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Interactions, Volume 17
Volume 17, Number 1, January + February 2010
- Richard Anderson, Jon Kolko:
Interactions: information, physicality, co-ownership, and culture. 5
- Mark Baskinger, Mark D. Gross:
Cover Story - Tangible interaction = form + computing. 6-11
- Donald A. Norman:
The Way I See It: The transmedia design challenge: technology that is pleasurable and satisfying. 12-15 - Liz Danzico:
Between The Lines - The art of editing: the new old skills for a curated life. 16-19 - Alex Wright:
(P)Review - Of memories and memorials: a conversation with Jake Barton about the Make History project. 20-23 - Denise Lee Yohn:
Feature - Operationalizing brands with new technologies. 24-27 - Jeremy Yuille, Hugh Macdonald:
Feature - The social life of visualization. 28-31
- Nicola J. Bidwell, Heike Winschiers-Theophilus:
Under Development - Beyond the Benjamins: toward an African interaction design. 32-35 - Natalie Quizon:
Feature - Social change: women, networks, and technology. 36-39 - Jonathan Lazar:
Interacting with public policy. 40-43 - Eli Blevis:
Sustainably Ours - Reclaim. 44-46
- Jay Chaeyong Yi:
Feature - User-research-driven mobile user interface innovation: a success story from Seoul. 48-51 - Dan Formosa:
Feature - Why marketing research makes us cringe. 52-56 - Klaus Kaasgaard:
Feature - Why designers sometimes make me cringe. 56-57 - Javier Marco, Sandra Baldassarri, Eva Cerezo, Diana Yifan Xu, Janet C. Read:
Lifelong Interactions - Let the experts talk: an experience of tangible game design with children. 58-61
- Elizabeth F. Churchill:
Ps and Qs: Socializing at cross purposes. 62-65 - Martha E. Pollack:
Timelines - Reflections on the future of iSchools from a dean inspired by some junior faculty. 66-68 - Peter H. Jones:
On Modeling - The language/action model of conversation: can conversation perform acts of design? 70-75 - Rebecca E. Grinter, Katie A. Siek, Andrea Grimes:
Feature - Is wellness informatics a field of human-centered health informatics? 76-79
- Richard Anderson, Jon Kolko:
On designers as catalytic agents. 80
Volume 17, Number 2, March + April 2010
- Richard Anderson, Jon Kolko:
Interactions: exploring aspects of design thinking. 5
- Chris Pacione:
Evolution of the mind: a case for design literacy. 6-11 - Paula Thornton:
Design thinking in stereo: Brown and Martin. 12-15 - Roger Martin, Jennifer Riel:
Designing interactions at work: applying design to discussions, meetings, and relationships. 16-19
- Liz Danzico:
From Davis to David: lessons from improvisation. 20-23 - Jeffrey Y. Kim, Arnold M. Lund, Caroline Dombrowski:
Mobilizing attention: storytelling for innovation. 24-26 - Alan F. Blackwell, Sally Fincher:
PUX: patterns of user experience. 27-31 - Jeffrey Bardzell, Jay D. Bolter, Jonas Löwgren:
Interaction criticism: three readings of an interaction design, and what they get us. 32-37
- Donald A. Norman:
Technology first, needs last: the research-product gulf. 38-42 - Lauren Serota, Dan Rockwell:
An introduction to casual data, and how it's changing everything. 43-47 - Sam Ladner:
The essence of interaction design research: a call for consistency. 48-51
- Elizabeth F. Churchill:
Sugared puppy-dog tails: gender and design. 52-56 - Shaowen Bardzell, Eli Blevis:
The lens of feminist HCI in the context of sustainable interaction design. 57-59 - Desmond Ballance, Jodie Jenkinson:
MyMeal: an interactive user-tailored meal visualization tool for teenagers battling eating disorders. 60-63
- Harry Hochheiser, Ben Shneiderman:
From bowling alone to tweeting together: technology-mediated social participation. 64-67 - Nicola J. Bidwell:
Ubuntu in the network: humanness in social capital in rural Africa. 68-71 - Ryan Wistort:
Only robots on the inside. 72-74
- Jonathan Grudin:
What a wonderful critter: orphans find a home. 76-78
- Jon Kolko, Richard Anderson:
On design thinking, business, the arts, STEM ... 80-
Volume 17, Number 3, May + June 2010
- Richard Anderson, Jon Kolko:
Business, culture, and society. 5
- Donald A. Norman:
Natural user interfaces are not natural. 6-10 - Liz Danzico:
Making face: practices and interpretations of avatars in everyday media. 11-14 - Bernard J. Jansen, Abdur Chowdury, Geoff Cook:
The ubiquitous and increasingly significant status message. 15-17 - Ahmed Bouzid, Weiye Ma:
Back to the future: bleeding-edge IVR. 18-20
- Jussi Impiö:
Give man a fish and you'll feed him for a day, teach him how to fish and...he will overfish. 22-25 - Jan Gulliksen, Hans von Axelson, Hans Persson, Bengt Göransson:
Accessibility and public policy in Sweden. 26-29 - Maria Francesca Costabile, Carmelo Ardito, Rosa Lanzilotti:
Enjoying cultural heritage thanks to mobile technology. 30-33
- Arnold M. Lund:
Creating a user-centered development culture. 34-38 - Mark R. Hicks:
Collaborate to innovate?: getting fresh small company thinking into big company innovation. 39-43 - Don Fotsch:
The role of leadership in winning design. 44-47
- Emily Pilloton:
Depth over breadth: designing for impact locally, and for the long haul. 48-51 - Nadav Savio:
Solving the world's problems through design. 52-54 - Hugh Dubberly, Rajiv Mehta, Shelley Evenson, Paul Pangaro:
Reframing health to embrace design of our own well-being. 56-63
- Eli Blevis:
Design challenge based learning (DCBL) and sustainable pedagogical practice. 64-69 - Paula M. Bach, Michael B. Twidale:
Social participation in open source: what it means for designers. 70-74 - Kristina Halvorson:
Intentional communication: expanding our definition of user experience design. 75-77 - Karen McGrane:
Content strategy for everybody (even you). 78-81 - Elizabeth F. Churchill:
Enticing engagement. 82-87
- Jon Kolko:
On language and potential. 88
Volume 17, Number 4, July + August 2010
- Richard Anderson, Jon Kolko:
Subtlety and change. 5
- Greg Hintermeister:
Everything I know about user experience I learned from Jimmy Buffett. 6-8 - Donald A. Norman:
The research-practice gap: the need for translational developers. 9-12 - Katie Minardo Scott:
Visible synthesis. 13-17
- Julian Sanchez, Marco T. Sanchez:
Climate change: a challenge for design. 18-21 - Carl F. DiSalvo, Phoebe Sengers, Hrönn Brynjarsdóttir:
Navigating the terrain of sustainable HCI. 22-25
- Kirsikka Vaajakallio, Tuuli Mattelmäki, Jung-Joo Lee:
co-design lessons with children. 26-29 - Ulrike Rivett, Melissa Loudon:
Learning to succeed at e-government. 30-33 - Dennis Littky:
Time goes by...everything looks the same. 34-37 - Jonathan Grudin:
CSCW: time passed, tempest, and time past. 38-40
- Juan E. Gilbert, Aqueasha M. Martin, Wanda Eugene, Hanan Alnizami, Wanda Moses, Deidra Morrison:
Interacting with public policy: Driving transportation policy through technological innovation. 42-48 - Alex Wright:
Stepping out of the shallows. 49-51 - Alex Wright:
Q&A with Nicholas Carr. 52-54 - Liz Danzico:
Adding by leaving out: the power of the pause. 55-57 - Jon Innes:
evolve, adapt, THRIVE! 58-61 - Elizabeth F. Churchill:
Today's flâneur: from HCI to place-based interaction and human-place interaction. 62-66 - Fred Scharmen:
Adaptive reuse: things, containers, and streets in the architecture of the social web. 67-70
