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Interactions, Volume 10
Volume 10, Number 1, January-February 2003
- Steven Pemberton:
That old Janx Spirit. 4
- Marisa E. Campbell:
What's happening. 7-9
- Kasper Hornbæk, Benjamin B. Bederson, Catherine Plaisant:
Navigation patterns & usability of zoomable user interfaces: with and without an overview. 11-12
- William L. Anderson:
Small details: how knowing a little can matter a lot. 13-16
- Dineh M. Davis:
Like water for data flow. 17-20
- Aaron Marcus:
User-interface design and China: a great leap forward. 21-25 - Sara Ilstedt Hjelm:
Research + design: the making of Brainball. 26-34
- Marisa E. Campbell:
Book preview. 35-37
- Marisa E. Campbell:
Conference preview. 39-42
- Steven Pemberton:
The kiss of the spiderbot. 44
Volume 10, Number 2, March-April 2003
- Steven Pemberton:
Spanning the globe. 4
- Chengzheng Sun:
Undo as concurrent inverse in group editors. 7-8
- Diane Norton:
Rainbow usability: customization vs. training in developing countries. 9-12
- Chia Shen, Neal Lesh, Frédéric Vernier:
Personal digital historian: story sharing around the table. 15-22
- Aaron Marcus:
Universal, ubiquitous, user-interface design for the disabled and elderly. 23-27
- Susan M. Dray, David A. Siegel, Paula Kotzé:
Indra's Net: HCI in the developing world. 28-37 - Pradeep Henry:
Advancing UCD while facing challenges working from offshore. 38-47 - Gary Marsden:
Using HCI to leverage communication technology. 48-55 - Laurette Pretorius, Sonja E. Bosch:
Enabling computer interaction in the indigenous languages of South Africa: the central role of computational morphology. 56-63 - Marion Walton, Vera Vukovic:
Cultures, literacy, and the web: dimensions of information "scent". 64-71 - Clarisse Sieckenius de Souza, Raquel Oliveira Prates, Simone Diniz Junqueira Barbosa:
Adopting information technology as a first step in design. 72-79 - Derrick L. Cogburn:
HCI in the so-called developing world: what's in it for everyone. 80-87 - Jian Wang:
Human-computer interaction research and practice in China. 88-96
Volume 10, Number 3, May-June 2003
- Steven Pemberton:
Not so much losing a publication as gaining a Web site. 4
- Marisa E. Campbell:
What's happening. 7-8
- Constantine E. Steriadis, Philip Constantinou:
Designing human-computer interfaces for quadriplegic people. 9-10
- Carl Myhill:
Get your product used in anger!: (before assuming you understand its requirements). 12-17
- John Armitage:
From user interface to über-interface: a design discipline model for digital products. 18-29
- David A. Siegel:
The business case for user-centered design: increasing your power of persuasion. 30-36
- Aaron Marcus:
Icons, symbols, and signs: visible languages to facilitate communication. 37-43 - Giorgio De Michelis:
The "Swiss Pattada". 44-53
- Marisa E. Campbell:
Book preview. 55-57
- Marisa E. Campbell:
Conference preview. 58-61
- Steven Pemberton:
Letter writing, telephones, and television. 64-
Volume 10, Number 4, July-August 2003
- Steven Pemberton:
Common interests. 4
- Marisa E. Campbell:
What's happening. 7-8
- Diane H. Sonnenwald, Mary C. Whitton, Kelly Maglaughlin:
Scientific collaboratories: evaluating their potential. 9-10
- Gerard Torenvliet:
We can't afford it!: the devaluation of a usability term. 12-17
- Gary Marchionini, Michael D. Levi:
Digital government information services: the Bureau of Labor statistics case. 18-27
- Dennis R. Wixon:
Evaluating usability methods: why the current literature fails the practitioner. 28-34
- Aaron Marcus:
What do UI designers think about protecting their designs? 36-43 - Linda Candy, Koichi Hori:
The digital muse: HCI in support of creativity: "creativity and cognition" comes of age: towards a new discipline. 44-54
- William Hudson:
Don't make me read: use and abuse of text in Web page design. 55-56
- Marisa E. Campbell:
Book preview. 57-59
- Marisa E. Campbell:
Conference preview. 60-63
- Steven Pemberton:
Restrictive practices. 64
Volume 10, Number 5, September-October 2003
- Steven Pemberton:
The timeless way. 4
- Marisa E. Campbell:
What's happening. 7-8
- Christopher Olston, Ed Huai-hsin Chi:
ScentTrails: integrating browsing and searching on the Web. 9-10
- Laura L. Downey:
Usability engineers: who do too much! 12-17
- David A. Siegel, Susan M. Dray:
Living on the edges: user-centered design and the dynamics of specialization in organizations. 18-27
- Aaron Marcus:
When is a user not a user?: Who are we? What do we do? 28-34 - Ahmed Seffah:
Learning the ropes: human-centered design skills and patterns for software engineers' education. 36-45
- William Hudson:
Books and mortar: the science of Web shopping. 47-48
- Mary Deaton:
The elements of user experience: user-centered design for the Web. 49-51
- Marisa E. Campbell:
Book preview. 52-54
- Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson:
DUX2003 Redux: a critical review of the new ACM conference series. 55-59
- Marisa E. Campbell:
Conference preview and calendar. 60-63
- Steven Pemberton:
Hotel heartbreak. 64
Volume 10, Number 6, November-December 2003
- Steven Pemberton:
Accessibilty is for everyone. 4-5
- Marisa E. Campbell:
What's happening. 7-8
- Jouni Huotari, Kalle Lyytinen, Marketta Niemelä:
Improving graphical information system model use with elision and connecting lines. 9-10
- Ina Wagner, Rüdiger Lainer:
Designing a visual 3-D interface: a reflection on methods. 12-19
- Elizabeth Rosenzweig, Joel D. Ziff:
Managing interdisciplinary relationships: lessons learned from the field. 20-27
- Aaron Marcus:
The emotion commotion. 28-34 - Mary Frances Theofanos, Janice Redish:
Bridging the gap: between accessibility and usability. 36-51
- William Hudson:
Enterprise information architecture: strategies for the real world. 53-55
- Kathy Gill:
Information architecture: blueprints for the Web. 57-58
- Marisa E. Campbell:
Conference preview and calendar. 60-62
- Steven Pemberton:
So big, so bad, so often. 64-
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