| Interactions: information, physicality, co-ownership, and culture | | BIB | Full-Text | 5 | |
| Richard Anderson; Jon Kolko | |||
| Tangible interaction = form + computing | | BIB | Full-Text | 6-11 | |
| Mark Baskinger; Mark Gross | |||
| The transmedia design challenge: technology that is pleasurable and satisfying | | BIB | Full-Text | 12-15 | |
| Donald A. Norman | |||
| The art of editing: the new old skills for a curated life | | BIB | Full-Text | 16-19 | |
| Liz Danzico | |||
| Of memories and memorials: a conversation with Jake Barton about the Make History project | | BIB | Full-Text | 20-23 | |
| Alex Wright | |||
| Operationalizing brands with new technologies | | BIB | Full-Text | 24-27 | |
| Denise Lee Yohn | |||
| The social life of visualization | | BIB | Full-Text | 28-31 | |
| Jeremy Yuille; Hugh Macdonald | |||
| Beyond the Benjamins: toward an African interaction design | | BIB | Full-Text | 32-35 | |
| N. J. Bidwell; H. Winschiers-Theophilus | |||
| Social change: women, networks, and technology | | BIB | Full-Text | 36-39 | |
| Natalie Quizon | |||
| Interacting with public policy | | BIB | Full-Text | 40-43 | |
| Jonathan Lazar | |||
| Reclaim | | BIB | Full-Text | 44-46 | |
| Eli Blevis | |||
| User-research-driven mobile user interface innovation: a success story from Seoul | | BIB | Full-Text | 48-51 | |
| Jay Chaeyong Yi | |||
| Why marketing research makes us cringe | | BIB | Full-Text | 52-56 | |
| Dan Formosa | |||
| Why designers sometimes make me cringe | | BIB | Full-Text | 56-57 | |
| Klaus Kaasgaard | |||
| Let the experts talk: an experience of tangible game design with children | | BIB | Full-Text | 58-61 | |
| Javier Marco; Sandra Baldassarri; Eva Cerezo; Diana Yifan Xu; Janet C. Read | |||
| Ps AND Qs: Socializing at cross purposes | | BIB | Full-Text | 62-65 | |
| Elizabeth F. Churchill | |||
| Reflections on the future of iSchools from a dean inspired by some junior faculty | | BIBAK | Full-Text | 66-68 | |
| Martha E. Pollack | |||
| This article, by Martha Pollack, Dean of the School of information at the
University of Michigan, completes a year in which five of the six Timelines
columns have dealt with prospects for research on Information as well as
aspects of its history. This is an exciting time for many elements of HCI,
including Design, the input and display device renaissance, a flowering of
domain-specific HCI-yet this period may be most remembered for its embrace of
Information. -- Jonathan Grudin Keywords: HCI History | |||
| The language/action model of conversation: can conversation perform acts of design? | | BIB | Full-Text | 70-75 | |
| Peter H. Jones | |||
| FEATURE: Is wellness informatics a field of human-centered health informatics? | | BIB | Full-Text | 76-79 | |
| Rebecca E. Grinter; Katie A. Siek; Andrea Grimes | |||
| On designers as catalytic agents | | BIB | Full-Text | 80 | |
| Richard Anderson; Jon Kolko | |||
| exploring aspects of design thinking | | BIB | Full-Text | 5 | |
| Richard Anderson; Jon Kolko | |||
| Evolution of the mind: a case for design literacy | | BIB | Full-Text | 6-11 | |
| Chris Pacione | |||
| Design thinking in stereo: Brown and Martin | | BIB | Full-Text | 12-15 | |
| Paula Thornton | |||
| Designing interactions at work: applying design to discussions, meetings, and relationships | | BIB | Full-Text | 16-19 | |
| Roger Martin; Jennifer Riel | |||
| From Davis to David: lessons from improvisation | | BIB | Full-Text | 20-23 | |
| Liz Danzico | |||
| Mobilizing attention: storytelling for innovation | | BIB | Full-Text | 24-26 | |
| Jeffrey Kim; Arnold Lund; Caroline Dombrowski | |||
| PUX: patterns of user experience | | BIB | Full-Text | 27-31 | |
| Alan F. Blackwell; Sally Fincher | |||
| Interaction criticism: three readings of an interaction design, and what they get us | | BIB | Full-Text | 32-37 | |
| Jeffrey Bardzell; Jay Bolter; Jonas Löwgren | |||
| Technology first, needs last: the research-product gulf | | BIB | Full-Text | 38-42 | |
| Donald A. Norman | |||
