!! Corrected Version!! -> Call for Submissions-Toronto Usability Summit
Apologies for the second message. The email address for submissions in the previous announcement was invalid and has been corrected in the version appended below. ----- Call For Proposals Toronto Usability Summit 2003 Conference Description The Toronto Usability Summit (TUS) is a multi-disciplinary gathering of usability professionals dedicated to advancing the skills and qualifications of practitioners in a wide range of fields. Conference participants include user interface designers and users, software developers, managers of human-computer interface projects, human factors practitioners, interface evaluators and testers, industrial designers, teachers of HCI, information architects, researchers in human-computer interaction, and professionals in other areas seeking to gain an understanding of how HCI relates to their specialties. Submission Types Presentations Presentation sessions focus on a practitioner¹s ideas and experience with usability methods, skills, philosophy, design, business case studies, or other relevant topics. No commercially available or vendor products will be accepted for demonstrations. Presenters should refrain from any product endorsements. Workshops Workshops provide participants with the opportunity to develop new methodologies, techniques, and skills. Workshop topics range from practical guidelines and standards to methods and techniques. Topics - Tutorials cover a wide range of HCI-related topics. Possible topics include, but are not limited to: - Usability & aesthetics - Requirements capture and analysis techniques - User interface development software (Visio, Tinderbox, Gene) - Practices and/or methodologies for design, cognitive engineering, usability engineering, etc. - Usability techniques (guerrilla, low fidelity prototyping, etc.) - Information visualization and retrieval - Multimedia, multimodal interfaces - Design for non-traditional systems, e.g., games - Web design and applications - Interfaces for home, wearable computing, etc. - HCI in corporate settings Submissions on emerging topics such as new techniques for usability or for capturing and reusing HCI knowledge, as well as new interfaces for the home or biomedical devices are encouraged. Target Audiences Beginner/Generalist Sessions designed for people who are new to usability should assume little or no prior knowledge or experience with usability concepts and techniques. These sessions should focus on bringing new people up to a minimum competency in a subject area as quickly as possible, so that they may take advantage of a broader range of sessions at this same conference. UPA will attempt to schedule these sessions early in the conference week. Advanced/Specialised These topics teach new skills to current practitioners, enhance existing skills, share knowledge and experience to broaden one¹s knowledge of both craft and business, and build the usability community. Experienced practitioners are the people most likely to encounter new problems and issues (beyond basic skills), and need to have knowledge of both techniques and resources that will help them cope with any challenge. Duration Presentations last approximately 50 min. Workshops are three hours long. Proposal Requirements Prepare a PDF format of the proposal, no longer than two pages, for review purposes. It must: - indicate the type (Presentation, Workshop) - identify the target audience (Beginner/Generalist, Advanced/Specialist) - describe the learning objectives - describe the material that will be covered - briefly outline how the tutorial will be conducted - in cases of multiple instructors, indicate role and percentage involvement of each instructor If the proposed workshop or presentation has been delivered previously, the proposal should include where the tutorial has been given and how it will be modified for TUS 2003. For the attendee background, include any prerequisites such as knowledge of HCI content, processes, and procedures. State any skills that are needed to understand tutorial content or to complete the exercises. Specify whether the session is intended to introduce participants to an area or further develop the expertise of knowledgeable participants. Submitting Your Proposal Persons interested in presenting or leading a workshop should send their proposal, in .pdf format, as well as contact information (name, affiliation, postal address, telephone/fax, email address) to: submissions@tus.ca by January 31, 2003. ------ Daniel Ponech, M.A. Founding Co-Chair Toronto Usability Summit www.tus.ca
Happy new year to you all! I'm just about to launch on some interdisciplinary research on 'ICT and work' (the others are sociologists/anthropologists, I am an HCI person interested in CSCW and ethnographic techniques). So we're coming at the issue from some fairly different literatures. If anyone has a recommendation or two on good or favourite readings in this area - either in general, or addressing particular working environments or technologies - I'd love to hear them. From any part of the world is fine. Feeling a little brain dead right now! many thanks Louise Louise Ferguson London, UK lou@louiseferguson.com www.louiseferguson.com blog: www.louiseferguson.com/cityofbits.htm M: +44 (0)781 0260637 F: +44 (0)870 1354074
Dear Louise and others who might be interested,
I'm just about to launch on some interdisciplinary research on 'ICT and work' (the others are sociologists/anthropologists, I am an HCI person interested in CSCW and ethnographic techniques). So we're coming at the issue from some fairly different literatures.
