Difference: InteractionDesignReadingGroupCHI2008PaperSubmissionPage (1 vs. 45)

Revision 452007-09-11 - MeghanAllen

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CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study visual exploratory analysis of web session logs with Session Viewer at the workplace. With seven log-analyst participants working on their own experimental data, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and grouped our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors that affect eventual tool adoption in the workplace. We find that noisy data requires substantial data validation and selection that should be facilitated by the tool. The level of tool flexibility should be based more on target users’ technical skills than on data. The tool should allow fluid data projection to support frequent analysis direction changes. For tool adoption, we believe the strongest determinant is whether the tool fulfills a true need in the analysis process. For large data analysis, integration to current tool set is not as critical as we once assumed. Sept 7 download pdf paper (3M)
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock, Meghan Exploring Methods to Improve Pen-based Menu Selection 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 new version of paper (pdf)
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn, Tangaroo, Tamara Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file
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Joel, Leah, Kelly Karen, Tony, Clarence, Heidi TBD Many lecture halls and conference rooms today are equipped with multiple projectors and large high-resolution displays. Existing presentation software, however, only support a single, static slide projected on one full screen. With the goal of designing richer presentation tools that can take advantage of the increased screen resolution and real-estate, we conducted an observational study that examined current practice with visual aids in presentations. We observed both traditional visual aids such as whiteboards and blackboards as well as presentations using computer generated slides. By observing presentations in both classroom and conference settings we were able to devise several design guidelines for building presentation tools that are aimed at enhancing audience learning. Finally, using these guidelines, we have designed an initial prototype system for authoring and presenting a presentation on multiple displays. now Download file
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Joel, Leah, Kelly Karen, Tony, Clarence, Heidi, Meghan TBD Many lecture halls and conference rooms today are equipped with multiple projectors and large high-resolution displays. Existing presentation software, however, only support a single, static slide projected on one full screen. With the goal of designing richer presentation tools that can take advantage of the increased screen resolution and real-estate, we conducted an observational study that examined current practice with visual aids in presentations. We observed both traditional visual aids such as whiteboards and blackboards as well as presentations using computer generated slides. By observing presentations in both classroom and conference settings we were able to devise several design guidelines for building presentation tools that are aimed at enhancing audience learning. Finally, using these guidelines, we have designed an initial prototype system for authoring and presenting a presentation on multiple displays. now Download file
 

Revision 442007-09-11 - HeidiLam

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CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study visual exploratory analysis of web session logs with Session Viewer at the workplace. With seven log-analyst participants working on their own experimental data, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and grouped our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors that affect eventual tool adoption in the workplace. We find that noisy data requires substantial data validation and selection that should be facilitated by the tool. The level of tool flexibility should be based more on target users’ technical skills than on data. The tool should allow fluid data projection to support frequent analysis direction changes. For tool adoption, we believe the strongest determinant is whether the tool fulfills a true need in the analysis process. For large data analysis, integration to current tool set is not as critical as we once assumed. Sept 7 download pdf paper (3M)
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock, Meghan Exploring Methods to Improve Pen-based Menu Selection 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 new version of paper (pdf)
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn, Tangaroo, Tamara Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file
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Joel, Leah, Kelly Karen, Tony, Clarence TBD Many lecture halls and conference rooms today are equipped with multiple projectors and large high-resolution displays. Existing presentation software, however, only support a single, static slide projected on one full screen. With the goal of designing richer presentation tools that can take advantage of the increased screen resolution and real-estate, we conducted an observational study that examined current practice with visual aids in presentations. We observed both traditional visual aids such as whiteboards and blackboards as well as presentations using computer generated slides. By observing presentations in both classroom and conference settings we were able to devise several design guidelines for building presentation tools that are aimed at enhancing audience learning. Finally, using these guidelines, we have designed an initial prototype system for authoring and presenting a presentation on multiple displays. now Download file
>
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Joel, Leah, Kelly Karen, Tony, Clarence, Heidi TBD Many lecture halls and conference rooms today are equipped with multiple projectors and large high-resolution displays. Existing presentation software, however, only support a single, static slide projected on one full screen. With the goal of designing richer presentation tools that can take advantage of the increased screen resolution and real-estate, we conducted an observational study that examined current practice with visual aids in presentations. We observed both traditional visual aids such as whiteboards and blackboards as well as presentations using computer generated slides. By observing presentations in both classroom and conference settings we were able to devise several design guidelines for building presentation tools that are aimed at enhancing audience learning. Finally, using these guidelines, we have designed an initial prototype system for authoring and presenting a presentation on multiple displays. now Download file
 

Revision 432007-09-11 - KarynMoffatt

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CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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Author/Owner Readers Title Summary Approx Date Ready for Review Comments
Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah, Karen, Joel, Garth -- no more readers required, thanks Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration NOW! paper
Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study visual exploratory analysis of web session logs with Session Viewer at the workplace. With seven log-analyst participants working on their own experimental data, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and grouped our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors that affect eventual tool adoption in the workplace. We find that noisy data requires substantial data validation and selection that should be facilitated by the tool. The level of tool flexibility should be based more on target users’ technical skills than on data. The tool should allow fluid data projection to support frequent analysis direction changes. For tool adoption, we believe the strongest determinant is whether the tool fulfills a true need in the analysis process. For large data analysis, integration to current tool set is not as critical as we once assumed. Sept 7 download pdf paper (3M)
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Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock, Meghan Exploring Methods to Improve Pen-based Menu Selection 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 paper (pdf)
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Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock, Meghan Exploring Methods to Improve Pen-based Menu Selection 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 new version of paper (pdf)
 