- Jon Kolko:
On education. 72-
Volume 17, Number 5, September + October 2010
- Richard Anderson, Jon Kolko:
Interactions: authenticity, complexity, and design. 5
- Matthew Jordan:
The meaning of affinity and the importance of identity in the designed world. 6-11 - Sarah Kettley:
Fluidity in craft and authenticity. 12-15 - Liz Danzico:
The design of serendipity is not by chance. 16-18 - Ben McAllister:
Why "the conversation" isn't necessarily a conversation. 19-21 - Elizabeth F. Churchill:
The (anti) social net. 22-25
- Eli Blevis, Shunying Blevis:
Hope for the best and prepare for the worst: interaction design and the tipping point. 26-30 - William Odom, Richard Banks, Dave Kirk:
Reciprocity, deep storage, and letting go: opportunities for designing interactions with inherited digital materials. 31-34 - Andrew Cyrus Smith:
My uncle used to watch television. 35-37
- Graham Pullin, Andrew Cook:
Six speaking chairs (not directly) for people who cannot speak. 38-42 - Dana Chisnell:
Looking at accessibility as a design problem. 43-45 - Donald A. Norman, Jakob Nielsen:
Gestural interfaces: a step backward in usability. 46-49
- Neil Patel:
Not your average farmer: designing for lead users in ICT4D research. 50-52 - John Leslie King:
Project SAGE, a half-century on. 53-55 - Lisa P. Nathan, Batya Friedman:
Interacting with policy in a political world: reflections from the voices from the Rwanda Tribunal project. 56-59
- Jodi Forlizzi:
All look same?: a comparison of experience design and service design. 60-62 - Valerie Bauwens:
Building a user observatory: from ethnographic insights to effective recommendations. 63-67 - Nicolas Nova:
Relying on failures in design research. 68-69 - Steve Baty:
Solving complex problems through design. 70-73 - Hugh Dubberly:
The space of design. 74-79
- Jon Kolko:
On academic knowledge production. 80
Volume 17, Number 6, November + December 2010
- Richard Anderson, Jon Kolko:
Welcome: Interactions. 5
- Ben Fullerton:
Designing for solitude. 6-9 - José A. Martínez Salmerón:
Oh, beleaguered beauty. 10-12 - Woodrow W. Winchester III:
REALizing our messy futures: toward culturally responsive design tools in engaging our deeper dives. 14-19 - Liz Danzico:
Between The Lines - The taxonomy of the invisible: counting emerging urban forests. 20-23
- Lisa P. Nathan:
Broadening horizons through information technology. 24-26 - Bill Tomlinson:
Future workplaces to support environmental sustainability. 27-28 - Yue Pan, Chit Meng Cheong, Eli Blevis:
The climate change habitability index. 29-33
- Dave Cronin:
Transforming healthcare infrastructure. 34-40 - Prasad Boradkar, Unmesh Kulkarni:
Design tools for base of the pyramid strategies. 41-46 - Dennis Schleicher, Peter Jones, Oksana Kachur:
Bodystorming as embodied designing. 47-51 - Marco Winckler:
Interacting With Public Policy - L'Administration électronique: the French approach to e-government. 52-55
- Bill Curtis:
Timelines - MCC's human interface laboratory: the promise and perils of long-term research. 56-59 - Donald A. Norman:
The Way I See It - Looking back, looking forward. 61-63 - Gary Marsden:
Under Development - Angst, and how to overcome it. 64-66 - Steve Portigal:
The hard work lies ahead (if you want it). 67-69 - Jon Freach:
Learning from John Rheinfrank: reflections on acquiring a design language. 70-74 - Shelley Evenson, Justin Rheinfrank, Hugh Dubberly:
Ability-centered design: from static to adaptive worlds. 75-79
- Jon Kolko:
On experiences, people, and technology. 80
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