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Kumiyo Nakakoji
Nara Institute of
Science and Technology (NAIST) &
SRA Key Technology Laboratory, Inc.
When
a Programmer Meets an Interaction Designer:
A Case Study on the Interaction Design-based
System Development Project
November
27, 2001
Tuesday
9:30 - 11:00
a.m.
CS 432/438
Faculty Host:
David Redmiles, redmiles@ics.uci.edu
Abstract: We have been conducting interaction design-based software
development for a series of interactive systems supporting early stages
of linear information design. We have conducted a case study on this project,
and developed a process model for interaction design-based software development
consisting of four facets: (1) a design principle (ART: Amplifying Representational
Talkback), (2) a means (spatial positioning) for supporting a particular
type of task (linear information design), (3) a software component library
to implement necessary interactions, and (4) resulting interactive systems.
I will present an overview of the case study by showing demos of the interactive
systems, and discuss how an interaction designer collaborates with a programmer
through communicative media.
About the Speaker:Kumiyo Nakakoji is a senior researcher at SRA Key Technology Laboratory, Inc., an Adjunct Associate Professor of the Cognitive Science Laboratory at Nara Institute of Science and Technology (NAIST), Japan, and a research fellow at the TOREST Intelligent Cooperation and Control Group, JST. She received her BS from Osaka University (1986), and MS (1990) and PhD (1993) in Computer Science from the University of Colorado at Boulder. Her research interests include: computer support for collective creativity, human-representation interaction, and interaction design for intellectual creative tasks.
For More Information: Debra A. Brodbeck, brodbeck@uci.edu