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn, Tangaroo, Tamara Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file
Joel, Leah, Kelly Karen, Tony, Clarence TBD Many lecture halls and conference rooms today are equipped with multiple projectors and large high-resolution displays. Existing presentation software, however, only support a single, static slide projected on one full screen. With the goal of designing richer presentation tools that can take advantage of the increased screen resolution and real-estate, we conducted an observational study that examined current practice with visual aids in presentations. We observed both traditional visual aids such as whiteboards and blackboards as well as presentations using computer generated slides. By observing presentations in both classroom and conference settings we were able to devise several design guidelines for building presentation tools that are aimed at enhancing audience learning. Finally, using these guidelines, we have designed an initial prototype system for authoring and presenting a presentation on multiple displays. now Download file
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Revision 422007-09-11 - JoelLanir

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CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study visual exploratory analysis of web session logs with Session Viewer at the workplace. With seven log-analyst participants working on their own experimental data, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and grouped our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors that affect eventual tool adoption in the workplace. We find that noisy data requires substantial data validation and selection that should be facilitated by the tool. The level of tool flexibility should be based more on target users’ technical skills than on data. The tool should allow fluid data projection to support frequent analysis direction changes. For tool adoption, we believe the strongest determinant is whether the tool fulfills a true need in the analysis process. For large data analysis, integration to current tool set is not as critical as we once assumed. Sept 7 download pdf paper (3M)
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock, Meghan Exploring Methods to Improve Pen-based Menu Selection 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 paper (pdf)
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn, Tangaroo, Tamara Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file
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Joel, Leah, Kelly Karen, Tony, Clarence TBD Many lecture halls and conference rooms today are equipped with multiple projectors and large high-resolution displays. Existing presentation software, however, only support a single, static slide projected on one full screen. With the goal of designing richer presentation tools that can take advantage of the increased screen resolution and real-estate, we conducted an observational study that examined current practice with visual aids in presentations. We observed both traditional visual aids such as whiteboards and blackboards as well as presentations using computer generated slides. By observing presentations in both classroom and conference settings we were able to devise several design guidelines for building presentation tools that are aimed at enhancing audience learning. Finally, using these guidelines, we have designed an initial prototype system for authoring and presenting a presentation on multiple displays. now Download file
>
>
Joel, Leah, Kelly Karen, Tony, Clarence TBD Many lecture halls and conference rooms today are equipped with multiple projectors and large high-resolution displays. Existing presentation software, however, only support a single, static slide projected on one full screen. With the goal of designing richer presentation tools that can take advantage of the increased screen resolution and real-estate, we conducted an observational study that examined current practice with visual aids in presentations. We observed both traditional visual aids such as whiteboards and blackboards as well as presentations using computer generated slides. By observing presentations in both classroom and conference settings we were able to devise several design guidelines for building presentation tools that are aimed at enhancing audience learning. Finally, using these guidelines, we have designed an initial prototype system for authoring and presenting a presentation on multiple displays. now Download file
 
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Revision 412007-09-10 - TonyTang

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CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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Sept 11th Meeting

Author/Owner Readers Title Summary Approx Date Ready for Review Comments
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Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah, Karen, Joel, Garth Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration NOW! paper
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Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah, Karen, Joel, Garth -- no more readers required, thanks Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration NOW! paper
 
Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study visual exploratory analysis of web session logs with Session Viewer at the workplace. With seven log-analyst participants working on their own experimental data, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and grouped our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors that affect eventual tool adoption in the workplace. We find that noisy data requires substantial data validation and selection that should be facilitated by the tool. The level of tool flexibility should be based more on target users’ technical skills than on data. The tool should allow fluid data projection to support frequent analysis direction changes. For tool adoption, we believe the strongest determinant is whether the tool fulfills a true need in the analysis process. For large data analysis, integration to current tool set is not as critical as we once assumed. Sept 7 download pdf paper (3M)
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock, Meghan Exploring Methods to Improve Pen-based Menu Selection 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 paper (pdf)
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn, Tangaroo, Tamara Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file

Revision 402007-09-10 - MeghanAllen

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META TOPICPARENT name="InteractionDesignReadingGroupNew"

CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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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 NOW! paper
Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study visual exploratory analysis of web session logs with Session Viewer at the workplace. With seven log-analyst participants working on their own experimental data, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and grouped our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors that affect eventual tool adoption in the workplace. We find that noisy data requires substantial data validation and selection that should be facilitated by the tool. The level of tool flexibility should be based more on target users’ technical skills than on data. The tool should allow fluid data projection to support frequent analysis direction changes. For tool adoption, we believe the strongest determinant is whether the tool fulfills a true need in the analysis process. For large data analysis, integration to current tool set is not as critical as we once assumed. Sept 7 download pdf paper (3M)
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Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock Exploring Methods to Improve Pen-based Menu Selection 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 paper (pdf)
>
>
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock, Meghan Exploring Methods to Improve Pen-based Menu Selection 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 paper (pdf)
 
