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Date: 01 Jul 2009 13:23:25 -0400
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Subject: DON'T DELETE THIS MESSAGE -- FOLDER INTERNAL DATA
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From perlman@turing.acm.org Thu Jul  2 10:22:46 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Thu, 2 Jul 2009 10:22:45 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: adas <adas.gelzinis@ktu.lt>
Subject: Re: |STAT request
In-Reply-To: <000001c9fb01$42bc3720$c834a560$@gelzinis@ktu.lt>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907021022420.21594@turing.acm.org>
References: <000001c9fb01$42bc3720$c834a560$@gelzinis@ktu.lt>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Thank you for your interest in |STAT data manipulation and analysis software.

UNIX |STAT for is now (only) available via Web browsers at a secret location.
 	http://www.hcibib.org/stat/xyzzy/

To obtain UNIX |STAT files, please follow the instructions at:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/#access
There are installation notes (e.g., for Mac OS X and Linux) at:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/installation.txt

DOS |STAT executables and documentation are available as a WinZip file:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/DOS-STAT.ZIP

HTML documentation is available from the |STAT home page:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/

On Thu, 2 Jul 2009, adas wrote:

> I AGREE TO ADHERE TO THE CONDITIONS OF USING |STAT.
>
> I AGREE NOT TO SHARE THE |STAT LOCATION WITH OTHERS.
>
>
>
>

From perlman@turing.acm.org Sun Jul  5 07:08:28 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Sun, 5 Jul 2009 07:08:28 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Gary perlman <perlman@turing.acm.org>
Subject: !add to cover.db ubimob mobilehci clihc ihm chinz
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907050704220.17699@turing.acm.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

and add new about events calendar

ask for updates and new items, provide form

From perlman@turing.acm.org Sun Jul  5 18:33:59 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Sun, 5 Jul 2009 18:33:58 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Gary perlman <perlman@turing.acm.org>
Subject: add events.html to hci-sites:conferences
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907051833230.23951@turing.acm.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed


From perlman@turing.acm.org Wed Jul  8 16:49:02 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Wed, 8 Jul 2009 16:49:01 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Bernd Herberg <bernd.herberg@web.de>
Subject: Re: |STAT
In-Reply-To: <1407515590@web.de>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907081648570.18337@turing.acm.org>
References: <1407515590@web.de>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: MULTIPART/MIXED; BOUNDARY="-1463807999-184373058-1247086141=:18337"

---1463807999-184373058-1247086141=:18337
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8BIT

Thank you for your interest in |STAT data manipulation and analysis software.

UNIX |STAT for is now (only) available via Web browsers at a secret location.
 	http://www.hcibib.org/stat/xyzzy/

To obtain UNIX |STAT files, please follow the instructions at:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/#access
There are installation notes (e.g., for Mac OS X and Linux) at:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/installation.txt

DOS |STAT executables and documentation are available as a WinZip file:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/DOS-STAT.ZIP

HTML documentation is available from the |STAT home page:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/

On Wed, 8 Jul 2009, Bernd Herberg wrote:

> I AGREE TO ADHERE TO THE CONDITIONS OF USING |STAT.
> I AGREE NOT TO SHARE THE |STAT LOCATION WITH OTHERS.
>
> thanks
>
> bernd
>
>
>
> ________________________________________________________________
> Neu: WEB.DE Doppel-FLAT mit Internet-Flatrate + Telefon-Flatrate
> für nur 19,99 Euro/mtl.!* http://produkte.web.de/go/02/
>
>
---1463807999-184373058-1247086141=:18337--

From perlman@turing.acm.org Thu Jul  9 10:02:47 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Thu, 9 Jul 2009 10:02:47 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Arielle Jones <arielle@spanishdict.com>
cc: director@hcibib.org
Subject: Re: Human-Computer Interaction website
In-Reply-To: <57cf7eb50907081353o44051569nf9409ef3b58cc612@mail.gmail.com>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907090956380.5711@turing.acm.org>
References: <57cf7eb50907081353o44051569nf9409ef3b58cc612@mail.gmail.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Hi Arielle,

A site like SpanishTranslation.us gives site owners a place to go to get
help with translation, but yours does not.  I think that SpanishDict.com
is more directed at casual translation rather than the kind of application
internationalization and localization that the intercultural page is
meant to serve. So I do not think it is appropriate.

I liked the three-way automated translation. My Spanish is based on
years of watching Sesame Stree with my kids. Being from Montreal,
I would have preferred to see a French 3-way example.

Best,

Gary Perlman, Director, HCI Bibliography Project
mailto:director@hcibib.org  http://hcibib.org/

On Wed, 8 Jul 2009, Arielle Jones wrote:

> Hi Gary,
>
> My name is Arielle Jones, and I work for www.SpanishDict.com, a
> comprehensive Spanish learning resource center. I wanted to reach out to you
> with regards to your site, www.HCIBib.org. I really enjoy how the site
> emphasizes your expertise in human-technology relationships, and offers
> other helpful customer services. I see that your site has
> SpanishTranslation.us listed as a translating resource. As a recommendation,
> you might want to check out www.SpanishDict.com, which includes many free
> educational materials as well as Spanish-to-English translation, possibly
> for your "Intercultural Resources" link section. Keep up the good work on
> the Human-Computer Interaction Bibliography website. Please let me know if
> you decide to check out SpanishDict, as we would truly appreciate a link for
> "Spanish Translation" on your site. I look forward to hearing from you.
>
> Thank you,
>
> Arielle Jones
>

From perlman@turing.acm.org Fri Jul 10 14:38:38 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Fri, 10 Jul 2009 14:38:37 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Orlando Bovell <bovell@hq.acm.org>
cc: wex@HOVIR.COM
Subject: Re: BUCKCHI Listserv Lists
In-Reply-To: <8121A635D723D1439452E134C4AB3BD804B1DA60@ACM-01-EX.atlarge.net>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907101436220.11714@turing.acm.org>
References: <8121A635D723D1439452E134C4AB3BD804B1DA60@ACM-01-EX.atlarge.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

BuckCHI is not using any of these lists.
I removed the subscribers years ago so they would not get spam.
Please do remove.

Gary Perlman
former BuckCHI Chair, infodir, etc.

PS: I guess Alan was on the list headers because he was the SIGCHI InfoDir.
Sometimes, these jobs are hard to shake off.

On Fri, 10 Jul 2009, Orlando Bovell wrote:

> Hi Gary/Alan,
>
>
>
> Are you using any of the following listserv lists? :
>
>
>
> BUCKCHI-ANNOUNCEMENTS
>
> BUCKCHI-INFO
>
> BUCKCHI-INFODIR
>
> BUCKCHI-MEMBERS
>
> BUCKCHI-OFFICERS
>
> BUCKCHI-PROGRAM
>
>
>
> If not, I would like to delete them as they all have no subscribers and
> have gotten nothing but spam these past 3 months.
>
>
>
> Orlando Bovell
>
> ACM Technical Support Specialist
>
> (212)626-0579
>
> ishelpdesk@hq.acm.org
>
>
>
>

From perlman@turing.acm.org Mon Jul 13 17:34:18 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Mon, 13 Jul 2009 17:34:17 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: chi-educators@acm.org
Subject: HCI Bibliography Update
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907131733510.16580@turing.acm.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

The HCI Bibliography (http://hcibib.org),
hosted for over a decade by ACM SIGCHI,
has recently been updated with thousands of records,
bringing the total to over 48,000.

Many new records are for previously uncovered conferences:
  * AVI: Advanced Visual Interfaces (1994-)
  * CHINZ: CHI New Zealand (2205-)
  * DocEng: Document Engineering (2001-)
  * ETRA: Eye Tracking Research & Applications (1999-)
  * Future Play (2007-)
  * ICMI: International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces (2002-)
  * Mobile HCI (2004-)
  * SoftVis: Software Visualization (2003-)
  * TEI: Tangible and Embedded Interaction (2007-)
  * VRST: Virtual Reality Software and Technology (1997-)
as well as some conferences with non-English content:
  * CLIHC: Latin American HCI (2003-)
  * IHM: Interaction Homme-Machine (2002-)
  * UbiMob: French Ubiquity Mobility (2004-)
as well as the historical coverage of:
  * GI: Graphics Interface (1969-)
Links to proceedings are available from the conference coverage page:
 	http://hcibib.org/confer.html
Of course, these additions have had an effect on the hot authors page,
with many familiar names now with over 100 entries in the HCIBib.
 	http://hcibib.org/authors.html

A new events page has recently been added, covering workshops,
conferences, and symposia around the world.
 	http://hcibib.org/events.html

The HCI Bibliography is a free-access bibliography on human-computer
interaction with over 48,000 records, mostly with abstracts and links
to full text. The HCIBib search service has performed over 4.7 million
searches since 1 December 2006, serving thousands of users worldwide,
who have also displayed 1.8 million interactive tables of contents of
conference proceedings and journal volumes.

Gary Perlman, Director, HCI Bibliography Project
mailto:director@hcibib.org  http://hcibib.org/

From perlman@turing.acm.org Mon Jul 13 17:34:48 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Mon, 13 Jul 2009 17:34:47 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: chi-students@acm.org
Subject: HCI Bibliography Update
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907131734260.16691@turing.acm.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

The HCI Bibliography (http://hcibib.org),
hosted for over a decade by ACM SIGCHI,
has recently been updated with thousands of records,
bringing the total to over 48,000.

