Human-Computer Interaction Education and Diversity

Human-Computer Interaction has evolved into an established field of teaching and research. Its multidisciplinary and cross-continental roots combined with its broad scope and multiplicity of paradigms, methods, tools, and application areas have led to a huge diversity. In the community there are currently debates about the pros and cons of this diversity and some voices claim for unifying theory and practice and standardising teaching curricula. In this paper I discuss HCI education, and analyse the past, present, and future of HCI in order to derive implications for HCI education.

[1]  Donald A. Norman,et al.  Emotional design , 2004, UBIQ.

[2]  Steve Cooper,et al.  Reflections on Stanford's MOOCs , 2013, CACM.

[3]  Jennifer Preece,et al.  Teaching and learning human-computer interaction: past, present, and future , 2013, INTR.

[4]  W. Buxton Human-Computer Interaction , 1988, Springer Berlin Heidelberg.

[5]  Jonathan Grudin A moving target: The evolution of HCI , 2011 .

[6]  Brian Shackel Human-computer interaction - Whence and whither? , 2009, Interact. Comput..

[7]  Tom Gross Cooperative ambient intelligence: towards autonomous and adaptive cooperative ubiquitous environments , 2008, Int. J. Auton. Adapt. Commun. Syst..

[8]  Tom Gross,et al.  Towards a new human-centred computing methodology for cooperative ambient intelligence , 2010, J. Ambient Intell. Humaniz. Comput..

[9]  Douglas C. Engelbart,et al.  A research center for augmenting human intellect , 1968, AFIPS Fall Joint Computing Conference.

[10]  Alistair Sutcliff,et al.  Designing interactive systems , 1996, SGCH.

[11]  Betty Edwards Drawing on the right side of the brain : a course in enhancing creativity and artistic confidence , 1979 .

[12]  Debbie Stone,et al.  User Interface Design and Evaluation , 2005 .

[13]  L. A. Hausman How we Think , 1921 .

[14]  T. Landauer,et al.  Handbook of Human-Computer Interaction , 1997 .

[15]  William Buxton,et al.  Readings in human-computer interaction , 1987 .

[16]  Jorge Gonçalves,et al.  CHI 1994-2013: mapping two decades of intellectual progress through co-word analysis , 2014, CHI.

[17]  Daniel L. McCue,et al.  A case for document management functions on the Web , 1997, CACM.

[18]  D. Holdstock Past, present--and future? , 2005, Medicine, conflict, and survival.

[19]  J. Jacko,et al.  The human-computer interaction handbook: fundamentals, evolving technologies and emerging applications , 2002 .

[20]  Jonathan Grudin Is HCI homeless?: in search of inter-disciplinary status , 2006, INTR.

[21]  Colin Potts,et al.  Design of Everyday Things , 1988 .

[22]  D. Hendrick,et al.  Introduction , 1998, Thorax.

[23]  Peter Wegner,et al.  Why interaction is more powerful than algorithms , 1997, CACM.

[24]  Ivan E. Sutherland,et al.  Sketchpad a man-machine graphical communication system , 1988, DAC 1988.

[25]  Ivan E. Sutherland,et al.  Sketchpad a Man-Machine Graphical Communication System , 1899, Outstanding Dissertations in the Computer Sciences.

[26]  Hau-San Wong,et al.  Human Computer Interaction , 2006, Encyclopedia of Multimedia.

[27]  Gregory D. Abowd,et al.  Human-Computer Interaction, third edition , 2004 .

[28]  Ulrich Eggers Drawing On The Right Side Of The Brain A Course In Enhancing Creativity And Artistic Confidence , 2016 .

[29]  Vannevar Bush,et al.  As we may think , 1945, INTR.

[30]  Andrew Sears and Julie A. Jacko The human-computer interaction handbook , 2013 .

[31]  Tom Carey,et al.  ACM SIGCHI Curricula for Human-Computer Interaction , 1992 .

[32]  Y. Rogers,et al.  Interaction Design , 2002 .

[33]  Gregory D. Abowd,et al.  Human-Computer Interaction (3rd Edition) , 2003 .