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn, Tangaroo, Tamara Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file
Joel, Leah, Kelly Karen, Tony, Clarence TBD Many lecture halls and conference rooms today are equipped with multiple projectors and large high-resolution displays. Existing presentation software, however, only support a single, static slide projected on one full screen. With the goal of designing richer presentation tools that can take advantage of the increased screen resolution and real-estate, we conducted an observational study that examined current practice with visual aids in presentations. We observed both traditional visual aids such as whiteboards and blackboards as well as presentations using computer generated slides. By observing presentations in both classroom and conference settings we were able to devise several design guidelines for building presentation tools that are aimed at enhancing audience learning. Finally, using these guidelines, we have designed an initial prototype system for authoring and presenting a presentation on multiple displays. now Download file

Revision 392007-09-10 - RockLeung

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CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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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 Download file
Peter, Tamara Karyn, Heidi LiveRAC: A scalable network management visualization system We describe a scalable network management visualization system called LiveRAC that uses live streaming data and implements a novel accordion drawing + semantic zoom interaction technique. The field deployed system helps network operations staff manage complex environments. 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 LiveRAC Paper
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Next Meeting (date TBD)

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Sept 11th Meeting

 
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 NOW! paper
Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study visual exploratory analysis of web session logs with Session Viewer at the workplace. With seven log-analyst participants working on their own experimental data, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and grouped our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors that affect eventual tool adoption in the workplace. We find that noisy data requires substantial data validation and selection that should be facilitated by the tool. The level of tool flexibility should be based more on target users’ technical skills than on data. The tool should allow fluid data projection to support frequent analysis direction changes. For tool adoption, we believe the strongest determinant is whether the tool fulfills a true need in the analysis process. For large data analysis, integration to current tool set is not as critical as we once assumed. Sept 7 download pdf paper (3M)
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Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn, Tangaroo, Tamara Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file
Joel, Leah, Kelly Karen, Tony, Clarence TBD Many lecture halls and conference rooms today are equipped with multiple projectors and large high-resolution displays. Existing presentation software, however, only support a single, static slide projected on one full screen. With the goal of designing richer presentation tools that can take advantage of the increased screen resolution and real-estate, we conducted an observational study that examined current practice with visual aids in presentations. We observed both traditional visual aids such as whiteboards and blackboards as well as presentations using computer generated slides. By observing presentations in both classroom and conference settings we were able to devise several design guidelines for building presentation tools that are aimed at enhancing audience learning. Finally, using these guidelines, we have designed an initial prototype system for authoring and presenting a presentation on multiple displays. now Download file
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Revision 382007-09-10 - KarynMoffatt

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META TOPICPARENT name="InteractionDesignReadingGroupNew"

CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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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 NOW! paper
Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study visual exploratory analysis of web session logs with Session Viewer at the workplace. With seven log-analyst participants working on their own experimental data, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and grouped our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors that affect eventual tool adoption in the workplace. We find that noisy data requires substantial data validation and selection that should be facilitated by the tool. The level of tool flexibility should be based more on target users’ technical skills than on data. The tool should allow fluid data projection to support frequent analysis direction changes. For tool adoption, we believe the strongest determinant is whether the tool fulfills a true need in the analysis process. For large data analysis, integration to current tool set is not as critical as we once assumed. Sept 7 download pdf paper (3M)
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Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock 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 short paper
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Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock Exploring Methods to Improve Pen-based Menu Selection 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 paper (pdf)
 
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn, Tangaroo, Tamara Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file
Joel, Leah, Kelly Karen, Tony, Clarence TBD Many lecture halls and conference rooms today are equipped with multiple projectors and large high-resolution displays. Existing presentation software, however, only support a single, static slide projected on one full screen. With the goal of designing richer presentation tools that can take advantage of the increased screen resolution and real-estate, we conducted an observational study that examined current practice with visual aids in presentations. We observed both traditional visual aids such as whiteboards and blackboards as well as presentations using computer generated slides. By observing presentations in both classroom and conference settings we were able to devise several design guidelines for building presentation tools that are aimed at enhancing audience learning. Finally, using these guidelines, we have designed an initial prototype system for authoring and presenting a presentation on multiple displays. now Download file
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  • : Version 1: Really rough
 
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Revision 372007-09-09 - JoelLanir

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Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study visual exploratory analysis of web session logs with Session Viewer at the workplace. With seven log-analyst participants working on their own experimental data, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and grouped our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors that affect eventual tool adoption in the workplace. We find that noisy data requires substantial data validation and selection that should be facilitated by the tool. The level of tool flexibility should be based more on target users’ technical skills than on data. The tool should allow fluid data projection to support frequent analysis direction changes. For tool adoption, we believe the strongest determinant is whether the tool fulfills a true need in the analysis process. For large data analysis, integration to current tool set is not as critical as we once assumed. Sept 7 download pdf paper (3M)
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock 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 short paper
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn, Tangaroo, Tamara Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file
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Joel, Leah, Kelly Karen, Tony, Clarence TBD Many lecture halls and conference rooms today are equipped with multiple projectors and large high-resolution displays. Existing presentation software, however, only support a single, static slide projected on one full screen. With the goal of designing richer presentation tools that can take advantage of the increased screen resolution and real-estate, we conducted an observational study that examined current practice with visual aids in presentations. We observed both traditional visual aids such as whiteboards and blackboards as well as presentations using computer generated slides. By observing presentations in both classroom and conference settings we were able to devise several design guidelines for building presentation tools that are aimed at enhancing audience learning. Finally, using these guidelines, we have designed an initial prototype system for authoring and presenting a presentation on multiple displays. now Download file
 