| An introduction to casual data, and how it's changing everything | | BIB | Full-Text | 43-47 | |
| Lauren Serota; Dan Rockwell | |||
| The essence of interaction design research: a call for consistency | | BIB | Full-Text | 48-51 | |
| Sam Ladner | |||
| Sugared puppy-dog tails: gender and design | | BIB | Full-Text | 52-56 | |
| Elizabeth F. Churchill | |||
| The lens of feminist HCI in the context of sustainable interaction design | | BIB | Full-Text | 57-59 | |
| Shaowen Bardzell; Eli Blevis | |||
| MyMeal: an interactive user-tailored meal visualization tool for teenagers battling eating disorders | | BIB | Full-Text | 60-63 | |
| Desmond Ballance; Jodie Jenkinson | |||
| From bowling alone to tweeting together: technology-mediated social participation | | BIB | Full-Text | 64-67 | |
| Harry Hochheiser; Ben Shneiderman | |||
| Ubuntu in the network: humanness in social capital in rural Africa | | BIB | Full-Text | 68-71 | |
| Nic Bidwell | |||
| Only robots on the inside | | BIB | Full-Text | 72-74 | |
| Ryan Wistort | |||
| What a wonderful critter: orphans find a home | | BIBK | Full-Text | 76-78 | |
| Jonathan Grudin | |||
Keywords: HCI History | |||
| On design thinking, business, the arts, STEM... | | BIB | Full-Text | 80-ff | |
| Jon Kolko; Richard Anderson | |||
| Business, culture, and society | | BIB | Full-Text | 5 | |
| Richard Anderson; Jon Kolko | |||
| Natural user interfaces are not natural | | BIB | Full-Text | 6-10 | |
| Donald A. Norman | |||
| Making face: practices and interpretations of avatars in everyday media | | BIB | Full-Text | 11-14 | |
| Liz Danzico | |||
| The ubiquitous and increasingly significant status message | | BIB | Full-Text | 15-17 | |
| Bernard J. Jansen; Abdur Chowdury; Geoff Cook | |||
| Back to the future: bleeding-edge IVR | | BIB | Full-Text | 18-20 | |
| Ahmed Bouzid; Weiye Ma | |||
| Give man a fish and you'll feed him for a day, teach him how to fish and...he will overfish | | BIB | Full-Text | 22-25 | |
| Jussi Impiö | |||
| Accessibility and public policy in Sweden | | BIB | Full-Text | 26-29 | |
| Jan Gulliksen; Hans von Axelson; Hans Persson; Bengt Göransson | |||
| Enjoying cultural heritage thanks to mobile technology | | BIB | Full-Text | 30-33 | |
| Maria Francesca Costabile; Carmelo Ardito; Rosa Lanzilotti | |||
| Creating a user-centered development culture | | BIB | Full-Text | 34-38 | |
| Arnold (Arnie) M. Lund | |||
| Collaborate to innovate?: getting fresh small company thinking into big company innovation | | BIB | Full-Text | 39-43 | |
| Mark Hicks | |||
| The role of leadership in winning design | | BIB | Full-Text | 44-47 | |
| Don Fotsch | |||
| Depth over breadth: designing for impact locally, and for the long haul | | BIB | Full-Text | 48-51 | |
| Emily Pilloton | |||
| Solving the world's problems through design | | BIB | Full-Text | 52-54 | |
| Nadav Savio | |||
| Reframing health to embrace design of our own well-being | | BIB | Full-Text | 56-63 | |
| Hugh Dubberly; Rajiv Mehta; Shelley Evenson; Paul Pangaro | |||
| Design challenge based learning (DCBL) sustainable pedagogical practice | | BIB | Full-Text | 64-69 | |
| Eli Blevis | |||
| Social participation in open source: what it means for designers | | BIB | Full-Text | 70-74 | |
| Paula M. Bach; Michael Twidale | |||
| Intentional communication: expanding our definition of user experience design | | BIB | Full-Text | 75-77 | |
| Kristina Halvorson | |||
| Content strategy for everybody (even you) | | BIB | Full-Text | 78-81 | |
| Karen McGrane | |||
| Enticing engagement | | BIB | Full-Text | 82-87 | |
| Elizabeth F. Churchill | |||
| On language potential | | BIB | Full-Text | 88 | |
| Jon Kolko | |||
| Subtlety, change | | BIB | Full-Text | 5 | |
| Richard Anderson; Jon Kolko | |||
| Everything I know about user experience I learned from Jimmy Buffett | | BIB | Full-Text | 6-8 | |
| Greg Hintermeister | |||
| The research-practice gap: the need for translational developers | | BIB | Full-Text | 9-12 | |
| Donald A. Norman | |||