Many new records are for previously uncovered conferences:
  * AVI: Advanced Visual Interfaces (1994-)
  * CHINZ: CHI New Zealand (2205-)
  * DocEng: Document Engineering (2001-)
  * ETRA: Eye Tracking Research & Applications (1999-)
  * Future Play (2007-)
  * ICMI: International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces (2002-)
  * Mobile HCI (2004-)
  * SoftVis: Software Visualization (2003-)
  * TEI: Tangible and Embedded Interaction (2007-)
  * VRST: Virtual Reality Software and Technology (1997-)
as well as some conferences with non-English content:
  * CLIHC: Latin American HCI (2003-)
  * IHM: Interaction Homme-Machine (2002-)
  * UbiMob: French Ubiquity Mobility (2004-)
as well as the historical coverage of:
  * GI: Graphics Interface (1969-)
Links to proceedings are available from the conference coverage page:
 	http://hcibib.org/confer.html
Of course, these additions have had an effect on the hot authors page,
with many familiar names now with over 100 entries in the HCIBib.
 	http://hcibib.org/authors.html

A new events page has recently been added, covering workshops,
conferences, and symposia around the world.
 	http://hcibib.org/events.html

The HCI Bibliography is a free-access bibliography on human-computer
interaction with over 48,000 records, mostly with abstracts and links
to full text. The HCIBib search service has performed over 4.7 million
searches since 1 December 2006, serving thousands of users worldwide,
who have also displayed 1.8 million interactive tables of contents of
conference proceedings and journal volumes.

Gary Perlman, Director, HCI Bibliography Project
mailto:director@hcibib.org  http://hcibib.org/

From perlman@turing.acm.org Mon Jul 13 17:35:17 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Mon, 13 Jul 2009 17:35:16 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: chi-announcements@acm.org
Subject: HCI Bibliography Update
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907131734580.16775@turing.acm.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

The HCI Bibliography (http://hcibib.org),
hosted for over a decade by ACM SIGCHI,
has recently been updated with thousands of records,
bringing the total to over 48,000.

Many new records are for previously uncovered conferences:
  * AVI: Advanced Visual Interfaces (1994-)
  * CHINZ: CHI New Zealand (2205-)
  * DocEng: Document Engineering (2001-)
  * ETRA: Eye Tracking Research & Applications (1999-)
  * Future Play (2007-)
  * ICMI: International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces (2002-)
  * Mobile HCI (2004-)
  * SoftVis: Software Visualization (2003-)
  * TEI: Tangible and Embedded Interaction (2007-)
  * VRST: Virtual Reality Software and Technology (1997-)
as well as some conferences with non-English content:
  * CLIHC: Latin American HCI (2003-)
  * IHM: Interaction Homme-Machine (2002-)
  * UbiMob: French Ubiquity Mobility (2004-)
as well as the historical coverage of:
  * GI: Graphics Interface (1969-)
Links to proceedings are available from the conference coverage page:
 	http://hcibib.org/confer.html
Of course, these additions have had an effect on the hot authors page,
with many familiar names now with over 100 entries in the HCIBib.
 	http://hcibib.org/authors.html

A new events page has recently been added, covering workshops,
conferences, and symposia around the world.
 	http://hcibib.org/events.html

The HCI Bibliography is a free-access bibliography on human-computer
interaction with over 48,000 records, mostly with abstracts and links
to full text. The HCIBib search service has performed over 4.7 million
searches since 1 December 2006, serving thousands of users worldwide,
who have also displayed 1.8 million interactive tables of contents of
conference proceedings and journal volumes.

Gary Perlman, Director, HCI Bibliography Project
mailto:director@hcibib.org  http://hcibib.org/

From perlman@turing.acm.org Tue Jul 14 10:18:12 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Tue, 14 Jul 2009 10:18:11 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Martin Hitz <martin.hitz@uni-klu.ac.at>
Subject: Re: HCI Bibliography Update
In-Reply-To: <9E72EE3D-E1A1-4B96-AF01-DC527F61069F@uni-klu.ac.at>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907141017100.4827@turing.acm.org>
References: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907131734580.16775@turing.acm.org>
 <9E72EE3D-E1A1-4B96-AF01-DC527F61069F@uni-klu.ac.at>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: MULTIPART/MIXED; BOUNDARY="-1463807999-1804003994-1247581091=:4827"

---1463807999-1804003994-1247581091=:4827
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8BIT

On Tue, 14 Jul 2009, Martin Hitz wrote:

> Gary,
>
> the link #1 in HCI-SITES: Humor, "1954 Computer of the future" 
> (http://www.csis.gvsu.edu/~grissom/368/1954computer.jpg) is unfortunatly 
> dangling.
>
> Cheers, Martin Hitz

de-dangled to http://www.hoax-slayer.com/1954-computer.html

Thank you!

Gary

> Am 13.07.2009 um 23:35 schrieb Gary PERLMAN:
>
>> The HCI Bibliography (http://hcibib.org),
>> hosted for over a decade by ACM SIGCHI,
>> has recently been updated with thousands of records,
>> bringing the total to over 48,000.
>> 
>> Many new records are for previously uncovered conferences:
>> * AVI: Advanced Visual Interfaces (1994-)
>> * CHINZ: CHI New Zealand (2205-)
>> * DocEng: Document Engineering (2001-)
>> * ETRA: Eye Tracking Research & Applications (1999-)
>> * Future Play (2007-)
>> * ICMI: International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces (2002-)
>> * Mobile HCI (2004-)
>> * SoftVis: Software Visualization (2003-)
>> * TEI: Tangible and Embedded Interaction (2007-)
>> * VRST: Virtual Reality Software and Technology (1997-)
>> as well as some conferences with non-English content:
>> * CLIHC: Latin American HCI (2003-)
>> * IHM: Interaction Homme-Machine (2002-)
>> * UbiMob: French Ubiquity Mobility (2004-)
>> as well as the historical coverage of:
>> * GI: Graphics Interface (1969-)
>> Links to proceedings are available from the conference coverage page:
>> 	http://hcibib.org/confer.html
>> Of course, these additions have had an effect on the hot authors page,
>> with many familiar names now with over 100 entries in the HCIBib.
>> 	http://hcibib.org/authors.html
>> 
>> A new events page has recently been added, covering workshops,
>> conferences, and symposia around the world.
>> 	http://hcibib.org/events.html
>> 
>> The HCI Bibliography is a free-access bibliography on human-computer
>> interaction with over 48,000 records, mostly with abstracts and links
>> to full text. The HCIBib search service has performed over 4.7 million
>> searches since 1 December 2006, serving thousands of users worldwide,
>> who have also displayed 1.8 million interactive tables of contents of
>> conference proceedings and journal volumes.
>> 
>> Gary Perlman, Director, HCI Bibliography Project
>> mailto:director@hcibib.org  http://hcibib.org/
>>
>>  ---------------------------------------------------------------
>>              To unsubscribe, send an empty email to
>>   mailto:chi-announcements-unsubscribe-request@listserv.acm.org
>>  For further details of CHI lists see http://sigchi.org/listserv
>>  ---------------------------------------------------------------
>> 6871 for
>>        <chi-announcements@acm.org>; Mon, 13
>
>
>
> Dr. Martin Hitz
>
> Professor, Interactive Systems Research Group
> Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt - Austria
> Phone: +43 463 2700 3512
> http://ias.uni-klu.ac.at
> Skype: prof.hitz
>
---1463807999-1804003994-1247581091=:4827--

From perlman@turing.acm.org Tue Jul 14 11:27:31 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Tue, 14 Jul 2009 11:27:31 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Andruid Kerne <andruid.filter@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: HCI Bibliography Update
In-Reply-To: <2dce03420907140814q634e4f0ahca545a480053526d@mail.gmail.com>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907141119400.17389@turing.acm.org>
References: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907131734580.16775@turing.acm.org>
 <2dce03420907140814q634e4f0ahca545a480053526d@mail.gmail.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Hi Andruid,

I've always been on the fence about MM. Since 1997, I've had MM93 and MM94 sitting
in the to-be-done directory. I guess it's no farther afield than, say, IR.

I'll mull it over.

Gary

On Tue, 14 Jul 2009, Andruid Kerne wrote:

> hi gary --
> this is very nice. thanks for your work!
>
> a suggested addition:
>
> acm multimedia, which has tracks in human-centered multimedia, applications,
> and interactive art.
>
> all best,
>
> andruid
>
>
> On Mon, Jul 13, 2009 at 4:35 PM, Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>wrote:
>
>> The HCI Bibliography (http://hcibib.org),
>> hosted for over a decade by ACM SIGCHI,
>> has recently been updated with thousands of records,
>> bringing the total to over 48,000.
>>
>> Many new records are for previously uncovered conferences:
>>  * AVI: Advanced Visual Interfaces (1994-)
>>  * CHINZ: CHI New Zealand (2205-)
>>  * DocEng: Document Engineering (2001-)
>>  * ETRA: Eye Tracking Research & Applications (1999-)
>>  * Future Play (2007-)
>>  * ICMI: International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces (2002-)
>>  * Mobile HCI (2004-)
>>  * SoftVis: Software Visualization (2003-)
>>  * TEI: Tangible and Embedded Interaction (2007-)
>>  * VRST: Virtual Reality Software and Technology (1997-)
>> as well as some conferences with non-English content:
>>  * CLIHC: Latin American HCI (2003-)
>>  * IHM: Interaction Homme-Machine (2002-)
>>  * UbiMob: French Ubiquity Mobility (2004-)
>> as well as the historical coverage of:
>>  * GI: Graphics Interface (1969-)
>> Links to proceedings are available from the conference coverage page:
>>        http://hcibib.org/confer.html
>> Of course, these additions have had an effect on the hot authors page,
>> with many familiar names now with over 100 entries in the HCIBib.
>>        http://hcibib.org/authors.html
>>
>> A new events page has recently been added, covering workshops,
>> conferences, and symposia around the world.
>>        http://hcibib.org/events.html
>>
>> The HCI Bibliography is a free-access bibliography on human-computer
>> interaction with over 48,000 records, mostly with abstracts and links
>> to full text. The HCIBib search service has performed over 4.7 million
>> searches since 1 December 2006, serving thousands of users worldwide,
>> who have also displayed 1.8 million interactive tables of contents of
>> conference proceedings and journal volumes.
>>
>> Gary Perlman, Director, HCI Bibliography Project
>> mailto:director@hcibib.org  http://hcibib.org/
>>
>>   ---------------------------------------------------------------
>>               To unsubscribe, send an empty email to
>>    mailto:chi-announcements-unsubscribe-request@listserv.acm.org
>>   For further details of CHI lists see http://sigchi.org/listserv
>>   ---------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>>
>
>
>

From perlman@turing.acm.org Tue Jul 14 13:10:14 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Tue, 14 Jul 2009 13:10:14 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Andruid Kerne <andruid.filter@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: HCI Bibliography Update
In-Reply-To: <2dce03420907140830w4755e60du1ac6316ad0360fc8@mail.gmail.com>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907141309020.11085@turing.acm.org>
References: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907131734580.16775@turing.acm.org> 
 <2dce03420907140814q634e4f0ahca545a480053526d@mail.gmail.com> 
 <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907141119400.17389@turing.acm.org>
 <2dce03420907140830w4755e60du1ac6316ad0360fc8@mail.gmail.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

HCM looks relevant, so I added it.