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Revision 362007-09-07 - TamaraMunzner

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Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah, Karen, Joel, Garth Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration NOW! paper
Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study visual exploratory analysis of web session logs with Session Viewer at the workplace. With seven log-analyst participants working on their own experimental data, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and grouped our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors that affect eventual tool adoption in the workplace. We find that noisy data requires substantial data validation and selection that should be facilitated by the tool. The level of tool flexibility should be based more on target users’ technical skills than on data. The tool should allow fluid data projection to support frequent analysis direction changes. For tool adoption, we believe the strongest determinant is whether the tool fulfills a true need in the analysis process. For large data analysis, integration to current tool set is not as critical as we once assumed. Sept 7 download pdf paper (3M)
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock 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 short paper
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Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn, Tangaroo Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file
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Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn, Tangaroo, Tamara Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file
 

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Revision 352007-09-07 - HeidiLam

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Next Meeting (date TBD)

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 NOW! paper
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Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study the use of Session Viewer in visual exploratory analysis of web session logs at the workplace. While we identified usability and design issues with the study, we also learned valuable lessons in visualization design and system use. With seven web session log analyst participants working on their own experimental data using Session Viewer, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and we group our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors we believe that will contribute or impede the eventual adoption of our tool in the workplace. Sept 7 paper (18M)
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Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study visual exploratory analysis of web session logs with Session Viewer at the workplace. With seven log-analyst participants working on their own experimental data, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and grouped our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors that affect eventual tool adoption in the workplace. We find that noisy data requires substantial data validation and selection that should be facilitated by the tool. The level of tool flexibility should be based more on target users’ technical skills than on data. The tool should allow fluid data projection to support frequent analysis direction changes. For tool adoption, we believe the strongest determinant is whether the tool fulfills a true need in the analysis process. For large data analysis, integration to current tool set is not as critical as we once assumed. Sept 7 download pdf paper (3M)
 
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock 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 short paper
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn, Tangaroo Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file

Revision 342007-09-07 - HeidiLam

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Next Meeting (date TBD)

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 NOW! paper
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Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study the use of Session Viewer in visual exploratory analysis of web session logs at the workplace. While we identified usability and design issues with the study, we also learned valuable lessons in visualization design and system use. With seven web session log analyst participants working on their own experimental data using Session Viewer, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and we group our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors we believe that will contribute or impede the eventual adoption of our tool in the workplace. Sept 10  
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Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study the use of Session Viewer in visual exploratory analysis of web session logs at the workplace. While we identified usability and design issues with the study, we also learned valuable lessons in visualization design and system use. With seven web session log analyst participants working on their own experimental data using Session Viewer, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and we group our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors we believe that will contribute or impede the eventual adoption of our tool in the workplace. Sept 7 paper (18M)
 
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock 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 short paper
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn, Tangaroo Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file

Revision 332007-09-07 - TonyTang

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Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah, Karen, Joel, Garth Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration NOW! paper
Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study the use of Session Viewer in visual exploratory analysis of web session logs at the workplace. While we identified usability and design issues with the study, we also learned valuable lessons in visualization design and system use. With seven web session log analyst participants working on their own experimental data using Session Viewer, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and we group our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors we believe that will contribute or impede the eventual adoption of our tool in the workplace. Sept 10  
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock 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 short paper
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Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file
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Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn, Tangaroo Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file
 

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Revision 322007-09-07 - RockLeung

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Next Meeting (date TBD)

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 NOW! paper
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Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study the use of Session Viewer in visual exploratory analysis of web session logs at the workplace. While we identified usability and design issues with the study, we also learned valuable lessons in visualization design and system use. With seven web session log analyst participants working on their own experimental data using Session Viewer, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and we group our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors we believe that will contribute or impede the eventual adoption of our tool in the workplace. Sept 10  
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi 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 short paper
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5  

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Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study the use of Session Viewer in visual exploratory analysis of web session logs at the workplace. While we identified usability and design issues with the study, we also learned valuable lessons in visualization design and system use. With seven web session log analyst participants working on their own experimental data using Session Viewer, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and we group our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors we believe that will contribute or impede the eventual adoption of our tool in the workplace. Sept 10  
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi, Rock 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 short paper
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5 Download file
 

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Revision 312007-09-06 - HeidiLam

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Next Meeting (date TBD)

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 NOW! paper
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Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony 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)  
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Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony A Visual Exploratory Data Analysis Tool At Work: Contextual Inquiry of Session Viewer We conducted a contextual inquiry to study the use of Session Viewer in visual exploratory analysis of web session logs at the workplace. While we identified usability and design issues with the study, we also learned valuable lessons in visualization design and system use. With seven web session log analyst participants working on their own experimental data using Session Viewer, we collected 20 hours of tool use, and we group our findings into two themes: (1) design implications in dealing with real-world noisy data, and (2) factors we believe that will contribute or impede the eventual adoption of our tool in the workplace. Sept 10  
 
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi 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 short paper
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5  

Revision 302007-09-05 - KarynMoffatt

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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 NOW! paper
Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony 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)  
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Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi 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
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B readers Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5  
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Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi 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 short paper
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B Karyn Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5  
 

