default search action
Interactions, Volume 4
Volume 4 , Number 1, January/February 1997
- Kishore S. Swaminathan, Stephen H. Sato:
Interaction design for large displays. 15-24 - Sara A. Bly:
Field work: is it product work? 25-30 - Sarah A. Bloomer, Rachel Croft, Lloyd Wright:
Collaborative design workshops: a case study. 31-39 - Roderick Perkins, Dan Smith Keller, Frank Ludolph:
Inventing the Lisa user interface. 40-53 - John Rheinfrank:
A conversation with Dan Rosenberg. 54-62 - Julien Clinton Sprott, Clifford A. Pickover:
Scientific visualization in mathematics and physics. 78-79
Volume 4 , Number 2, March/April 1997
- David R. Millen, Susan M. Dray:
Job transformation in the age of the net. 13-18 - Karen L. McGraw:
Defining and designing the performance-centered interface: moving beyond the user-centered interface. 19-26 - Guy A. Boy:
The group elicitation method for participatory design and usability testing. 27-33 - Maddy D. Brouwer-Janse, Jane Fulton Suri, Mitchell Yawitz, Govert de Vries, James L. Fozard, Roger Coleman:
User interfaces for young and old. 34-46 - Larry E. Wood:
Semi-structured interviewing for user-centered design. 48-61 - Cynthia Goodman:
InfoART: the digital frontier from video to virtual reality. 74-77
Volume 4 , Number 3, May/June 1997
- Jef Raskin:
What's NeXT for Apple? 12-16 - Janet Stack:
Women into computing. 17-18 - Arlene F. Aucella:
Ensuring success with usability engineering. 19-22 - Ron Perkins, Matt Belge, Kate Ehrlich:
Expert reviews: design for rapidly changing times. 23-30 - David V. Beard, Scott Entrikin, Pat Conroy, Nathan C. Wingert, Corey D. Schou, Dana K. Smith, Kevin M. Denelsbeck:
Quick GOMS: a visual software engineering tool for simple rapid time-motion modeling. 31-36 - Steve Blythin, Mark Rouncefield, John A. Hughes:
Never mind the ethno' stuff, what does all this mean and what do we do now: ethnography in the commercial world. 38-47 - Arnold M. Lund:
Another approach to justifying the cost of usability. 48-56 - Yvonne Rogers, Victoria Bellotti:
Grounding blue-sky research: how can ethnography help? 58-63
Volume 4 , Number 4, July/August 1997
- John Gosbee, Eileen Ritchie:
Human-computer interaction and medical software development. 13-18 - Deborah Mrazek, Cynthia Baldaccini:
Avoiding cultural false positives. 19-24 - Leigh Snelling, David Bruce Smith:
The work mapping technique. 25-31 - Kim H. Veltman:
Frontiers in electronic media. 32-64 - John L. Bennett:
Foreseeing the future: ACM97. 66-74
Volume 4 , Number 5, September/October 1997
- Libby Hanna, Kirsten Risden, Kirsten Alexander:
Guidelines for usability testing with children. 9-14 - Russ Brami:
Icons: a unique form of painting. 15-28 - Carola Fellenz:
Introducing usability into smaller organizations. 29-33 - Kate Ehrlich:
A conversation with Ted Selker. 34-47 - Allison Druin:
The CHI97 CHIkids program: a partnership between kids, adults and technology. 48-59
Volume 4 , Number 6, November/December 1997
- Steven Cherry:
Editorial. 4 - Steven Cherry:
What's happening. 7-11 - Hal Shubin, Margaret M. Meehan:
Navigation in Web applications. 13-17 - Sarah A. Bloomer, Rachel Croft:
Pitching usability to your organization. 18-26 - Gillian Crampton Smith:
Computer-related design at the Royal College of Art: 1997 graduation projects. 27-33 - Carola Lilienthal, Heinz Züllighoven:
Application-oriented usage quality: the tools and materials approach. 35-41 - Ben Shneiderman, Pattie Maes:
Direct manipulation vs. interface agents. 42-61 - François Grize, Mehdi Aminian:
Cybcérone: a kiosk information system based on WWW and Java. 62-69 - Steven Cherry:
Book preview. 70-73 - Steven Cherry:
About the art in this issue. 74-75 - Loren G. Terveen, Peter Johnson:
Conference preview: IUI '98: 1998 International Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces. 77 - George G. Robertson:
Reflections on user interface software and technology. 80-
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.