Thanks.

Gary

On Tue, 14 Jul 2009, Andruid Kerne wrote:

> mm is sort of two conferences. the content track is video and image ir. it
> is admittedly large in recent years.
> at the same time, the human-centered multimedia (2009 will be its 3rd year),
> applications, and interactive art tracks are indeed appropriate. and quite
> competitive.
>
> best,
>
> andruid
>
>
> On Tue, Jul 14, 2009 at 10:27 AM, Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>wrote:
>
>> Hi Andruid,
>>
>> I've always been on the fence about MM. Since 1997, I've had MM93 and MM94
>> sitting
>> in the to-be-done directory. I guess it's no farther afield than, say, IR.
>>
>> I'll mull it over.
>>
>> Gary
>>
>>
>> On Tue, 14 Jul 2009, Andruid Kerne wrote:
>>
>>  hi gary --
>>> this is very nice. thanks for your work!
>>>
>>> a suggested addition:
>>>
>>> acm multimedia, which has tracks in human-centered multimedia,
>>> applications,
>>> and interactive art.
>>>
>>> all best,
>>>
>>> andruid
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, Jul 13, 2009 at 4:35 PM, Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org
>>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>  The HCI Bibliography (http://hcibib.org),
>>>> hosted for over a decade by ACM SIGCHI,
>>>> has recently been updated with thousands of records,
>>>> bringing the total to over 48,000.
>>>>
>>>> Many new records are for previously uncovered conferences:
>>>>  * AVI: Advanced Visual Interfaces (1994-)
>>>>  * CHINZ: CHI New Zealand (2205-)
>>>>  * DocEng: Document Engineering (2001-)
>>>>  * ETRA: Eye Tracking Research & Applications (1999-)
>>>>  * Future Play (2007-)
>>>>  * ICMI: International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces (2002-)
>>>>  * Mobile HCI (2004-)
>>>>  * SoftVis: Software Visualization (2003-)
>>>>  * TEI: Tangible and Embedded Interaction (2007-)
>>>>  * VRST: Virtual Reality Software and Technology (1997-)
>>>> as well as some conferences with non-English content:
>>>>  * CLIHC: Latin American HCI (2003-)
>>>>  * IHM: Interaction Homme-Machine (2002-)
>>>>  * UbiMob: French Ubiquity Mobility (2004-)
>>>> as well as the historical coverage of:
>>>>  * GI: Graphics Interface (1969-)
>>>> Links to proceedings are available from the conference coverage page:
>>>>       http://hcibib.org/confer.html
>>>> Of course, these additions have had an effect on the hot authors page,
>>>> with many familiar names now with over 100 entries in the HCIBib.
>>>>       http://hcibib.org/authors.html
>>>>
>>>> A new events page has recently been added, covering workshops,
>>>> conferences, and symposia around the world.
>>>>       http://hcibib.org/events.html
>>>>
>>>> The HCI Bibliography is a free-access bibliography on human-computer
>>>> interaction with over 48,000 records, mostly with abstracts and links
>>>> to full text. The HCIBib search service has performed over 4.7 million
>>>> searches since 1 December 2006, serving thousands of users worldwide,
>>>> who have also displayed 1.8 million interactive tables of contents of
>>>> conference proceedings and journal volumes.
>>>>
>>>> Gary Perlman, Director, HCI Bibliography Project
>>>> mailto:director@hcibib.org  http://hcibib.org/
>>>>
>>>>  ---------------------------------------------------------------
>>>>              To unsubscribe, send an empty email to
>>>>   mailto:chi-announcements-unsubscribe-request@listserv.acm.org
>>>>  For further details of CHI lists see http://sigchi.org/listserv
>>>>  ---------------------------------------------------------------
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
>
>

From perlman@turing.acm.org Tue Jul 14 17:07:53 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Tue, 14 Jul 2009 17:07:52 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: "Shneiderman, Ben" <ben@cs.umd.edu>
Subject: RE: HCI Bibliography Update
In-Reply-To: <44ECC48C52C97040BACBB07269CEEE4601B83CAA@delegate.pc.cs.umd.edu>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907141639520.12619@turing.acm.org>
References: A<Pine.LNX.4.64.0907131734580.16775@turing.acm.org>
 <44ECC48C52C97040BACBB07269CEEE4601B83CAA@delegate.pc.cs.umd.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Hi Ben (and Jenny),

Sure, please send me your list. I've been marching through ACM stuff lately
because I updated my filters to import ACM records at something like 1000 a day,
with the bulk of the time going into fixing typos in the ACM data.

I should polish my data entry form and let people add books for me.
Maybe that's next.

On the hot author's page, I like to see whose a hot new star.
White on the left, red on the right.
 	87 Carl Gutwin
 	84 Ravin Balakrishnan
 	83 James Landay
 	81 some guy named Sears 81
 	76 Mary Czerwinski

If you are in far western Colorado, the Colorado National Monument is a
personal favorite. Of course, the mountains are very nice. Sunscreen!

Gary

On Tue, 14 Jul 2009, Shneiderman, Ben wrote:

> HI Gary,
>
>   Bravos one more time for your amazing wonderful helpful inspirational
> vital work on HCIBIB.... and many new features.
>
>   Thanks so much!!
>
>   One concern - your Recommended Readings are out of date - only two
> additions for 2007, two for 2008, and none for 2009.  I know this is
> tough to keep up to date, but I could resend you my list of recent
> books, if you can deal with that.  Otherwise, you should indicate that
> this list needs revision and invite someone to handle it.  I don't want
> people to think that our field is decaying.   My personal concern is
> that you list our Second edition of Designing the User Interface, when
> we just published the fifth.
>
>   This is a modest concern - your service has been remarkable and much
> appreciated.  You deserve much recognition and repeated awards.
>
>      Best wishes... regards from Colorado where Jenny and I are
> enjoying three weeks of cools temps and mountain views.... Ben
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: ACM SIGCHI General Interest Announcements (Mailing List)
> [mailto:CHI-ANNOUNCEMENTS@LISTSERV.ACM.ORG] On Behalf Of Gary PERLMAN
> Sent: Monday, July 13, 2009 5:35 PM
> To: CHI-ANNOUNCEMENTS@LISTSERV.ACM.ORG
> Subject: HCI Bibliography Update
>
> The HCI Bibliography (http://hcibib.org),
> hosted for over a decade by ACM SIGCHI,
> has recently been updated with thousands of records,
> bringing the total to over 48,000.
>
> Many new records are for previously uncovered conferences:
>  * AVI: Advanced Visual Interfaces (1994-)
>  * CHINZ: CHI New Zealand (2205-)
>  * DocEng: Document Engineering (2001-)
>  * ETRA: Eye Tracking Research & Applications (1999-)
>  * Future Play (2007-)
>  * ICMI: International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces (2002-)
>  * Mobile HCI (2004-)
>  * SoftVis: Software Visualization (2003-)
>  * TEI: Tangible and Embedded Interaction (2007-)
>  * VRST: Virtual Reality Software and Technology (1997-)
> as well as some conferences with non-English content:
>  * CLIHC: Latin American HCI (2003-)
>  * IHM: Interaction Homme-Machine (2002-)
>  * UbiMob: French Ubiquity Mobility (2004-)
> as well as the historical coverage of:
>  * GI: Graphics Interface (1969-)
> Links to proceedings are available from the conference coverage page:
> 	http://hcibib.org/confer.html
> Of course, these additions have had an effect on the hot authors page,
> with many familiar names now with over 100 entries in the HCIBib.
> 	http://hcibib.org/authors.html
>
> A new events page has recently been added, covering workshops,
> conferences, and symposia around the world.
> 	http://hcibib.org/events.html
>
> The HCI Bibliography is a free-access bibliography on human-computer
> interaction with over 48,000 records, mostly with abstracts and links
> to full text. The HCIBib search service has performed over 4.7 million
> searches since 1 December 2006, serving thousands of users worldwide,
> who have also displayed 1.8 million interactive tables of contents of
> conference proceedings and journal volumes.
>
> Gary Perlman, Director, HCI Bibliography Project
> mailto:director@hcibib.org  http://hcibib.org/
>
>    ---------------------------------------------------------------
>                To unsubscribe, send an empty email to
>     mailto:chi-announcements-unsubscribe-request@listserv.acm.org
>    For further details of CHI lists see http://sigchi.org/listserv
>    ---------------------------------------------------------------
>
>

From perlman@turing.acm.org Tue Jul 14 17:16:28 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Tue, 14 Jul 2009 17:16:26 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Marilyn Tremaine <marilyn.tremaine@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: HCI Bibliography Update
In-Reply-To: <2502eb4e0907141352p56c2ddccn993fdeb36323f1b2@mail.gmail.com>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907141708090.12619@turing.acm.org>
References: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907131734580.16775@turing.acm.org>
 <2502eb4e0907141352p56c2ddccn993fdeb36323f1b2@mail.gmail.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Hi Marylyn,

As you know, it's a compulsive disorder. :-)
Not really, as I can track lulls in cataloging
that relate to birth of children and other crises.