Revision 292007-09-04 - LeahFindlater

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Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah, Karen, Joel, Garth Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration NOW! paper
Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony 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)  
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi 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
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Leah, Joanna Tony, Heidi Impact of Screen Size on Performance and User Satisfaction With Adaptive Graphical User Interfaces (not a real abstract) 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. Aug 26th  
 
Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B readers Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5  

Revision 282007-08-31 - TonyTang

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Next Meeting (date TBD)

Author/Owner Readers Title Summary Approx Date Ready for Review Comments
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Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah, Karen, Joel, Garth Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration    
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Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah, Karen, Joel, Garth Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration NOW! paper
 
Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony 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)  
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi 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
Leah, Joanna Tony, Heidi Impact of Screen Size on Performance and User Satisfaction With Adaptive Graphical User Interfaces (not a real abstract) 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. Aug 26th  

Revision 272007-08-30 - RockLeung

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Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony 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)  
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi 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
Leah, Joanna Tony, Heidi Impact of Screen Size on Performance and User Satisfaction With Adaptive Graphical User Interfaces (not a real abstract) 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. Aug 26th  
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Kirstie et al. readers title abstract date comments
your name your readers your title your abstract your date optional comments
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Rodrigo W, David B, Kirstie, Konstantin B readers Security Practitioners in Context: Their Activities and Interactions with Other Stakeholders in the Organization abstract Sept 5  
 

Revision 262007-08-28 - EvgneyMaksakov

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Aug 28th meeting

Author/Owner Readers Title Summary Approx Date Ready for Review Comments
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Yamin, Joanna, Kelly Tony, Karen The Annotators' Perspective on Co-authoring with Structured Annotations ABSTRACT: Research has shown that grouping related annotations together can help those who review an annotated document by reducing their workload and raising the accuracy of their reviewing. Less is known about the impact on users who create these structured annotations – the annotators. The goals of the research reported in this paper were: (1) to better understand current annotation creation practices, (2) to explore how structuring can be used by annotators, both the structuring process and resulting types of structure, and (3) to evaluate the impact on annotators of having to create structured annotations. We conducted three studies to address each of these goals and learned that structured annotations are perceived to be worth the additional workload and that the bottom-up grouping approach complements the top-down approach in describing relationships amongst annotations in a document. Aug 22 Download file
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Yamin, Joanna, Kelly Tony, Karen, Evgeny The Annotators' Perspective on Co-authoring with Structured Annotations ABSTRACT: Research has shown that grouping related annotations together can help those who review an annotated document by reducing their workload and raising the accuracy of their reviewing. Less is known about the impact on users who create these structured annotations – the annotators. The goals of the research reported in this paper were: (1) to better understand current annotation creation practices, (2) to explore how structuring can be used by annotators, both the structuring process and resulting types of structure, and (3) to evaluate the impact on annotators of having to create structured annotations. We conducted three studies to address each of these goals and learned that structured annotations are perceived to be worth the additional workload and that the bottom-up grouping approach complements the top-down approach in describing relationships amongst annotations in a document. Aug 22 Download file
 
Leah, Joanna Joel, Karen, Tangaroo 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 Download 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 Download file
Peter, Tamara Karyn, Heidi LiveRAC: A scalable network management visualization system We describe a scalable network management visualization system called LiveRAC that uses live streaming data and implements a novel accordion drawing + semantic zoom interaction technique. The field deployed system helps network operations staff manage complex environments. 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 LiveRAC Paper

Revision 252007-08-27 - TonyTang

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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 ABSTRACT: Research has shown that grouping related annotations together can help those who review an annotated document by reducing their workload and raising the accuracy of their reviewing. Less is known about the impact on users who create these structured annotations – the annotators. The goals of the research reported in this paper were: (1) to better understand current annotation creation practices, (2) to explore how structuring can be used by annotators, both the structuring process and resulting types of structure, and (3) to evaluate the impact on annotators of having to create structured annotations. We conducted three studies to address each of these goals and learned that structured annotations are perceived to be worth the additional workload and that the bottom-up grouping approach complements the top-down approach in describing relationships amongst annotations in a document. Aug 22 Download file
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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 Download short paper
>
>
Leah, Joanna Joel, Karen, Tangaroo 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 Download 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 Download file
Peter, Tamara Karyn, Heidi LiveRAC: A scalable network management visualization system We describe a scalable network management visualization system called LiveRAC that uses live streaming data and implements a novel accordion drawing + semantic zoom interaction technique. The field deployed system helps network operations staff manage complex environments. 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 LiveRAC Paper

Revision 242007-08-27 - RockLeung

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META TOPICPARENT name="InteractionDesignReadingGroupNew"

CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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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 ABSTRACT: Research has shown that grouping related annotations together can help those who review an annotated document by reducing their workload and raising the accuracy of their reviewing. Less is known about the impact on users who create these structured annotations – the annotators. The goals of the research reported in this paper were: (1) to better understand current annotation creation practices, (2) to explore how structuring can be used by annotators, both the structuring process and resulting types of structure, and (3) to evaluate the impact on annotators of having to create structured annotations. We conducted three studies to address each of these goals and learned that structured annotations are perceived to be worth the additional workload and that the bottom-up grouping approach complements the top-down approach in describing relationships amongst annotations in a document. Aug 22 Download file
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 Download short paper
Changed:
<
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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  
>
>
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 Download file
 
Peter, Tamara Karyn, Heidi LiveRAC: A scalable network management visualization system We describe a scalable network management visualization system called LiveRAC that uses live streaming data and implements a novel accordion drawing + semantic zoom interaction technique. The field deployed system helps network operations staff manage complex environments. 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 LiveRAC Paper