There is (of course!) a lot of work on these issues from various perspectives. I come to think on work psychology, stress, etc, related to ICT. Also, of course, the issue of "organizational memory", that has been as much promoted as critisized. I myself have, together with my doctoral students, been working some on the issue of ICT in collaborative work with "dynamic systems": control rooms,of different kinds. Some journal publications that should be easily available are: Garbis, C. & Wærn, Y. (1999). Team coordination and communication in a rescue command staff - The role of public representations. Le Travail Humain, 62, 273-291. Artman, H., Waern, Y. (1999) Distributed cognition in an Emergency Co-ordination center. Cognition technology and Work, 1:237-246 You can also approach Christer Garbis or Henrik Artman directly for knowing more about their dissertations within this field of "dynamic control": chrga@tema.liu.se, artman@nada.kth.se. Good luck! Yvonne -- Yvonne Wærn, Professor em, PhD. Department of Communication Studies, Linköping University SE 581 83 Linköping
Re: [Air-l] work and ICT - literature queryGreetings and Happy New Year, AoIR members! I've got a film question I've been thinking about for weeks. Hopefully someone can provide a suggestion. I'm teaching a cultural studies class this winter where the focus will be internet ethnography. Since I'm using The Internet: An Ethnographic Approach by Daniel Miller and Don Slater, I'd like some material surrounding Trinidad and Tobago. I'm including some readings about gender and sexuality in Trinidad, and the beginning of a science fiction set in a future caribbean world (Nalo Hopkinson's Midnight Robber). I also want a film--one that covers internet use and the caribbean would be my ideal, but, since I'm drawing a blank, how about one that covers internet use and any non-post-industrialized nation. Any suggestions? Thanks! Jillana Enteen jillana@rcnchicago.com http://www.rcnchicago.com/~jillana ,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸
On Fri, 3 Jan 2003, Louise Ferguson wrote:
Happy new year to you all!
I'm just about to launch on some interdisciplinary research on 'ICT and work' (the others are sociologists/anthropologists, I am an HCI person interested in CSCW and ethnographic techniques). So we're coming at the issue from some fairly different literatures.
Louise, i highly recommend a relatively recent issue of Information, Communication & Society, guest edited by Nina Wakeford (Volume 5, Number 1/January 01, 2002) http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/app/home/issue.asp?wasp=6alpnjxtqtxm4 fxhlbcl&referrer=parent&backto=journal,2,14;linkingpublicationresults,1,1 Editorial Comment Nina Wakeford Keeping Up: Web Design Skill and The Reinvented Worker Nalini P. Kotamraju Hot Jobs in Cool Places. The Material Cultures of New Media Product Spaces: The Case of South of the Market, San Francisco Andy C. Pratt Occupational Technologists as an Occupational Community: Ethnographic Evidence Daniel Marschall Cool, Creative and Egalitarian? Exploring Gender in Project-Based New Media Work in Europe Rosalind Gill Trusting Strangers: Work Relationships in Four High-Tech Communities J.A. English-Lueck, Charles N. Darrah, Andrea Saveri Playing at work: Understanding the Future of Work Practices at the Institute for the Future Lonny J Brooks, Geoffrey Bowker i also suggest the work of Gina Neff. david silver
participants (5)
-
Daniel Ponech -
david silver -
Jillana Enteen -
Louise Ferguson -
Yvonne Waern