Difference: InteractionDesignReadingGroupCHI2008PaperSubmissionPage (13 vs. 14)

Revision 142007-08-22 - LeahFindlater

Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="InteractionDesignReadingGroupNew"

CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

Line: 11 to 11
 

Aug 28th meeting

Author/Owner Readers Title Summary Approx Date Ready for Review Comments
Yamin, Joanna, Kelly Tony, Karen The Annotators' Perspective on Co-authoring with Structured Annotations This paper examines the impact of supporting structure on users who create annotations. Aug 22  
Changed:
<
<
Leah, Joanna ?, ? Evaluation of a Role-Based Approach for Customizing a Complex Development Environment Coarse-grained approaches to customization allow the user to enable or disable groups of features at once, rather than individual features. While this could reduce the complexity of customization and encourage more users to customize their interfaces, the research challenges of designing such approaches have not been fully explored. To address this limitation, we conducted an interview study with 14 professional software developers who use an integrated development environment that provides a role-based, coarse-grained approach to customization. From the results, we identify challenges that are inherent in designing coarse-grained customization models, including issues of functionality partitioning, presentation, and individual differences. Aug 22 This is a short paper!
>
>
Leah, Joanna Joel, Karen Evaluation of a Role-Based Approach for Customizing a Complex Development Environment Coarse-grained approaches to customization allow the user to enable or disable groups of features at once, rather than individual features. While this could reduce the complexity of customization and encourage more users to customize their interfaces, the research challenges of designing such approaches have not been fully explored. To address this limitation, we conducted an interview study with 14 professional software developers who use an integrated development environment that provides a role-based, coarse-grained approach to customization. From the results, we identify challenges that are inherent in designing coarse-grained customization models, including issues of functionality partitioning, presentation, and individual differences. Aug 22 This is a short paper!
 
Rock, Joanna, Peter G Dave, Karyn Initial Icon Usability Across the Adult Lifespan This paper examines effects of age and icon characteristics on the usability of existing mobile device icons Aug 26  
Peter, Tamara Karyn Participatory Design of a Network Management Visualization System We present the long-distance participatory design and initial field study results of LiveRAC, a scalable visualization system for monitoring computer systems and networking data. We describe the approach we took for iterating on the design, while managing the long-distance nature of the collaboration. Through this process we designed and developed LiveRAC through numerous phases, from paper prototypes to a deployed system that is being used by senior network engineers in a managed hosting services environment with thousands of monitored network assets. The LiveRAC visualization system shows alarm and metric data such as CPU usage and available memory for a large collection of machines simultaneously using semantic zooming, allowing the user to choose which servers to inspect with detailed charts while still showing a compressed view of the entire information space. Aug 28  
Line: 19 to 19
 
Author/Owner Readers Title Summary Approx Date Ready for Review Comments
Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah, Karen, Joel, Garth Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration    
Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Real-World Analysis of Noisy Complex Data Field session of Session Viewer, a visualization tool for web session logs Sept 11 (or earlier, but after Aug 24)  
Changed:
<
<
Leah, Joanna (not) Tony, Heidi TBD We conducted a study to explore the effects of screen size and different levels of accuracy for adaptive menus on performance, subjective measures, and the user's overall awareness of the application's feature set. before Aug 31st  
>
>
Leah, Joanna Tony, Heidi TBD We conducted a study to explore the effects of screen size and different levels of accuracy for adaptive menus on performance, subjective measures, and the user's overall awareness of the application's feature set. before Aug 31st  
 
Karyn, Joanna ?, ? TBD A previous study of Tablet PC pen interaction determined that selecting the top edge of the menu item below the target item was a major source of selection errors. We conducted a study to investigate two different approaches to correcting for this error, comparing them to each other and to a control condition. The first approach is to deactivate the top edge such that it functions as an invisible menu separator. The second is to reassign the top edge such that taps in this region are interpreted as selection of the item above, while leaving the visual appearance of the items unchanged. Sept 11 May be a short paper
your name your readers your title your abstract your date optional comments
 
This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platform Powered by PerlCopyright © 2008-2025 by the contributing authors. All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors.
Ideas, requests, problems regarding TWiki? Send feedback