A guide to empirical research in human-computer interaction(HCI). It begins with foundational topics including historical context, the human factor, interaction elements, and the fundamentals of science and research.
A guide to empirical research in human-computer interaction(HCI). It begins with foundational topics including historical context, the human factor, interaction elements, and the fundamentals of science and research.
I. Scott MacKenzie is Associate Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at York University, Canada. For the past 30 years, MacKenzie has been an active member of the human-computer interaction (HCI) research community, with over 130 peer-reviewed publications, including more than 30 papers in the Association for Computing Machinery Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (ACM SIGCHI) conference proceedings. MacKenzie's interests include human performance measurement and modeling, interaction devices and techniques, text entry, mobile computing, accessible computing, touch-based interaction, eye tracking, and experimental methodology.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Historical Context 2. The Human Factor 3. Interaction Elements 4. Scientific Foundations 5. Designing HCI Experiments 6. Hypothesis Testing 7. Modeling Interaction 8. Writing and Publishing a Research Paper
1. Historical Context 2. The Human Factor 3. Interaction Elements 4. Scientific Foundations 5. Designing HCI Experiments 6. Hypothesis Testing 7. Modeling Interaction 8. Writing and Publishing a Research Paper
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