Next Meeting (date TBD)

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META FILEATTACHMENT attr="" comment="test" date="1187996248" name="test.txt" path="test.txt" size="4" user="rockl" version="1.1"
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META FILEATTACHMENT attr="" comment="%_Q_%Evaluation of a Role-Based Approach for Customizing a Complex Development Environment%_Q_%" date="1188074074" name="interviews-v1-1-IDRG.doc" path="interviews-v1-1-IDRG.doc" size="299008" user="lkf" version="1.1"
META FILEATTACHMENT attr="" comment="LiveRAC" date="1188191614" name="liverac_chi2008.pdf" path="liverac_chi2008.pdf" size="420298" user="spark343" version="1.1"
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META FILEATTACHMENT attr="" comment="Exploring Age Differences in the Initial Usability of Mobile Device Icons" date="1188227909" name="IconUsability_Aug28IDRG.pdf" path="IconUsability_Aug28IDRG.pdf" size="514191" user="rockl" version="1.1"

Revision 232007-08-27 - PeterMcLachlan

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META TOPICPARENT name="InteractionDesignReadingGroupNew"

CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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Yamin, Joanna, Kelly Tony, Karen The Annotators' Perspective on Co-authoring with Structured Annotations ABSTRACT: Research has shown that grouping related annotations together can help those who review an annotated document by reducing their workload and raising the accuracy of their reviewing. Less is known about the impact on users who create these structured annotations – the annotators. The goals of the research reported in this paper were: (1) to better understand current annotation creation practices, (2) to explore how structuring can be used by annotators, both the structuring process and resulting types of structure, and (3) to evaluate the impact on annotators of having to create structured annotations. We conducted three studies to address each of these goals and learned that structured annotations are perceived to be worth the additional workload and that the bottom-up grouping approach complements the top-down approach in describing relationships amongst annotations in a document. Aug 22 Download file
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 Download 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  
Changed:
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Peter, Tamara Karyn, Heidi 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  
>
>
Peter, Tamara Karyn, Heidi LiveRAC: A scalable network management visualization system We describe a scalable network management visualization system called LiveRAC that uses live streaming data and implements a novel accordion drawing + semantic zoom interaction technique. The field deployed system helps network operations staff manage complex environments. 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 LiveRAC Paper
 

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META FILEATTACHMENT attr="" comment="Yamin's paper: %_Q_%The Annotators' Perspective on Co-authoring with Structured Annotations%_Q_%" date="1188049686" name="AnnotatorsPerspective_Yamin_Aug25.pdf" path="AnnotatorsPerspective_Yamin_Aug25.pdf" size="428821" user="yhtun" version="1.1"
META FILEATTACHMENT attr="" comment="%_Q_%Evaluation of a Role-Based Approach for Customizing a Complex Development Environment%_Q_%" date="1188074074" name="interviews-v1-1-IDRG.doc" path="interviews-v1-1-IDRG.doc" size="299008" user="lkf" version="1.1"
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META FILEATTACHMENT attr="" comment="LiveRAC" date="1188191614" name="liverac_chi2008.pdf" path="liverac_chi2008.pdf" size="420298" user="spark343" version="1.1"

Revision 222007-08-25 - LeahFindlater

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CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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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 ABSTRACT: Research has shown that grouping related annotations together can help those who review an annotated document by reducing their workload and raising the accuracy of their reviewing. Less is known about the impact on users who create these structured annotations – the annotators. The goals of the research reported in this paper were: (1) to better understand current annotation creation practices, (2) to explore how structuring can be used by annotators, both the structuring process and resulting types of structure, and (3) to evaluate the impact on annotators of having to create structured annotations. We conducted three studies to address each of these goals and learned that structured annotations are perceived to be worth the additional workload and that the bottom-up grouping approach complements the top-down approach in describing relationships amongst annotations in a document. Aug 22 Download file
Changed:
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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!
Leah, Joanna Tony, Heidi Impact of Screen Size on Performance and User Satisfaction With Adaptive Graphical User Interfaces (not a real abstract) 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. Aug 26th  
>
>
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 Download 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, Heidi 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: 21 to 20
 
Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah, Karen, Joel, Garth Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration    
Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony 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)  
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi 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
Added:
>
>
Leah, Joanna Tony, Heidi Impact of Screen Size on Performance and User Satisfaction With Adaptive Graphical User Interfaces (not a real abstract) 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. Aug 26th  
 
Kirstie et al. readers title abstract date comments
your name your readers your title your abstract your date optional comments
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META FILEATTACHMENT attr="" comment="test" date="1187996248" name="test.txt" path="test.txt" size="4" user="rockl" version="1.1"
META FILEATTACHMENT attr="" comment="Yamin's paper: %_Q_%The Annotators' Perspective on Co-authoring with Structured Annotations%_Q_%" date="1188049686" name="AnnotatorsPerspective_Yamin_Aug25.pdf" path="AnnotatorsPerspective_Yamin_Aug25.pdf" size="428821" user="yhtun" version="1.1"
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META FILEATTACHMENT attr="" comment="%_Q_%Evaluation of a Role-Based Approach for Customizing a Complex Development Environment%_Q_%" date="1188074074" name="interviews-v1-1-IDRG.doc" path="interviews-v1-1-IDRG.doc" size="299008" user="lkf" version="1.1"