With the ACM DL integrating more and more, I
wonder how much longer it makes sense to do it.
It might make an interesting study to see what
difference it makes.

I have a lot of data on how it's used (option usage, source of IP).
I should write up some of the more startling results for interactions.
If anything, the display with all the flags would be good eye candy.

Good to hear from you,

Gary

On Tue, 14 Jul 2009, Marilyn Tremaine wrote:

> Hi Gary,
>
> It is wonderful that you continue to do this.  This Bibliography is
> extraordinarily helpful.
>
> Many Thanks,
> Marilyn
>
> On Mon, Jul 13, 2009 at 5:35 PM, Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>wrote:
>
>> The HCI Bibliography (http://hcibib.org),
>> hosted for over a decade by ACM SIGCHI,
>> has recently been updated with thousands of records,
>> bringing the total to over 48,000.
>>
>> Many new records are for previously uncovered conferences:
>>  * AVI: Advanced Visual Interfaces (1994-)
>>  * CHINZ: CHI New Zealand (2205-)
>>  * DocEng: Document Engineering (2001-)
>>  * ETRA: Eye Tracking Research & Applications (1999-)
>>  * Future Play (2007-)
>>  * ICMI: International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces (2002-)
>>  * Mobile HCI (2004-)
>>  * SoftVis: Software Visualization (2003-)
>>  * TEI: Tangible and Embedded Interaction (2007-)
>>  * VRST: Virtual Reality Software and Technology (1997-)
>> as well as some conferences with non-English content:
>>  * CLIHC: Latin American HCI (2003-)
>>  * IHM: Interaction Homme-Machine (2002-)
>>  * UbiMob: French Ubiquity Mobility (2004-)
>> as well as the historical coverage of:
>>  * GI: Graphics Interface (1969-)
>> Links to proceedings are available from the conference coverage page:
>>        http://hcibib.org/confer.html
>> Of course, these additions have had an effect on the hot authors page,
>> with many familiar names now with over 100 entries in the HCIBib.
>>        http://hcibib.org/authors.html
>>
>> A new events page has recently been added, covering workshops,
>> conferences, and symposia around the world.
>>        http://hcibib.org/events.html
>>
>> The HCI Bibliography is a free-access bibliography on human-computer
>> interaction with over 48,000 records, mostly with abstracts and links
>> to full text. The HCIBib search service has performed over 4.7 million
>> searches since 1 December 2006, serving thousands of users worldwide,
>> who have also displayed 1.8 million interactive tables of contents of
>> conference proceedings and journal volumes.
>>
>> Gary Perlman, Director, HCI Bibliography Project
>> mailto:director@hcibib.org  http://hcibib.org/
>>
>>   ---------------------------------------------------------------
>>               To unsubscribe, send an empty email to
>>    mailto:chi-announcements-unsubscribe-request@listserv.acm.org
>>   For further details of CHI lists see http://sigchi.org/listserv
>>   ---------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>>
>
>
>

From perlman@turing.acm.org Wed Jul 15 01:54:35 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Wed, 15 Jul 2009 01:54:35 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Gary perlman <perlman@turing.acm.org>
Subject: acessibility checks
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907150148450.28579@turing.acm.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

http://www.google.ca/search?q=accessibility+check&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a


http://www.powermapper.com/products/sortsite/ads/acc-accessibility-testing.htm?gclid=CIqs3vCB15sCFSMeDQodJR4R_g

http://www.etre.com/tools/accessibilitycheck/

http://wave.webaim.org/

http://www.section508.info/



From perlman@turing.acm.org Wed Jul 15 12:19:01 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Wed, 15 Jul 2009 12:19:00 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Alfredo Sanchez <j.alfredo.sanchez@gmail.com>
cc: director@hcibib.org
Subject: Re: HCI Bibliography Update
In-Reply-To: <27b048120907142113s43171cfdq267d8102769c56bf@mail.gmail.com>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907151205170.7828@turing.acm.org>
References: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907131734580.16775@turing.acm.org>
 <27b048120907142113s43171cfdq267d8102769c56bf@mail.gmail.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: MULTIPART/MIXED; BOUNDARY="-1463807999-1037951008-1247674740=:7828"

---1463807999-1037951008-1247674740=:7828
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8BIT

Dear Alfredo,

Thanks for the suggestion. Do you know if CLIHC'07 will appear in the
ACM Digital Library? I have special scripts that pull those proceedings
into the HCIBIB with little effort by me. If CLIHC'07 (and on) will not appear,
then I will need to make a decision about the amount of detail in the coverage:
  * just an entry for the workshop, with a link to the online program
  + bibliographic information from the program for each paper
  + a link to the PDF
  + abstract and/or keywords
Going into the PDF and grabbing the abstract and keywords is the most
time-consuming, but is valuable to the users because it increases the
chances of retrieval and gives users a quick overview.

If CLIHC is no longer going to be covered in the ACM DL,
then I'd be interested in setting up an arrangement in which
some volunteers (e.g., students) helped with the capture of the information.

A side note: I was looking at CLIHC 2007 and 2009, and noticed that there
was nothing at the umbrella URL http://www.clihc.org/. I think it would make
sense to have at least links to the 2003/05/07/09 websites, links to the
ACM DL for 2003/05, etc.

Thanks for the suggestion! I wish I had learned Spanish/Portuguese,
but here is Montreal, French is First.

Best regards,

Gary

On Tue, 14 Jul 2009, Alfredo Sanchez wrote:

> Dear Gary,
>
> Thanks lots for the great work on the HCI Bibliography.
>
> I noticed that you are including now the CLIHC conference, which is
> great news for our Latin American community. The 2007 edition is not
> included, though. I would like to point out that the papers for CLIHC
> 2007 are available on line at http://www.clihc.org/2007/ in case there
> is a chance to index them.
>
> Best regards,
>
> -a.
>
> Prof. Alfredo Sánchez
> Universidad de las Américas Puebla
> CLIHC Steering Committee.
> http://ict.udlap.mx
> j.alfredo.sanchez@gmail.com
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, Jul 13, 2009 at 4:35 PM, Gary PERLMAN<perlman@turing.acm.org> wrote:
>> The HCI Bibliography (http://hcibib.org),
>> hosted for over a decade by ACM SIGCHI,
>> has recently been updated with thousands of records,
>> bringing the total to over 48,000.
>>
>> Many new records are for previously uncovered conferences:
>>  * AVI: Advanced Visual Interfaces (1994-)
>>  * CHINZ: CHI New Zealand (2205-)
>>  * DocEng: Document Engineering (2001-)
>>  * ETRA: Eye Tracking Research & Applications (1999-)
>>  * Future Play (2007-)
>>  * ICMI: International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces (2002-)
>>  * Mobile HCI (2004-)
>>  * SoftVis: Software Visualization (2003-)
>>  * TEI: Tangible and Embedded Interaction (2007-)
>>  * VRST: Virtual Reality Software and Technology (1997-)
>> as well as some conferences with non-English content:
>>  * CLIHC: Latin American HCI (2003-)
>>  * IHM: Interaction Homme-Machine (2002-)
>>  * UbiMob: French Ubiquity Mobility (2004-)
>> as well as the historical coverage of:
>>  * GI: Graphics Interface (1969-)
>> Links to proceedings are available from the conference coverage page:
>>        http://hcibib.org/confer.html
>> Of course, these additions have had an effect on the hot authors page,
>> with many familiar names now with over 100 entries in the HCIBib.
>>        http://hcibib.org/authors.html
>>
>> A new events page has recently been added, covering workshops,
>> conferences, and symposia around the world.
>>        http://hcibib.org/events.html
>>
>> The HCI Bibliography is a free-access bibliography on human-computer
>> interaction with over 48,000 records, mostly with abstracts and links
>> to full text. The HCIBib search service has performed over 4.7 million
>> searches since 1 December 2006, serving thousands of users worldwide,
>> who have also displayed 1.8 million interactive tables of contents of
>> conference proceedings and journal volumes.
>>
>> Gary Perlman, Director, HCI Bibliography Project
>> mailto:director@hcibib.org  http://hcibib.org/
>>
>>   ---------------------------------------------------------------
>>               To unsubscribe, send an empty email to
>>    mailto:chi-announcements-unsubscribe-request@listserv.acm.org
>>   For further details of CHI lists see http://sigchi.org/listserv
>>   ---------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>>
>
---1463807999-1037951008-1247674740=:7828--

From perlman@turing.acm.org Wed Jul 15 13:25:29 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Wed, 15 Jul 2009 13:25:28 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: "Shneiderman, Ben" <ben@cs.umd.edu>
Subject: RE: HCI Bibliography Update --= BOOKS
In-Reply-To: <44ECC48C52C97040BACBB07269CEEE4601B83CBE@delegate.pc.cs.umd.edu>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907151322090.3673@turing.acm.org>
References: A<Pine.LNX.4.64.0907131734580.16775@turing.acm.org>
 <44ECC48C52C97040BACBB07269CEEE4601B83CAA@delegate.pc.cs.umd.edu>
 <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907141639520.12619@turing.acm.org>
 <44ECC48C52C97040BACBB07269CEEE4601B83CBE@delegate.pc.cs.umd.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: MULTIPART/MIXED; BOUNDARY="-1463807999-1697498477-1247678728=:3673"

---1463807999-1697498477-1247678728=:3673
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8BIT

Thanks, Ben.

I have uypdated DTUI on my readings page:
 	http://hcibib.org/readings.html#toc-devel

I'll look over the ones you sent. The page needs some deletions as well as additions.

