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People and Computers XVII — Designing for Society
註釋This volume contains the full papers presented at HCI 2003, the 17th Annual Conference of the British HCI Group, a specialist group of the British Computer Society. The conference has become the premier annual conference on Human-Computer Interaction in Europe. Attracting researchers, practitioners, educators and users from all over the world, with interests in many facets of human- computer interaction, usability and interactive systems, these published proceedings form an important part of the archive of HCI research. As advances in computing and communications technologies extend the human-computer interface beyond the desktop and into our clothes, streets and buildings, mobile and pervasive applications provide exciting challenges and opportunities. People and Computers XVII - Designing for Society, addresses the main areas of HCI research while focusing on its position and usage within today's society. The papers raise and discuss numerous questions, such as. How do we design for usability when human- computer interaction is dispersed and interwoven throughout our environment. How can we understand and account for the web of influences amongst society, environment and technology. How do we interact successfully with and through devices and networks with many form factors. And, how do we design these devices? TOC:Doing the Right Thing in the Right Place: Technology, Theory and Design for Multiple and Group Activities Understanding Task Grouping Strategies - Peter J Wild, Peter Johnson & Hilary Johnson Two Phenomenological Studies of Place - Phil Turner & Susan Turner The Interaction Character of Computers in Co-located Collaboration - Mattias Arvola Information Retrieval How KnowledgeWorkers Gather Information from the Web: Implications for Peer-to-Peer File Sharing Tools - Jennifer Hyams & Abigail Sellen Evaluation of a Prototype Interface for Structured Document Retrieval - Jane Reid & Mark D Dunlop Comparing Speed-dependent Automatic Zooming with Traditional Scroll, Pan and Zoom Methods - Andy Cockburn & Joshua Savage Design Methods and Principles The Application of Urban Design Principles to Navigation of Information Spaces - David Benyon & Bettina Wilmes A Method for Organizational Culture Analysis as a Basis for the Implementation of User-Centred Design into Organizations - Netta Iivari, Kaisu Juntunen & Ilkka Tuikkala Evaluation Methods Changing Analysts' Tunes: The Surprising Impact of a New Instrument for Usability Inspection Method Assessment - Gilbert Cockton, Alan Woolrych, Lynne Hall & Mark Hindmarch Ontological Sketch Models: Highlighting User-System Misfits - Iain Connell, Thomas Green & Ann Blandford Interaction Techniques: Looking, Listening, Pointing, Stroking Improving the Acquisition of Small Targets - Andy Cockburn & Andrew Firth A Directional Stroke Recognition Technique for Mobile Interaction in a Pervasive ComputingWorld - Vassilis Kostakos & Eamonn O'Neill Look or Listen: Discovering Effective Techniques for Accessing Speech Data