Revision 212007-08-25 - YaminHtun

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META TOPICPARENT name="InteractionDesignReadingGroupNew"

CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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Aug 28th meeting

Author/Owner Readers Title Summary Approx Date Ready for Review Comments
Changed:
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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  
>
>
Yamin, Joanna, Kelly Tony, Karen The Annotators' Perspective on Co-authoring with Structured Annotations ABSTRACT: Research has shown that grouping related annotations together can help those who review an annotated document by reducing their workload and raising the accuracy of their reviewing. Less is known about the impact on users who create these structured annotations – the annotators. The goals of the research reported in this paper were: (1) to better understand current annotation creation practices, (2) to explore how structuring can be used by annotators, both the structuring process and resulting types of structure, and (3) to evaluate the impact on annotators of having to create structured annotations. We conducted three studies to address each of these goals and learned that structured annotations are perceived to be worth the additional workload and that the bottom-up grouping approach complements the top-down approach in describing relationships amongst annotations in a document. Aug 22 Download file
 
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!
Leah, Joanna Tony, Heidi Impact of Screen Size on Performance and User Satisfaction With Adaptive Graphical User Interfaces (not a real abstract) 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. Aug 26th  
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  
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your name your readers your title your abstract your date optional comments
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META FILEATTACHMENT attr="" comment="test" date="1187996248" name="test.txt" path="test.txt" size="4" user="rockl" version="1.1"
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META FILEATTACHMENT attr="" comment="Yamin's paper: %_Q_%The Annotators' Perspective on Co-authoring with Structured Annotations%_Q_%" date="1188049686" name="AnnotatorsPerspective_Yamin_Aug25.pdf" path="AnnotatorsPerspective_Yamin_Aug25.pdf" size="428821" user="yhtun" version="1.1"

Revision 202007-08-25 - HeidiLam

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META TOPICPARENT name="InteractionDesignReadingGroupNew"

CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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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!
Leah, Joanna Tony, Heidi Impact of Screen Size on Performance and User Satisfaction With Adaptive Graphical User Interfaces (not a real abstract) 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. Aug 26th  
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  
Changed:
<
<
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  
>
>
Peter, Tamara Karyn, Heidi 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  
 

Next Meeting (date TBD)

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    
Changed:
<
<
Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter 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)  
Karyn, Joanna Peter, ? 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
>
>
Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter, Tony 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)  
Karyn, Joanna Peter, Heidi 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
 
Kirstie et al. readers title abstract date comments
your name your readers your title your abstract your date optional comments

Revision 192007-08-24 - LeahFindlater

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META TOPICPARENT name="InteractionDesignReadingGroupNew"

CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

Line: 12 to 12
 
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  
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!
Changed:
<
<
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. Aug 26th  
>
>
Leah, Joanna Tony, Heidi Impact of Screen Size on Performance and User Satisfaction With Adaptive Graphical User Interfaces (not a real abstract) 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. Aug 26th  
 
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  

Revision 182007-08-24 - RockLeung

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META TOPICPARENT name="InteractionDesignReadingGroupNew"

CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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Karyn, Joanna Peter, ? 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
Kirstie et al. readers title abstract date comments
your name your readers your title your abstract your date optional comments
Added:
>
>
 
Added:
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META FILEATTACHMENT attr="" comment="test" date="1187996248" name="test.txt" path="test.txt" size="4" user="rockl" version="1.1"

Revision 172007-08-24 - LeahFindlater

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META TOPICPARENT name="InteractionDesignReadingGroupNew"

CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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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  
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!
Changed:
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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 24th  
>
>
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. Aug 26th  
 
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  

Revision 162007-08-23 - PeterMcLachlan

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META TOPICPARENT name="InteractionDesignReadingGroupNew"

CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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Next Meeting (date TBD)

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    
Changed:
<
<
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)  
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
>
>
Heidi, Tamara Leah, Karen, Peter 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)  
Karyn, Joanna Peter, ? 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
 
Kirstie et al. readers title abstract date comments
your name your readers your title your abstract your date optional comments

Revision 152007-08-23 - RockLeung

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CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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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  
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!
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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 24th  
 
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  
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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)  
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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
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Kirstie et al. readers title abstract date comments
 
your name your readers your title your abstract your date optional comments

Revision 142007-08-22 - LeahFindlater

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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  
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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  
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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:
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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

Revision 132007-08-22 - RockLeung

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 Everyone: Pick a paper or two to read, put your name next to the paper. Try to keep things even so everyone gets some help! It's probably a good idea to notify the author that you will be reading his/her paper so he/she can get you an up to date copy -->
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Aug 28th meeting

 
Author/Owner Readers Title Summary Approx Date Ready for Review Comments
Deleted:
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Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah, Karen, Joel, Garth Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration    
Rock, Joanna, Peter G 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 24  
 
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  
Added:
>
>
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!
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  

Next Meeting (date TBD)

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)  
Deleted:
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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  
 
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  
Deleted:
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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!
 
