Research Papers



Instructions

For each week with a paper assigned, you must:

  1. Read the paper thoroughly. Electronic versions of all the papers are on Blackboard in the Course Materials/Readings folder.
  2. Prepare for your research paper circle role. Instructions can be found here.
  3. Submit a 1-2 paragraph reflection on the paper, in the Blackboard Research Paper discussion forum. This is due by the start of class (6pm). Reflections submitted any later than 6pm at the start of the class in which the paper is discussed will be marked late.

Read By

Topic

Readings

9/21

Action Research

  • Hayes, Gillian R. "The relationship of action research to human-computer interaction." ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI) 18.3 (2011): 15.

10/5

E-government

  • Dombrowski, Lynn, Amy Voida, Gillian R. Hayes, and Melissa Mazmanian. "The labor practices of service mediation: a study of the work practices of food assistance outreach." In Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 1977-1986. ACM, 2012.

10/19

Design: Paper Prototyping

  • Dow, Steven P., et al. "Parallel prototyping leads to better design results, more divergence, and increased self-efficacy." ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI) 17.4 (2010): 18.

11/2

HCI Theory: Experience

  • Wright, P., Wallace, J. and McCarthy, J., "Aesthetics and experience-centered design," ACM Transactions of Computer-Human Interaction, 15, 4 (2008), 1-21.

11/9

HCI Research as Problem Solving

  • Oulasvirta, Antti, and Kasper Hornbūk. "HCI Research as Problem-Solving." In Proceedings of the 2016 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 4956-4967. ACM, 2016.

11/16

From Research to Product

  • Chilana, Parmit K., Andrew J. Ko, and Jacob Wobbrock. "From user-centered to adoption-centered design: a case study of an HCI research innovation becoming a product." In Proceedings of the 33rd Annual ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 1749-1758. ACM, 2015.