Gary

On Wed, 15 Jul 2009, Shneiderman, Ben wrote:

> HI Gary,
>
>
>
>  Thanks for your willingness to work on the Recommended Readings... you may not want to include all of these, but take what you like...(notice that there are a few groups)   and here's our book...
>
>
>
> . Shneiderman, B. and Plaisant, C., Designing the User Interface: Strategies for Effective Human-Computer Interaction: Fifth Edition, Addison-Wesley Publ. Co., Reading, MA (March 2009), 606 pages. http://www.pearsonhighered.com/dtui5einfo/
>
>
>
>
>
>   Best wishes... Ben
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Books
>
>
>
> Ballard, Barbara, Designing the Mobile User Experience, John Wiley & Sons, New York
>
> (2007).
>
>
>
> Benyon, David, Turner, Phil, and Turner, Susan, Designing Interactive Systems: People,
>
> Activities, Contexts, Technologies, Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA (2005).
>
>
>
> Buxton, Bill, Sketching User Experiences: Getting the Design Right and the Right Design,
>
> Morgan Kaufmann, San Francisco, CA (2007).
>
>
>
> Cooper, Alan, Reimann, Robert, and Cronin, David, About Face 3: The Essentials of Interaction
>
> Design, John Wiley & Sons, New York (2007).
>
>
>
> Dix, Alan, Finlay, Janet, Abowd, Gregory, and Beale, Russell, Human-Computer Interaction,
>
> Third Edition, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ (2003).
>
>
>
> Dourish, Paul, Where the Action Is, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA (2002).
>
>
>
> Dumas, Joseph S. and Loring, Beth A., Moderating Usability Tests: Principles and Practices
>
> for Interacting, Morgan Kaufmann, San Francisco, CA (2008).
>
>
>
> Fogg, B.J., Persuasive Technology: Using Computers to Change What We Think and Do,
>
> Morgan Kaufmann, San Francisco, CA (2002).
>
>
>
> Galitz, Wilbert O., The Essential Guide to User Interface Design: An Introduction to GUI
>
> Design Principles and Techniques, Third Edition, John Wiley & Sons, New York (2007).
>
>
>
> Holtzblatt, Karen, Wendell, Jessamyn Burns, and Wood, Shelley, Rapid Contextual Design:
>
> A How-to Guide to Key Techniques for User-Centered Design, Morgan Kaufmann,
>
> San Francisco, CA (2004).
>
>
>
> Johnson, Jeff, GUI Bloopers 2.0: Common User Interface Design Don'ts and Dos, Morgan
>
> Kaufmann, San Francisco, CA (2007).
>
>
>
> Jones, Matt and Marsden, Gary, Mobile Interaction Design, John Wiley & Sons, New York
>
> (2006).
>
>
>
> Jones, William, Keeping Found Things Found: The Study and Practice of Personal Information
>
> Management, Morgan Kaufmann, San Francisco, CA (2008).
>
>
>
> Keates, Simeon, Designing for Accessibility: A Business Guide to Countering Design Exclusion,
>
> CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL (2006).
>
>
>
> Kortum, Philip, HCI Beyond the GUI: Design for Haptic, Speech, Olfactory and Other Nontraditional
>
> Interfaces, Morgan Kaufmann, San Francisco, CA (2008).
>
>
>
> Love, Steve, Understanding Mobile Human-Computer Interaction, Morgan Kaufmann,
>
> San Francisco, CA (2005).
>
>
>
> Löwgren, J. and Stolterman, E., Thoughtful Interaction Design: A Design Perspective on
>
> Information Technology, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA (2004).
>
>
>
> Ludlow, P. and Wallace, M., The Second Life Herald: The Virtual Tabloid That Witnessed the
>
> Dawn of the Metaverse, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA (2007).
>
>
>
> Markopoulos, Panos, Read, Janet, MacFarlane, Stuart, and Hoysniemi, Johanna,
>
> Evaluating Children's Interactive Products: Principles and Practices for Interaction
>
> Designers, Morgan Kaufmann, San Francisco, CA (2008).
>
>
>
> Moggridge, Bill, Designing Interaction, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA (2006).
>
>
>
> Norman, D., Emotional Design: Why We Love (or Hate) Everyday Things, Basic Books,
>
> New York (2004).
>
>
>
> Norman, K. L., Cyberpsychology: An Introduction to the Psychology of Human-Computer
>
> Interaction, Cambridge University Press, New York (2008).
>
>
>
> Pirolli, Peter, Information Foraging Theory: Adaptive Interaction with Information, Oxford
>
> University Press, New York (2007).
>
>
>
> Rubin, Jeffrey and Chisnell, Dana, Handbook of Usability Testing: How to Plan, Design, and
>
> Conduct Effective Tests, Second Edition, John Wiley & Sons, New York (2008).
>
>
>
> Saffer, Dan, Designing for Interaction: Creating Smart Applications and Clever Devices,
>
> New Riders, Indianapolis, IN (2006).
>
>
>
> Schummer, Till and Lukosch, Stephan, Patterns for Computer-Mediated Interaction,
>
> John Wiley & Sons, New York (2007).
>
>
>
> Sharp, Helen, Rogers, Yvonne, and Preece, Jenny, Interaction Design: Beyond Human-
>
> Computer Interaction, Second Edition, John Wiley & Sons, West Sussex, England (2007).
>
>
>
> Shneiderman, Ben, Leonardo's Laptop: Human Needs and the New Computing Technologies,
>
> MIT Press, Cambridge, MA (2002).
>
>
>
> Sieckenius de Souza, C., Semiotic Engineering of Human-Computer Interaction, MIT Press,
>
> Cambridge, MA (2005).
>
>
>
> Stone, Debbie, Jarrett, Caroline, Woodroffe, Mark, and Minocha, Shailey, User Interface
>
> Design and Evaluation, Morgan Kaufmann, San Francisco, CA (2005).
>
>
>
> Te'eni, Dov, Carey, Jane, and Zhang, Ping, Human-Computer Interaction: Developing
>
> Effective Organizational Information Systems, John Wiley & Sons, New York (2007).
>
>
>
> Thackara, John, In the Bubble: Designing in a Complex World, MIT Press, Cambridge,
>
> MA(2005).
>
>
>
> Tullis, Thomas and Albert, William, Measuring the User Experience: Collecting, Analyzing,
>
> and Presenting Usability Metrics, Morgan Kaufmann, San Francisco, CA (2008).
>
>
>
> Ware, Colin, Information Visualization: Perception for Design, Second Edition, Morgan
>
> Kaufmann, San Francisco, CA (2004).
>
>
>
> Ware, Colin, Visual Thinking for Design, Morgan Kaufmann, San Francisco, CA (2008).
>
>
>
> Web Design
>
> Horton, Sarah, Access by Design: A Guide to Universal Usability for Web Designers,
>
> New Riders, Indianapolis, IN (2005).
>
>
>
> Lazar, Jonathan, User-Centered Web Development, Jones & Bartlett Publishers, Boston, MA
>
> (2001).
>
>
>
> Lynch, Patrick J. and Horton, Sarah, Web Style Guide: Basic Design Principles for Creating
>
> Web Sites, Third Edition, Yale University Press, New Haven, CT (2008).
>
>
>
> King, Andrew B., Website Optimization: Speed, Search Engine & Conversion Rate Secrets,
>
> O'Reilly Media, Sebastopol, CA (2008).
>
>
>
> Krug, Steve, Don't Make Me Think!: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability, Second
>
> Edition, New Riders, Indianapolis, IN (2005).
>
>
>
> Nielsen, Jakob, Designing Web Usability: The Practice of Simplicity, New Riders,
>
> Indianapolis, IN (1999).
>
>
>
> Nielsen, Jakob and Loranger, Hoa, Prioritizing Web Usability, New Riders, Indianapolis,
>
> IN (2006).
>
>
>
> Nielsen, Jakob and Tahir, Marie, Homepage Usability: 50 Websites Deconstructed, New
>
> Riders, Indianapolis, IN (2002).
>
>
>
> Porter, Josh, Designing for the Social Web, New Riders, Indianapolis, IN (2008).
>
>
>
> Redish, Janice, Letting Go of the Words: Writing Web Content that Works, Morgan
>
> Kaufmann, San Francisco, CA (2007).
>
>
>
> Rosenfeld, Louis and Morville, Peter, Information Architecture for the World Wide Web,
>
> Second Edition, O'Reilly Media, Sebastopol, CA (2002).
>
>
>
> Spool, Jared M., Scanlon, Tara, Schroeder, Will, Snyder, Carolyn, and DeAngelo,
>
> Terri, Web Site Usability: A Designer's Guide, Morgan Kaufmann, San Francisco,
>
> CA (1999).
>
>
>
> Thatcher, Jim et al., Web Accessibility: Web Standards and Regulatory Compliance, friends of
>
> ED (2006).
>
>
>
> Van Duyne, Douglas K., Landay, James A., and Hong, Jason I., The Design of Sites:
>
> Patterns, Principles, and Processes for Crafting a Customer-Centered Web Experience,
>
> Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA (2002).
>
>
>
> Wroblewski, Luke, Web Form Design: Filling in the Blanks, Rosenfeld Media, Brooklyn,
>
> NY (2008).
>
>
>
> Collections
>
> Bias, Randolph and Mayhew, Deborah (Editors), Cost-Justifying Usability: An Update for
>
> the Internet Age, Second Edition, Morgan Kaufmann, San Francisco, CA (2005).
>
>
>
> Branaghan, Russell J. (Editor), Design by People for People: Essays on Usability, Usability
>
> Professionals' Association, Bloomingdale, IL (2001).
>
>
>
> Carroll, John M. (Editor), Human-Computer Interaction in the New Millennium, Addison-
>
> Wesley, Reading, MA (2002).
>
>
>
> Carroll, Johh M. (Editor), HCI Models, Theories, and Frameworks: Toward a Multidisciplinary
>
> Science, Morgan Kaufmann, San Francisco, CA (2003).
>
>
>
> Earnshaw, Rae, Guedj, Richard, van Dam, Andries, and Vince, John (Editors), Frontiers in
>
> Human-Centred Computing, Online Communities and Virtual Environments, Springer-
>
> Verlag, London, U.K. (2001).
>
>
>
> Erickson, Thomas and McDonald, David W. (Editors), HCI Remixed: Essays on Works That
>
> Have Influenced the HCI Community, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA (2008).
>
>
>
> Jacko, Julie and Sears, Andrew (Editors), The Human-Computer Interaction Handbook:
>
> Second Edition, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Hillsdale, NJ (2008).
>
>
>
> Kaptelinin, V. and Nardi, B., Acting with Technology: Activity Theory and Interaction
>
> Design, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA (2006).
>
>
>
> Lazar, J. (Editor), Universal Usability: Designing User Interfaces for Diverse Users, John
>
> Wiley & Sons, New York (2007).
>
>
>
> Lumsden, Joanna (Editor), Handbook of Research on User Interface Design and Evaluation for
>
> Mobile Technology, IGI Publishing, Hershey, PA(2008).
>
>
>
> Nahl, Diane and Bilal, Dania (Editors), Information and Emotion: The Emergent Affective
>
> Paradigm in Information Behavior Research and Theory, Information Today, Medford,
>
> NJ (2007).
>
>
>
> Proctor, Robert (Editor), Handbook of Human Factors in Web Design, Routledge,
>
> New York (2004).
>
>
>
> Salvendy, Gavriel (Editor), Handbook of Human Factors, Third Edition, John Wiley & Sons,
>
> New York (2006).
>
>
>
> Stephanidis, Constantine (Editor), User Interfaces for All: Concepts, Methods, and Tools,
>
> Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Hillsdale, NJ (2001).
>
>
>
> Streitz, Norbert, Kameas, Achilles, and Mavrommati, Irene (Editors), The Disappearing
>
> Computer: Interaction Design, System Infrastructures and Applications for Smart Environments,
>
> Lecture Notes in Computer Science 4500, Springer, Heidelberg, Germany (2007).
>
>
>
> Whitworth, Brian and De Moor, Aldo (Editors), Handbook of Research on Socio-Technical
>
> Design and Social Networking Systems, IGI Global, Hershey, PA(2009).
>
>
>
> Zhang, P. and Galletta, D. (Editors), Human-Computer Interaction and Management Information
>
> Systems - Foundations, M. E. Sharpe, Inc., Armonk, NY (2006).
>
>
>
>
>
>
---1463807999-1697498477-1247678728=:3673--