| Visible synthesis | | BIB | Full-Text | 13-17 | |
| Katie Minardo Scott | |||
| Climate change: a challenge for design | | BIB | Full-Text | 18-21 | |
| Julian Sanchez; Marco T. Sanchez | |||
| Navigating the terrain of sustainable HCI | | BIB | Full-Text | 22-25 | |
| Carl DiSalvo; Phoebe Sengers; Hrönn Brynjarsdóttir | |||
| co-design lessons with children | | BIB | Full-Text | 26-29 | |
| Kirsikka Vaajakallio; Tuuli Mattelmäki; Jung-Joo Lee | |||
| Learning to succeed at e-government | | BIB | Full-Text | 30-33 | |
| Ulrike Rivett; Melissa Loudon | |||
| Time goes by...everything looks the same | | BIB | Full-Text | 34-37 | |
| Dennis Littky | |||
| CSCW: time passed, tempest, and time past | | BIBAK | Full-Text | 38-40 | |
| Jonathan Grudin | |||
| Twenty-five years after its founding, the CSCW community concluded that it
had been boiled. Its name no longer reflects the group's activity. Each word in
"Computer Supported Cooperative Work" has lost its relevance. Keywords: HCI History | |||
| Interacting with public policy: Driving transportation policy through technological innovation | | BIB | Full-Text | 42-48 | |
| Juan E. Gilbert; Aqueasha M. Martin; Wanda Eugene; Hanan Alnizami; Wanda Moses; Deidra Morrison | |||
| Stepping out of the shallows | | BIB | Full-Text | 49-51 | |
| Alex Wright | |||
| Q&A with Nicholas Carr | | BIB | Full-Text | 52-54 | |
| Alex Wright | |||
| Adding by leaving out: the power of the pause | | BIB | Full-Text | 55-57 | |
| Liz Danzico | |||
| evolve, adapt, THRIVE! | | BIB | Full-Text | 58-61 | |
| Jon Innes | |||
| Today's flâneur: from HCI to place-based interaction and human-place interaction | | BIB | Full-Text | 62-66 | |
| Elizabeth F. Churchill | |||
| Adaptive reuse: things, containers, and streets in the architecture of the social web | | BIB | Full-Text | 67-70 | |
| Fred Scharmen | |||
| On education | | BIB | Full-Text | 72-ff | |
| Jon Kolko | |||
| Interactions: authenticity, complexity, design | | BIB | Full-Text | 5 | |
| Richard Anderson; Jon Kolko | |||
| The meaning of affinity and the importance of identity in the designed world | | BIB | Full-Text | 6-11 | |
| Matthew Jordan | |||
| Fluidity in craft and authenticity | | BIB | Full-Text | 12-15 | |
| Sarah Kettley | |||
| The design of serendipity is not by chance | | BIB | Full-Text | 16-18 | |
| Liz Danzico | |||
| Why "the conversation" isn't necessarily a conversation | | BIB | Full-Text | 19-21 | |
| Ben McAllister | |||
| The (anti) social net | | BIB | Full-Text | 22-25 | |
| Elizabeth F. Churchill | |||
| Hope for the best and prepare for the worst: interaction design and the tipping point | | BIB | Full-Text | 26-30 | |
| Eli Blevis; Shunying Blevis | |||
| Reciprocity, deep storage, and letting go: opportunities for designing interactions with inherited digital materials | | BIB | Full-Text | 31-34 | |
| William Odom; Richard Banks; Dave Kirk | |||
| My uncle used to watch television | | BIB | Full-Text | 35-37 | |
| Andrew Cyrus Smith | |||
| Six speaking chairs (not directly) for people who cannot speak | | BIB | Full-Text | 38-42 | |
| Graham Pullin; Andrew Cook | |||
| Looking at accessibility as a design problem | | BIB | Full-Text | 43-45 | |
| Dana Chisnell | |||
| Gestural interfaces: a step backward in usability | | BIB | Full-Text | 46-49 | |
| Donald A. Norman; Jakob Nielsen | |||
| Not your average farmer: designing for lead users in ICT4D research | | BIB | Full-Text | 50-52 | |
| Neil Patel | |||
| Project SAGE, a half-century on | | BIBAK | Full-Text | 53-55 | |
| John Leslie King | |||
| John Leslie King's interest in history was evident at the first CSCW
conference in 1986. His review of 15 years of research with technology to
support real-time collocated interaction, then called Group Decision Support
Systems, revealed that we sometimes learn more slowly from experience than we
could. In this article, he describes the little-known system that pioneered
real-time human-computer interaction in the 1950s, created the computing
