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ACM SIGCHI Bulletin, Volume 28
Volume 28, Number 1, January 1996
- Mike Atwood, Guy A. Boy:

50 years ACM, 14 years SIGCHI. 2-3 - Lorraine Borman:

SIGCHI: the early years. 4-6 - Steven Pemberton:

SIGCHI: the later years. 7-9 - Steven Pemberton:

The SIGCHI bulletin: interviews with the editors. 10-13 - Steven Pemberton:

The CHI conference: interviews with conference chairs. 14-24 - Jean B. Gasen:

HCI education: past, present and future? 25-27 - James E. Pitkow:

The evolution of the student experience: interviews with Stuart Card and James Foley. 28-31 - Maria G. Wadlow:

Visual interaction design: rites of passage. 32-33 - Kate Ehrlich:

Conferences. 34-35 - Pat Billingsley:

Simplifying conformance. 36-38 - John Karat, Clare-Marie Karat:

Perspectives on design and internationalization. 39-40 - Alistair G. Sutcliffe:

Designing interactive systems. 41-42 - Kumiyo Nakakoji, Uwe Malinowski, Jonas Löwgren:

Knowledge-based support for the user-interface design process. 43-47 - Batya Friedman, Eric Brok, Susan King Roth, John C. Thomas:

Minimizing bias in computer systems. 48-51 - Tony Salvador, Jean Scholtz, James A. Larson:

The Denver model for groupware design. 52-58 - Ellen Isaacs, John C. Tang:

Why don't more non-North-American papers get accepted to CHI? 59-65 - Scott Fertig, Eric Freeman, David Gelernter:

"Finding and reminding" reconsidered. 66-69 - Charles Rich:

Window sharing with collaborative interface agents. 70-78 - Peter Stevens:

CHI 96: a preview. 82-83 - Lon Barfield:

Uppers and downers. 95 - Steven Pemberton:

Programmers are humans too. 96
Volume 28, Number 2, April 1996
- Jean B. Gasen:

More Needles in the Haystack. 4 - Saul Greenberg:

Teaching human computer interaction to programmers. 5-6 - Maria G. Wadlow:

"Enough is enough, and enough is too much!". 7 - Pat Billingsley:

ANSI/HFES 200 canvass committee now forming. 8-9 - Kate Ehrlich:

World Wide Web. 10-11 - Rob Jackson:

So how are your hands? Thoughts from a CS student with RSI. 12-14 - Loretta Staples, Daniel Boyarski, Eviatar Shafrir, Peter Vanags, Annette Wagner, Linda Wall:

Tools & Techniques in Visual Design Development: A CHI '95 Workshop. 16-17 - Susan S. Kirschenbaum, Wayne D. Gray, Richard M. Young:

Cognitive architectures and HCI. 18-21 - Alan Wexelblat:

Gesture at the user interface: a CHI '95 workshop. 22-26 - Donald L. Day:

OZCHI '95: 4th Australian conference on computer-human interaction. 27 - Philip J. A. Scown, Barbara McManus:

Educating computer people about people & computers: report on conference panel, HCI'95, Huddersfield. 28-31 - Chris Johnson, Philip D. Gray:

Temporal aspects of usability: papers from a workshop. 32 - Chris Johnson, Philip D. Gray:

Assessing the impact of time on user interface design. 33-35 - Richard C. Thomas:

Long-term variation in user actions. 36-38 - Paddy O'Donnell, Stephen W. Draper:

How machine delays change user strategies. 39-42 - Philippe A. Palanque, Rémi Bastide:

Time modelling in Petri nets for the design of interaction active. 43-46 - Alan J. Dix, Gregory D. Abowd:

Delays and temporal incoherence due to the mediated status-status mappings. 47-49 - Gregory D. Abowd, Lein Ton:

Automated verification of temporal dialogue properties. 50-52 - Bob Fields, Peter C. Wright, Michael D. Harrison:

Time, tasks and errors. 53-56 - M. Mezzanotte, Fabio Paternò:

Including time in the notion of interactor. 57-61 - Robert Mack, Linn Marks, Dave Collins, Keith Instone:

The CHI '95 conference electronic publication: introduction to an experiment. 62-75 - Michael K. Stenzler, Richard R. Eckert:

Interactive video. 76-81 - Kevin Mullet, Darrell Sano:

Designing Visual Interfaces. 82-83 - Lon Barfield:

Sticky labels. 95
Volume 28, Number 3, July 1996
- Alvin W. Yeo

:
Cultural user interfaces: a silver lining in cultural diversity. 4-7 - Brad Weed:

The industrial design of the software industry. 8-11 - Kate Ehrlich:

Students. 12-13 - Jean B. Gasen:

Time flies you cannot they fly too fast. 14 - Ben Anderson, Blair MacIntyre

:
Programming languages: a play in three acts. 15-19 - Pat Billingsley:

Hail and farewell. 20 - Dennis R. Wixon, Judy Ramey:

Field oriented design techniques: case studies and organizing dimensions. 21-26 - Christopher A. Rouff:

Formal specification of user interfaces. 27-33 - Yvonne Wærn:

Collective learning and collective memory for coping with dynamic complexity: co-tech workshop at ECSCW 95. 34-41 - Deborah A. Boehm-Davis, Wayne D. Gray:

ESP6 (or, snowbound during the great storm of '96): 6th workshop on empirical studies of programmers, Alexandria, Virginia, USA, Jan 5-7. 42-43 - Yvonne Rogers, Frances Aldrich:

In search of clickable dons: learning about HCI through interacting with Norman's CD-ROM. 44-47 - Berardina Nadja De Carolis:

HCI in Italy: an overview of the current state of research. 48-49 - Paolo Bottoni, Maria Francesca Costabile, Stefano Levialdi, Piero Mussio:

A visual approach to HCI. 50-55 - Michele Missikoff, R. Pizzicannella:

A visual approach to object-oriented analysis based on abstract diagrams. 56-64 - Patrizia Marti:

Task-centred design. 65-70 - Giorgio P. Faconti:

Reasoning on gestural interfaces through syndetic modelling]. 71-76 - Fabio Paternò:

Moving tasks at the center of the development, execution and evaluation process. 77-81 - Fiorella de Rosis, Sebastiano Pizzutilo, Berardina De Carolis:

A tool to support specification and evaluation of context-customized interfaces. 82-88 - Tiziana Catarci, Maria Francesca Costabile, Antonio Massari, Lorenzo Saladini, Giuseppe Santucci:

A multiparadigmatic environment for interacting with databases. 89-96 - Daniela Meloni, Alessandro Mura, Francesco Saverio Nucci, Angelo Cangelosi, Maria Beatrice Ligorio:

Virtual ECHO: an interface for a simulated environment. 97-101 - Oliviero Stock, Carlo Strapparava, Massimo Zancanaro:

Human-computer interaction through natural language and hypermedia in AlFresco. 102-107 - Amedeo Cesta, Daniela D'Aloisi:

Building interfaces as personal agents: a case study. 108-113 - Antonio Rizzo, Oronzo Parlangeli, Enrica Marchigiani, Sebastiano Bagnara:

The management of human errors in user-centered design. 114-118 - Bert Bos:

Book Review: Multimedia and Hypertext: the Internet and Beyond, by Jakob Nielsen. 120-121
Volume 28, Number 4, October 1996
- Osei Darkwa:

The Voluntary Workcamps Association of Ghana's Computer Literacy/Distance Learning Project: Appeal for Equipment and Financial Support. 4-6 - Harry E. Blanchard:

A Look Ahead and an Overview. 7-9 - Maria G. Wadlow:

Visual Interaction Design: Time to Go. 10 - Andrew Sears:

Education: Some Progress and Some New Questions. 11-14 - Richard I. Anderson:

Local SIGs: The Year-Round CHI Conference At a Local SIG Hear You. 15-16 - Sara Rochelle Parsowith, Carol Traynor:

Students: A Common Ground between Student Volunteers & the CHI 96 Community. 17-19 - Steven Pemberton:

Common Ground: CHI 96 Interviews with the Conference Co-Chairs. 20-22 - Ian McClelland, Bronwen Taylor, Bill Hefley

:
User-centred design principles: how far have they been industrialised? 23-25 - Andrew Sears, Mary Czerwinski, Laurie P. Dringus, Barbara Bernal Thomas:

Educating HCI practitioners: evaluating what industry needs and academia delivers. 26-28 - Amir Mané, Susan J. Boyce, Demetrios Karis, Nicole Yankelovich:

Designing the user interface for speech recognition applications. 29-34 - Larry E. Wood, Ron Zeno:

Transforming user-centered analysis into concrete design. 35-38 - Heather Desurvire, Lauren Schwartz:

The HCI professional as consultant. 39-41 - Keith Instone:

HCI and the Web. 42-45 - Fabio Paternò, Philippe A. Palanque:

Formal methods in computer human interaction: comparison, benefits, open questions. 46-48 - Casey Boyd, Rudy Darken:

Psychological issues of virtual environment interfaces. 49-53 - Stacie Hibino:

Reflections on the CHI 96 doctoral consortium. 54-55 - Jennifer S. Kay

, Casey Boyd:
Common Ground for CHI Students at CHI 96: A CHI 96 Special Interest Group. 56 - Allison Druin:

Common Ground: What I Learned at CHIkids. 57-59 - George A. Flanagan:

Usability management maturity, part 1: self assessment - how do you stack up? 61-62 - Thyra L. Rauch, Susan H. Kahler, George A. Flanagan:

Usability management maturity, part 2: usability techniques - what can you do? 63-65 - Laura L. Downey, Sharon J. Laskowski, Elizabeth A. Buie, H. Rex Hartson:

Usability engineering: industry-government collaboration for system effectiveness and efficiency. 66-67 - Simon Buckingham Shum:

The missing link: hypermedia usability research and the Web. 68-75 - Jennifer L. DePaul, Thomas T. Hewett:

"Cool stuff and hot interfaces": the Human-Computer Interaction Laboratory's 13th annual symposium and open house. 76-78 - Gunter Dubrau:

The attributistical understanding of information: its evaluation and its consequences for the soft redesign of user interface screens. 79-84 - Paul Mclnerney:

Book Review: Scenario-Based Design Envisioning Work and Technology in System Development, by John Carroll and John Wiley. 85-86

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