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

Revision 122007-08-22 - KarenParker

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Author/Owner Readers Title Summary Approx Date Ready for Review Comments
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Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration    
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Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah, Karen, Joel, Garth Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration    
 
Rock, Joanna, Peter G 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 24  
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  
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)  
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  
Changed:
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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  
>
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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 ?, ? 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!
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

Revision 112007-08-22 - KarynMoffatt

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Author/Owner Readers Title Summary Approx Date Ready for Review Comments
Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration    
Changed:
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<
Rock, Joanna, Peter G   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 24  
>
>
Rock, Joanna, Peter G 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 24  
 
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  
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:
<
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Peter, Tamara   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  
Leah, Joanna (not) Tony, ? 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  
>
>
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  
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  
 
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!
Added:
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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

Revision 102007-08-22 - KarenParker

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CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration    
Rock, Joanna, Peter G   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 24  
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:
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Heidi, Tamara Leah, ? 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)  
>
>
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)  
 
Peter, Tamara   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  
Leah, Joanna (not) Tony, ? 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 ?, ? 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!

Revision 92007-08-19 - TonyTang

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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  
Heidi, Tamara Leah, ? 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)  
Peter, Tamara   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  
Changed:
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Leah, Joanna Tony, ? 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 (not) Tony, ? 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 ?, ? 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!
your name your readers your title your abstract your date optional comments

Revision 82007-08-19 - HeidiLam

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Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration    
Rock, Joanna, Peter G   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 24  
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:
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Heidi, Tamara ?? 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)  
>
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Heidi, Tamara Leah, ? 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)  
 
Peter, Tamara   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  
Leah, Joanna Tony, ? 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 ?, ? 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!

Revision 72007-08-19 - LeahFindlater

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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  
Heidi, Tamara ?? 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)  
Peter, Tamara   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  
Added:
>
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Leah, Joanna Tony, ? 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 ?, ? 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!
 
your name your readers your title your abstract your date optional comments

Revision 62007-08-16 - PeterMcLachlan

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Rock, Joanna, Peter G   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 24  
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  
Heidi, Tamara ?? 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)  
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Peter, Tamara   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  
 
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Revision 52007-08-16 - HeidiLam

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CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration    
Rock, Joanna, Peter G   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 24  
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  
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Heidi, Tamara ?? 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)  
 
your name your readers your title your abstract your date optional comments

Revision 42007-08-16 - YaminHtun

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CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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Author/Owner Readers Title Summary Approx Date Ready for Review Comments
Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration    
Rock, Joanna, Peter G   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 24  
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your name your readers your title your abstract your date optional comments
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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  
your name your readers your title your abstract your date optional comments
 

Revision 32007-08-16 - RockLeung

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META TOPICPARENT name="InteractionDesignReadingGroupNew"

CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

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  • If you are a writer: attach an updated version of your paper, the title of your paper, and the abstract on this webpage -- please note, it is your responsibility to keep your draft on this webpage up-to-date, or to email up-to-date versions of your draft to your readers.
  • Everyone: pick a paper or two you will read, put your name next to the paper. Try to keep things even so everyone gets some help! It's probably a good idea to notify the author that you will be reading his/her paper so he/she can get you an up to date copy
>
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  • If you are a writer: attach an updated version of your paper, the title of your paper, and the abstract on this webpage -- please note, it is your responsibility to keep your draft on this webpage up-to-date, or to email up-to-date versions of your draft to your readers.
  • When we have most of our submissions posted, we'll ask everyone to pick a paper or two to read.
<-- 
Everyone: Pick a paper or two to read, put your name next to the paper. Try to keep things even so everyone gets some help! It's probably a good idea to notify the author that you will be reading his/her paper so he/she can get you an up to date copy
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Author/Owner Readers Title Abstract Approx Date Ready for Review Comments
Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration Aug 15  
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Author/Owner Readers Title Summary Approx Date Ready for Review Comments
Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration    
Rock, Joanna, Peter G   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 24  
 
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-- TonyTang - 13 Aug 2007

Revision 22007-08-15 - RockLeung

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META TOPICPARENT name="InteractionDesignReadingGroupNew"
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CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

  • If you are a writer: attach an updated version of your paper, the title of your paper, and the abstract on this webpage -- please note, it is your responsibility to keep your draft on this webpage up-to-date, or to email up-to-date versions of your draft to your readers.
  • Everyone: pick a paper or two you will read, put your name next to the paper. Try to keep things even so everyone gets some help! It's probably a good idea to notify the author that you will be reading his/her paper so he/she can get you an up to date copy
Changed:
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Author/Pwner Readers
<-- -->
Sorted ascending
Title Abstract
Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration
your name your readers your title your abstract
>
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Author/Owner Readers Title Abstract Approx Date Ready for Review Comments
Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration Aug 15  
your name your readers your title your abstract your date optional comments
 

-- TonyTang - 13 Aug 2007

Revision 12007-08-13 - TonyTang

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Added:
>
>
META TOPICPARENT name="InteractionDesignReadingGroupNew"

CHI 2008 Draft Submission Stuff

  • If you are a writer: attach an updated version of your paper, the title of your paper, and the abstract on this webpage -- please note, it is your responsibility to keep your draft on this webpage up-to-date, or to email up-to-date versions of your draft to your readers.
  • Everyone: pick a paper or two you will read, put your name next to the paper. Try to keep things even so everyone gets some help! It's probably a good idea to notify the author that you will be reading his/her paper so he/she can get you an up to date copy

Author/Pwner Readers Title Abstract
Tony, Sid Rocky, Leah Surface affordances This paper examines the role of surfaces in meeting room collaboration
your name your readers your title your abstract

-- TonyTang - 13 Aug 2007

 
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