Overview
- Editors:
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Steve Howard
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Swinburne CHI Laboratory, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia
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Judy Hammond
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School of Computing Sciences, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia
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Gitte Lindgaard
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Gitte Lindgaard & Associates, Australia
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Table of contents (140 chapters)
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Technical Sessions
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Visual Interfaces
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- Takeo Igarashi, Sachiko Kawachiya, Satoshi Matsuoka, Hidehiko Tanaka
Pages 104-111
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New Technologies
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- Bill Simpson-Young, Ken Yap, Jordi Robert-Ribes, Nadine Ozkan
Pages 112-113
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- Tim Mansfield, Simon Kaplan, Ted Phelps, Mark Fitzpatrick, Winnie Qiu, Rik Taylor et al.
Pages 114-116
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- Duncan Stevenson, Kevin Smith, Paul Veldkamp, John McLaughlin, Rochelle O’Hagan, Dione Smith et al.
Pages 117-118
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Panel Session
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- Leigh Snelling, Lucy Suchman, Joan Greenbaum, Toni Robertson, Patsy Segall
Pages 119-122
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Task and Interaction Modelling I
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- Meurig Sage, Chris Johnson
Pages 126-133
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Organisation and Laboratory Overview
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- Gayna Williams, Marshall McClintock
Pages 144-145
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- Clark N. Quinn, Malcolm Raymond
Pages 146-147
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Issues in Design I
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- Alistair Sutcliffe, Michele Ryan
Pages 148-155
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- David Golightly, David J. Gilmore
Pages 156-163
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- Bob Fields, Peter Wright, Michae Harrison
Pages 164-171
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HCI: Education and discipline
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- Shirley J. Holst, Elizabeth F. Churchill, David J. Gilmore
Pages 180-187
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Designing Multimedia Interfaces
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- Barbee Teasley, Keith Instone, Laura Marie Leventhal, Eric Brown
Pages 197-204
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- Frank Vetere, Steve Howard, Ying Leung
Pages 205-211
About this book
The theme of the 1997 INTERACT conference, 'Discovering New Worlds ofHCI', signals major changes that are taking place with the expansion of new technologies into fresh areas of work and leisure throughout the world and new pervasive, powerful systems based on multimedia and the internet. HCI has a vital role to play in these new worlds, to ensure that people using the new technologies are empowered rather than subjugated to the technology that they increasingly have to use. In addition, outcomes from HCI research studies over the past 20 years are now finding their way into many organisations and helping to improve and enhance work practices. These factors have strongly influenced the INTERACT'97 Committee when creating the conference programme, with the result that, besides the more traditional HCI research and education focus found in previous INTERACT conferences, one strand of the 1997 conference has been devoted to industry and another to multimedia. The growth in the IFIP TCI3 committee itself reflects the expansion ofHCI into new worlds. Membership oflFIP TC13 has risen to now include representatives of 24 IFIP member country societies from many parts of the world. In 1997, IFIP TCl3 breaks new ground by holding its sixth INTERACT conference in the Asia-Pacific region. This is a significant departure from previous INTERACT conferences, that were all held in Europe, and is especially important for the Asia-Pacific region, as HCI expands beyond its traditional base.
Editors and Affiliations
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Swinburne CHI Laboratory, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia
Steve Howard
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School of Computing Sciences, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia
Judy Hammond
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Gitte Lindgaard & Associates, Australia
Gitte Lindgaard