From perlman@turing.acm.org Wed Jul 15 13:29:46 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Wed, 15 Jul 2009 13:29:45 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: HCI Webliography <apache@turing.acm.org>
cc: director@hcibib.org, gene@fxpal.com
Subject: Re: !SUGGEST_a_LINK! hci-sites:resources: FXPAL Blog
In-Reply-To: <200907151719.n6FHJMev002800@turing.acm.org>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907151329150.3673@turing.acm.org>
References: <200907151719.n6FHJMev002800@turing.acm.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Hi Gene,

Added it to hci-sites:discussion.

Gary

On Wed, 15 Jul 2009, HCI Webliography wrote:

> Reply-To: director@hcibib.org
>
> This data is being sent to director@hcibib.org
> to be considered for inclusion in the HCI Bibliography
>
> %M U.blog.fxpal.com   63.161.32.3
> %0 INTERNET
> %D 2009-07-15
> %K hci-sites:resources
> %A Gene Golovchinsky
> %C Palo Alto, California 94304
> %I FX Palo Alto Laboratory, Inc.
> %K human-computer interaction, information seeking, virtual reality, multimedia
> %L English
> %T FXPAL Blog
> %U gene@fxpal.com
> %W http://blog.fxpal.com
> %X Blog on various topics related to HCI, IR, collaborative search, etc.
>
> Information from this tool may also be used for your entry:
> http://hcibib.org/accessibility/chaccess.cgi?url=http://blog.fxpal.com
>

From perlman@turing.acm.org Thu Jul 16 10:53:27 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Thu, 16 Jul 2009 10:53:26 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: eleanor@elynch.org
cc: director@hcibib.org
Subject: Re: Feedback on your website
In-Reply-To: <20090716134520.AD4722D5806A@mail.hosting-4u.com>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907161048290.7546@turing.acm.org>
References: <20090716134520.AD4722D5806A@mail.hosting-4u.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Thanks, Ellie,

I think that page is a nice introduction to some of the issues and answers to blind accessibility.
The hcibib accessibility page is meant to gather resources for students, researchers and developers
specializing in the human-computer interaction. The yext.com page is too introductory and mostly
contains links to resources already listed on the hcibib accessibility page.

Thanks you for your interest,

Gary Perlman, Director, HCI Bibliography Project
mailto:director@hcibib.org  http://hcibib.org/

On Thu, 16 Jul 2009, eleanor@elynch.org wrote:

> Hey,
>
> I was researching some online disability resources for my brother and came across your page at http://www.hcibib.org/accessibility.  I wanted to suggest another resource that you could add to your page that may benefit your visitors. The URL is http://www.yext.com/eyecare/articles/web-access-for-the-blind.html and its a great article that discusses how people who are blind can access and use the internet.  I hope you find it useful too!
>
> Thanks & keep up the good work!!
>
> Cheers,
> Ellie
>

From perlman@turing.acm.org Thu Jul 16 22:24:29 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Thu, 16 Jul 2009 22:24:28 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: lynn@hfes.org, lois@hfes.org
cc: director@hcibib.org
Subject: HFES in HCI Bibliography
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907162120210.31484@turing.acm.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Hello from Montreal!

It's been almost seven years that we moved back to my nascent home.
I am still working at OCLC and the HCI Bibliography is ever popular,
with over a million searches per year.
 	http://hcibib.org/

In a flurry of procrastination for other tasks, I have been adding
many records to the HCI Bibliography, which now has almost 49K records.
It has been especially helpful that publishers now provide materials
online, in downloadable formats (e.g., like RIS format for import),
with links to full text. I can now download proceedings like CHI 2009
with 277 entries in less than an hour (it would be less, but I correct
format and spelling errors, of which there are many in conference pubs.

As you may recall, the HCI Bibliography obtained permissions for
the HF Journal and annual meeting proceedings in 1991.
 	http://hcibib.org/Work/Permissions/hfs-1991.pdf
You'll be glad to know that the HCI Bibliography has never charged for
access to its entries (or added those awful google ads), and always
displays publisher copyrights with each record.

The history of the HFS and HFES coverage in the HCI Bibliography is spotty.
We obtained 1987 to 1989 on disk from the Denver Chapter via Craig Hartley.
We OCR-scanned abstracted records from 1990-1993 and involved dozens of
volunteers to fix typos, releasing the records within a year of publication
(those were the days before the web, mind you). It became harder to get
time to scan and volunteers to check, so 1995 was without abstracts.
That was the last year of coverage in the HCIBIB because I asked users
if anyone cared if HFES proceedings were no longer covered and no one replied.
 	http://www.hcibib.org/confer.html#HFES

Back then, even with OCR, there was a lot of effort involved in getting records
online -- maybe 10 minutes per record -- but now it's much faster and more accurate,
and there are links to full text. Ideally, there is an API for getting the data,
but sites the the HFES DL are so regular in their format that gathering the data
can be automated.

So, my plan is to add abstracted bibliographic entries like the following,
which includes a link to the fulltext access page.

%T Effectiveness of Various Automated Readability Measures for the Competitive Evaluation of User Documentation 
%A Lewis, James R.
%B Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting Proceedings
%S Computer Systems: Novel Usability Methods in Theory and Practice
%P 624-628
%V 50
%D remarkably, the date is not shown on the record, but I can add it based on the volume
%* Copyright (c) 2006 Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
%W http://hfes.publisher.ingentaconnect.com/content/hfes/hfproc/2006/00000050/00000005/art00001
%X I examined samples from a number of companys' user publications using several automated reading measures and a graphics/text ratio. The goal was to answer two questions: Were there reliable differences in writing style among the competitors? If so, were these differences related to their rank position in published surveys of user satisfaction with documentation? Of the measures included in the study, only the Cloudiness Count had any significant relationship to rank position in the surveys. A second evaluation, focused on the components of the Cloudiness Count, indicated that both of its components (passive voice and `empty' words - a type of infrequent word) contributed equally to its effectiveness. This is consistent with psycholinguistic research that indicates that it is harder for people to extract the meaning from a passive sentence relative to its active counterpart, and that word frequency is the variable with the most influence on the speed of lexical access.

I wanted to warn you about this activity because I did not want you to be
unpleasantly surprised by thousands of HFES records appearing online.
I think I'll start with 2008 and work back, probably doing full sections from
select TGs, like CS. I do not know if ingenta tracks referring IPs for you,
but I would expect that you will get a fair amount of traffic from hcibib.org.

Once the records are in the HCI Bibliography, they are searched along with other
pubs in HCI and it helps people find materials they would not otherwise have found.

Hope all's well,

Gary Perlman, Director, HCI Bibliography Project
mailto:director@hcibib.org  http://hcibib.org/


From perlman@turing.acm.org Fri Jul 17 16:20:19 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Fri, 17 Jul 2009 16:20:17 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Jeff Johnson <jjohnson@uiwizards.com>
Subject: Re: HCI Bibliography Update
In-Reply-To: <p06240803c6864caad4c8@[192.168.0.4]>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907171613460.17806@turing.acm.org>
References: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907131734580.16775@turing.acm.org>
 <p06240803c6864caad4c8@[192.168.0.4]>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Thanks, Jeff.

I'll make sure those have hcibib entries.
I'll give you a data input credit.

As for the length of my list, it's mainly filler
with links to libraries, amazon, booksites,
and thumbnails. My list used to look like
yours, but when I added the eye candy,
it got 10 times the traffic.

Gary

PS: Your "General Design" section looks like it has four books
by General Norman Design, USMC (you make up your own acronym).

