaluation studies of collaborative work within the Swedish MultiG Research Program. 191-192 - Reinoud Hulzebosch, Anthony Jameson:

A rapid method for tailored, multi-perspective evaluation of user interfaces. 193-194 - Miriam E. Kotsonis, Darren A. Kall:

Process quality metrics for user interface design. 195-196 - Edo M. Houwing, Marion Wiethoff, Albert G. Arnold:

Interface evaluation from users' point of view: three complementary measures. 197-198 - Nobuko Kishi:

Tools for graphical user interface evaluation using playback. 199-200 - Stewart Thomas Fleming, Alistair C. Kilgour, Carmel Smith:

Computer support for evaluation studies. 201-202 - Richard Mander, Michael Arent:

Blind models as minimal artifacts. 203-204 - John Kirby, Heather A. Heathfield:

Analysis and design techniques for user centred design. 205-206 - Stephen W. Draper

:
The notion of task in HCI. 207-208 - Janni Nielsen, Annette Aboulafia:

Designing user interfaces - the role in intuition and imagination (1992). 209-210 - Niels Ole Bernsen:

Structuring design spaces. 211-212 - Diana McKerlie, Allan MacLean:

Experience with QOC design rationalee. 213-214

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