< PREV ID

- SEARCH -

NEXT ID>

< BCK

FWD >


Making sense of sensing systems: five questions for designers and researchers

Bellotti, Victoria and Back, Maribeth and Edwards, Keith W and Grinter, Rebecca E. and Henderson, Austin and Lopes, Cristina

 

Info
ID: BEL2002:01 2002
File: BEL2002_01_-_Making_Sense.pdf
DOI   
Note: PDF Articles only available for those with access to the TU/e ID S-Drive.
Keywords

Keywords: Ambient Intelligence

Abstract

This paper borrows ideas from social science to inform the design of novel "sensing" user-interfaces for computing technology. Specifically, we present five design challenges inspired by analysis of human-human communication that are mundanely addressed by traditional graphical user interface designs (GUIs). Although classic GUI conventions allow us to finesse these questions, recent research into innovative interaction techniques such as 'Ubiquitous Computing' and 'Tangible Interfaces' has begun to expose the interaction challenges and problems they pose. By making them explicit we open a discourse on how an approach similar to that used by social scientists in studying human-human interaction might inform the design of novel interaction mechanisms that can be used to handle human-computer communication accomplishments

Details
address New York, NY, USA organization
booktitle CHI '02: Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems pages 415--422
chapter publisher ACM Press
crossref school
edition series
editor type
howpublished volume
institution year 2002
journal mycomments*
key source*
language file* BEL2002_01_-_Making_Sense.pdf:BEL2002_01_-_Making_Sense.pdf:PDF
month isbn* 1-58113-453-3
note DOI http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/503376.503450
number annote*