On Fri, 17 Jul 2009, Jeff Johnson wrote:

> Gary,
>
> Thanks for the HCI Bib update.
>
> Just FYI, I also recently updated my (short in comparison to the HCI Bib) UI 
> design rec'd reading list.
> See http://www.uiwizards.com/suggestedReading.html
>
> Thanks,
> Jeff
>

From perlman@turing.acm.org Tue Jul 21 13:05:43 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Tue, 21 Jul 2009 13:05:43 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: "Gary Perlman @ Yahoo" <garyperlman@yahoo.com>
Subject: testing mail to myself
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907211305250.21762@turing.acm.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Did it get through?

From perlman@turing.acm.org Wed Jul 22 23:55:51 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Wed, 22 Jul 2009 23:55:50 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Artak Amirbekyan <uqaamir1@uq.edu.au>
Subject: Re: |STAT
In-Reply-To: <C68CC1F7.129E%uqaamir1@uq.edu.au>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907222355470.11615@turing.acm.org>
References: <C68CC1F7.129E%uqaamir1@uq.edu.au>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Thank you for your interest in |STAT data manipulation and analysis software.

UNIX |STAT for is now (only) available via Web browsers at a secret location.
 	http://www.hcibib.org/stat/xyzzy/

To obtain UNIX |STAT files, please follow the instructions at:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/#access
There are installation notes (e.g., for Mac OS X and Linux) at:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/installation.txt

DOS |STAT executables and documentation are available as a WinZip file:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/DOS-STAT.ZIP

HTML documentation is available from the |STAT home page:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/

On Wed, 22 Jul 2009, Artak Amirbekyan wrote:

> I AGREE TO ADHERE TO THE CONDITIONS OF USING |STAT.
> I AGREE NOT TO SHARE THE |STAT LOCATION WITH OTHERS.
>

From perlman@turing.acm.org Wed Jul 22 23:57:05 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Wed, 22 Jul 2009 23:57:04 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: "Wallior, Julien" <Julien.Wallior@sig.com>
Subject: Re: |STAT
In-Reply-To: <DDA5DF6A64A9A6418661A501B3B846520644D17D81@msgbal514.ds.susq.com>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907222356590.11615@turing.acm.org>
References: <DDA5DF6A64A9A6418661A501B3B846520644D17D81@msgbal514.ds.susq.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Thank you for your interest in |STAT data manipulation and analysis software.

UNIX |STAT for is now (only) available via Web browsers at a secret location.
 	http://www.hcibib.org/stat/xyzzy/

To obtain UNIX |STAT files, please follow the instructions at:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/#access
There are installation notes (e.g., for Mac OS X and Linux) at:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/installation.txt

DOS |STAT executables and documentation are available as a WinZip file:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/DOS-STAT.ZIP

HTML documentation is available from the |STAT home page:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/

On Wed, 22 Jul 2009, Wallior, Julien wrote:

> I AGREE TO ADHERE TO THE CONDITIONS OF USING |STAT.
> I AGREE NOT TO SHARE THE |STAT LOCATION WITH OTHERS.
>
>
>
> IMPORTANT: The information contained in this email and/or its attachments is confidential. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender immediately by reply and immediately delete this message and all its attachments. Any review, use, reproduction, disclosure or dissemination of this message or any attachment by an unintended recipient is strictly prohibited. Neither this message nor any attachment is intended as or should be construed as an offer, solicitation or recommendation to buy or sell any security or other financial instrument. Neither the sender, his or her employer nor any of their respective affiliates makes any warranties as to the completeness or accuracy of any of the information contained herein or that this message or any of its attachments is free of viruses.
>

From perlman@turing.acm.org Wed Jul 22 23:57:46 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Wed, 22 Jul 2009 23:57:45 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: =?iso-8859-1?Q?c=E9dric_doucet?= <cedric.doucet@live.fr>
Subject: Re: |STAT
In-Reply-To: <SNT101-W102ECBB793BBB2FD65F18EEE1B0@phx.gbl>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907222357370.11615@turing.acm.org>
References: <SNT101-W102ECBB793BBB2FD65F18EEE1B0@phx.gbl>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: MULTIPART/MIXED; BOUNDARY="-1463807999-370382896-1248321465=:11615"

---1463807999-370382896-1248321465=:11615
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8BIT

Thank you for your interest in |STAT data manipulation and analysis software.

UNIX |STAT for is now (only) available via Web browsers at a secret location.
 	http://www.hcibib.org/stat/xyzzy/

To obtain UNIX |STAT files, please follow the instructions at:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/#access
There are installation notes (e.g., for Mac OS X and Linux) at:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/installation.txt

DOS |STAT executables and documentation are available as a WinZip file:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/DOS-STAT.ZIP

HTML documentation is available from the |STAT home page:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/

On Wed, 22 Jul 2009, cédric doucet wrote:

>
> I AGREE TO ADHERE TO THE CONDITIONS OF USING |STAT.
> I AGREE NOT TO SHARE THE |STAT LOCATION WITH OTHERS.
>
> _________________________________________________________________
> Téléphonez gratuitement à tous vos proches avec Windows Live Messenger  !  Téléchargez-le maintenant !
> http://www.windowslive.fr/messenger/1.asp
---1463807999-370382896-1248321465=:11615--

From perlman@turing.acm.org Fri Jul 24 00:16:31 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Fri, 24 Jul 2009 00:16:30 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: normore@utk.edu
cc: director@hcibib.org
Subject: HFES in HCIBIB
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907240011200.636@turing.acm.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Hi Lorraine,

I've just determined that it now takes about 15 minutes to ingest an annual
meeting proceedings from the HFES DL into the HCIBIB. So I am getting ready
to pick up the backlog to 1995 or 1996. I can import the entire proceedings,
or with slightly less work, select the TGs to represent in the HCIBIB.

Some TGs are no-brainers, like CG and Internet. Then SD and T&E are often
relevant. And then there are potpourri sessions and student sessions.
I could toss abstracts, but I wonder if the noise from even the "Tote that
Bail" sessions would be a problem for the HCIBIB.

Seeing as you have contributed the most the get the HFES records into the
HCIBIB, I wanted to get your input about what you would like to see in there.

Gary

From perlman@turing.acm.org Sat Jul 25 10:12:34 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Sat, 25 Jul 2009 10:12:34 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Gary Perlman at OCLC <perlman@oclc.org>
Subject: untranslated/mistranlated
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907251011240.12740@turing.acm.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

untranslated: nn mmm yyyy (dates)

mistranslated: showing 1-n of m

open jira tickets

From perlman@turing.acm.org Sat Jul 25 10:18:44 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Sat, 25 Jul 2009 10:18:43 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: normore@utk.edu
cc: director@hcibib.org
Subject: Re: HFES in HCIBIB
In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907240011200.636@turing.acm.org>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907251014000.12740@turing.acm.org>
References: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907240011200.636@turing.acm.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Thanks, Lorraine,

Somehow, I lost your message, but not until I read it.
I'll take your advice on doing the whole proceedings.
I'll count on the precision of user queries to filter
out material that is not of interest, and who knows,
some of the material in those tote-that-bail sessions
might be relevant to mobile device designers.

Thanks for your input, as usual.

Gary

On Fri, 24 Jul 2009, Gary PERLMAN wrote:

> Hi Lorraine,
>
> I've just determined that it now takes about 15 minutes to ingest an annual
> meeting proceedings from the HFES DL into the HCIBIB. So I am getting ready
> to pick up the backlog to 1995 or 1996. I can import the entire proceedings,
> or with slightly less work, select the TGs to represent in the HCIBIB.
>
> Some TGs are no-brainers, like CG and Internet. Then SD and T&E are often
> relevant. And then there are potpourri sessions and student sessions.
> I could toss abstracts, but I wonder if the noise from even the "Tote that
> Bail" sessions would be a problem for the HCIBIB.
>
> Seeing as you have contributed the most the get the HFES records into the
> HCIBIB, I wanted to get your input about what you would like to see in there.
>
> Gary
>

From perlman@turing.acm.org Sun Jul 26 15:27:02 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Sun, 26 Jul 2009 15:27:01 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Lois Smith <lois@hfes.org>
cc: lynn@hfes.org, director@hcibib.org, kermit.davis@uc.edu, 
    'John Lee' <jdlee@engr.wisc.edu>, 
    "'Gutierrez, John Paul'" <JohnPaul.Gutierrez@sagepub.com>, normore@utk.edu
Subject: RE: HFES in HCI Bibliography
In-Reply-To: <auto-000014033534@hfes.org>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907261357340.31275@turing.acm.org>
References: <auto-000014033534@hfes.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Hi Lois,

I consulted with my senior HFES consultant, Lorraine Normore,
and she suggested adding all the sessions, not just those
that are obviously HCI-related. It was not much more effort
and looking over the sessions where some of the more productive
authors appear in those years, this approach seems reasonable.

Yesterday, I added 2005-2008 to the HCI Bibliography (pushing the
HCIBIB over 50,000 records). The integration took longer than
I expected, but an hour a year is not bad. Most of my time was
spent correcting typos in the paper abstracts (and titles),
and in dealing with problems with the first attempts to pull
the information out of the Ingenta site. The consistency of
the URL formats, however, was a great help.