profession, and trained hundreds of its earliest practitioners. -- Jonathan
Grudin Keywords: HCI History | |||
| Interacting with policy in a political world: reflections from the voices from the Rwanda Tribunal project | | BIB | Full-Text | 56-59 | |
| Lisa P. Nathan; Batya Friedman | |||
| All look same?: a comparison of experience design and service design | | BIB | Full-Text | 60-62 | |
| Jodi Forlizzi | |||
| Building a user observatory: from ethnographic insights to effective recommendations | | BIB | Full-Text | 63-67 | |
| Valérie Bauwens | |||
| Relying on failures in design research | | BIB | Full-Text | 68-69 | |
| Nicolas Nova | |||
| Solving complex problems through design | | BIB | Full-Text | 70-73 | |
| Steve Baty | |||
| The space of design | | BIB | Full-Text | 74-79 | |
| Hugh Dubberly | |||
| On academic knowledge production | | BIB | Full-Text | 80 | |
| Jon Kolko | |||
| Interactions | | BIB | Full-Text | 5 | |
| Richard Anderson; Jon Kolko | |||
| Designing for solitude | | BIB | Full-Text | 6-9 | |
| Ben Fullerton | |||
| Oh, beleaguered beauty | | BIB | Full-Text | 10-12 | |
| José A. Martínez Salmerón | |||
| REALizing our messy futures: toward culturally responsive design tools in engaging our deeper dives | | BIB | Full-Text | 14-19 | |
| Woodrow W., III Winchester | |||
| The taxonomy of the invisible: counting emerging urban forests | | BIB | Full-Text | 20-23 | |
| Liz Danzico | |||
| Broadening horizons through information technology | | BIB | Full-Text | 24-26 | |
| Lisa P. Nathan | |||
| Future workplaces to support environmental sustainability | | BIB | Full-Text | 27-28 | |
| Bill Tomlinson | |||
| The climate change habitability index | | BIB | Full-Text | 29-33 | |
| Yue Pan; Chit Meng Cheong; Eli Blevis | |||
| Transforming healthcare infrastructure | | BIB | Full-Text | 34-40 | |
| Dave Cronin | |||
| Design tools for base of the pyramid strategies | | BIB | Full-Text | 41-46 | |
| Prasad Boradkar; Unmesh Kulkarni | |||
| Bodystorming as embodied designing | | BIB | Full-Text | 47-51 | |
| Dennis Schleicher; Peter Jones; Oksana Kachur | |||
| L'Administration électronique: the French approach to e-government | | BIB | Full-Text | 52-55 | |
| Marco Winckler | |||
| MCC's human interface laboratory: the promise and perils of long-term research | | BIBAK | Full-Text | 56-59 | |
| Bill Curtis | |||
| Success famously has many parents, and SIGCHI is no exception. A strong
paternity claim can be made by Bill Curtis, who garnered funding and organized
ACM's sponsorship for the Gaithersburg conference in 1982, during which plans
to form SIGCHI were announced. The successful and unexpectedly profitable
Gaithersburg meeting provided the model for the first CHI conference, which
convened in Boston in December 1983. In this column, Bill discusses his
subsequent involvement with the Microelectronics and Computer Technology
Corporation. This research enterprise, largely forgotten today, was highly
influential in the 1980s, hiring and providing visibility to HCI researchers,
many of whom remain active. From 1986 to 1989, I was one of the occupants of
that unusual building in Austin, Texas, where the fourth-floor management
comprised mainly former intelligence-agency employees, while many researchers
on the floors below were there in part to avoid working on Reagan-era Strategic
Defense Initiative ("Star Wars") projects. Keywords: HCI History | |||
| Looking back, looking forward | | BIB | Full-Text | 61-63 | |
| Donald A. Norman | |||
| Angst, and how to overcome it | | BIB | Full-Text | 64-66 | |
| Gary Marsden | |||
| The hard work lies ahead (if you want it) | | BIB | Full-Text | 67-69 | |
| Steve Portigal | |||
| Learning from John Rheinfrank: reflections on acquiring a design language | | BIB | Full-Text | 70-74 | |
| Jon Freach | |||
| Ability-centered design: from static to adaptive worlds | | BIB | Full-Text | 75-79 | |
| Shelley Evenson; Justin Rheinfrank; Hugh Dubberly | |||
| On experiences, people, technology | | BIB | Full-Text | 80 | |
| Jon Kolko | |||