Here are the four conferences now in the HCIBIB:
 	http://hcibib.org/bs.cgi?query=C.HFES.0*&rectype=conferences

I found some general issues on the website that I will share:

  1. Session names:
     a. There were spelling errors in some (about 1-2 per year).
     Alas, the processing of information is so hectic that I did not track
     them, but I can run a job to fetch them if you would like to correct them.
     b. Some entities that are used in session names appear in the tables of
 	contents. They include &sol; &quest; &excl; These are not expanded by
 	my browsers, so they look ugly. Examples:
 	http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/hfes/hfproc/2008/00000052/00000024
 		SD4 ... &excl; instead of !
 	http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/hfes/hfproc/2008/00000052/00000025
 		TE3 ... &quest; and &sol; instead of ? and /
 	c. For other years, the session names are displayed, but the year is not.
 	I found myself looking at the url, which has the year embedded.
  2. No page for each conference:
     a. There is no page devoted to the sessions for a single annual meeting,
 	showing the sessions for just that one year.
 	b. There is a page on which users can order proceedings, which has a sample
 	of the sessions, but no links to the online proceedings. On the ordering
 	pages (note: plural), the ISBN is listed, but with ISSN as label:
 	    http://www.hfes.org/Publications/ProductDetail.aspx?ProductId=89 Online Order Form
 	I think a single page for one year would make the different formats
 	complement the others. Some other pages with information about 2008 are:
     http://www.hfes.org/web/hfesmeetings/08annualmeeting.html Conference home page
 	http://www.hfes.org/web/hfesmeetings/HFES52AMProgram.pdf Online program
 	I know that these are HFES.org pages and the others are Ingenta pages,
 	but I don't think that users care about such things.
  3. Current TOC of "issues"
 		http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/hfes/hfproc
 	a. No session names are shown for 2008. This is not inviting to users.
 	b. The "issues" are listed in descending order, which might work for
 	   journal issues that are published serially, but these "issues" are
 	   published alphabetically at one time.
 	c. Number 19, 2008 has no identifier INSIDE the session TOC.
 	   I determined from the online program that it was POSTERS.

I am reluctant making any suggestions without further analysis,
but not so reluctant that I will not. Assuming that restructuring
the Ingenta site is difficult, I suggest enhancing the Annual Meeting
pages like:
 	http://www.hfes.org/web/hfesmeetings/08annualmeeting.html
It's a simple page with information about the conference,
including cover art, but there is no link to the online proceedings.
I would add a table that would show the top level structure of the
conference, like that on the Ingenta site, but for a specific year,
possibly with indications of the number of sessions
and/or number of papers. The names would link to the 
Ingenta page with the online session. The same sort of TOC could appear
on the Purchase CD page:
 	http://www.hfes.org/Publications/ProductDetail.aspx?ProductId=89
There could be a button to expand the names of sessions to provide
more context, as shown for Aerospace. If you would like a mockup,
I could put one together (for free, I should note, and as an added
bonus, I could list the typos).

The following should be viewed unformatted with a fixed-width font like Courier.

  #  Sessions Papers
  1     7       32 Aerospace Systems
                   http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/hfes/hfproc/2008/00000052/00000001
                 5 Awareness and Attention in Flight
                 1 The Role of Human Engineering in the Design of the Orion Spacecraft
                 1 NextGen Human Factors Research and Engineering Requirements
                 6 Air Traffic Control
                 5 Cockpit and Display Design
                 5 Human Error in Aviation
                 5 Space Human Factors
  2     3       13 Aging
  3    16       83 Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making
  4     2        7 Communications
  5     4       18 Computer Systems
  6     2        5 Demonstrations
  7     3       10 Education
  8     3       11 Environmental Design
  9     2        7 Forensics Professional 
10     5       16 General Session
11     7       33 Health Care 
12     7       25 Human Performance 
13     3       11 Individual Differences in Performance 
14     8       34 Industrial Ergonomics
15     2        8 Internet 
16     4       10 Macroergonomics
17     7       38 Perception and Performance 
18     5       18 Product Design 
19     4       13 Safety
20     4       14 Student Forum 
21     5       25 Surface Transportation 
22     5       14 System Development
23     3       11 Test and Evaluation 
24     5       21 Training 
25     3       12 Virtual Environments

On Mon, 20 Jul 2009, Lois Smith wrote:

> Hi, Gary. Great to hear from you, and I'm happy to hear the HCI Bibliography
> is alive and well.
>
> Of course we're happy to have you cite HFES articles on HCI, as this can
> only increase visibility for them. Once someone gets to the full-text access
> page after following a citation in the bibiography, he or she can read the
> abstract and either log in if already a subscriber or download the full text
> on a payment basis.
>
> At this time, Human Factors articles for 1999 through 2009 are also included
> in the SAGE Journals Online platform (hosted by HighWire). Earlier articles
> are in Ingenta, and so are almost all years of the HFES proceedings.
>
> We can definitely get reports of usage by IP address, so that's good to
> know.
>
> Thanks again for including HFES content in the bibliography, Gary, and if
> you need anything else, just let me know.
>
> Best,
> Lois
>
> Lois Smith, Communications Director
> Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
> P.O. Box 1369
> Santa Monica, CA 90406-1369 USA
> 310/394-1811, Fax 310/394-2410
> lois@hfes.org, http://hfes.org
> "Human factors/ergonomics: People-friendly design through science and
> engineering"
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Gary PERLMAN [mailto:perlman@turing.acm.org]
> Sent: Thursday, July 16, 2009 7:24 PM
> To: lynn@hfes.org; lois@hfes.org
> Cc: director@hcibib.org
> Subject: HFES in HCI Bibliography
>
> Hello from Montreal!
>
> It's been almost seven years that we moved back to my nascent home.
> I am still working at OCLC and the HCI Bibliography is ever popular,
> with over a million searches per year.
> 	http://hcibib.org/
>
> In a flurry of procrastination for other tasks, I have been adding
> many records to the HCI Bibliography, which now has almost 49K records.
> It has been especially helpful that publishers now provide materials
> online, in downloadable formats (e.g., like RIS format for import),
> with links to full text. I can now download proceedings like CHI 2009
> with 277 entries in less than an hour (it would be less, but I correct
> format and spelling errors, of which there are many in conference pubs.
>
> As you may recall, the HCI Bibliography obtained permissions for
> the HF Journal and annual meeting proceedings in 1991.
> 	http://hcibib.org/Work/Permissions/hfs-1991.pdf
> You'll be glad to know that the HCI Bibliography has never charged for
> access to its entries (or added those awful google ads), and always
> displays publisher copyrights with each record.
>
> The history of the HFS and HFES coverage in the HCI Bibliography is spotty.
> We obtained 1987 to 1989 on disk from the Denver Chapter via Craig Hartley.
> We OCR-scanned abstracted records from 1990-1993 and involved dozens of
> volunteers to fix typos, releasing the records within a year of publication
> (those were the days before the web, mind you). It became harder to get
> time to scan and volunteers to check, so 1995 was without abstracts.
> That was the last year of coverage in the HCIBIB because I asked users
> if anyone cared if HFES proceedings were no longer covered and no one
> replied.
> 	http://www.hcibib.org/confer.html#HFES
>
> Back then, even with OCR, there was a lot of effort involved in getting
> records
> online -- maybe 10 minutes per record -- but now it's much faster and more
> accurate,
> and there are links to full text. Ideally, there is an API for getting the
> data,
> but sites the the HFES DL are so regular in their format that gathering the
> data
> can be automated.
>
> So, my plan is to add abstracted bibliographic entries like the following,
> which includes a link to the fulltext access page.
>
> %T Effectiveness of Various Automated Readability Measures for the
> Competitive Evaluation of User Documentation
> %A Lewis, James R.
> %B Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting Proceedings
> %S Computer Systems: Novel Usability Methods in Theory and Practice
> %P 624-628
> %V 50
> %D remarkably, the date is not shown on the record, but I can add it based
> on the volume
> %* Copyright (c) 2006 Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
> %W
> http://hfes.publisher.ingentaconnect.com/content/hfes/hfproc/2006/00000050/0
> 0000005/art00001
> %X I examined samples from a number of companys' user publications using
> several automated reading measures and a graphics/text ratio. The goal was
> to answer two questions: Were there reliable differences in writing style
> among the competitors? If so, were these differences related to their rank
> position in published surveys of user satisfaction with documentation? Of
> the measures included in the study, only the Cloudiness Count had any
> significant relationship to rank position in the surveys. A second
> evaluation, focused on the components of the Cloudiness Count, indicated
> that both of its components (passive voice and `empty' words - a type of
> infrequent word) contributed equally to its effectiveness. This is
> consistent with psycholinguistic research that indicates that it is harder
> for people to extract the meaning from a passive sentence relative to its
> active counterpart, and that word frequency is the variable with the most
> influence on the speed of lexical access.
>
> I wanted to warn you about this activity because I did not want you to be
> unpleasantly surprised by thousands of HFES records appearing online.
> I think I'll start with 2008 and work back, probably doing full sections
> from
> select TGs, like CS. I do not know if ingenta tracks referring IPs for you,
> but I would expect that you will get a fair amount of traffic from
> hcibib.org.
>
> Once the records are in the HCI Bibliography, they are searched along with
> other
> pubs in HCI and it helps people find materials they would not otherwise have
> found.
>
> Hope all's well,
>
> Gary Perlman, Director, HCI Bibliography Project
> mailto:director@hcibib.org  http://hcibib.org/
>
>

From perlman@turing.acm.org Tue Jul 28 17:36:03 2009 -0400
Status: 
X-Status: 
X-Keywords:
Date: Tue, 28 Jul 2009 17:35:59 -0400 (EDT)
From: Gary PERLMAN <perlman@turing.acm.org>
To: Alex Fine <afine@bcs.rochester.edu>
Subject: Re: |STAT request
In-Reply-To: <4A6E1DDC.3040105@bcs.rochester.edu>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0907281735560.16958@turing.acm.org>
References: <4A6E1DDC.3040105@bcs.rochester.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

Thank you for your interest in |STAT data manipulation and analysis software.

UNIX |STAT for is now (only) available via Web browsers at a secret location.
 	http://www.hcibib.org/stat/xyzzy/

To obtain UNIX |STAT files, please follow the instructions at:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/#access
There are installation notes (e.g., for Mac OS X and Linux) at:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/installation.txt

DOS |STAT executables and documentation are available as a WinZip file:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/DOS-STAT.ZIP

HTML documentation is available from the |STAT home page:
 	http://www.acm.org/perlman/stat/

On Mon, 27 Jul 2009, Alex Fine wrote:

>  I AGREE TO ADHERE TO THE CONDITIONS OF USING |STAT.
>  I AGREE NOT TO SHARE THE |STAT LOCATION WITH OTHERS.
>
>
> **
>

