Carol Traynor Sessions
Consortium: Doctoral Consortium
Saturday 18:00 - 21:00.
Sunday 08:30 - 21:00.
Monday 08:30 - 17:00.
The CHI 98 Doctoral Consortium is a closed session that provides an opportunity
for Ph.D. students to explore their research interests in an interdisciplinary
workshop with established researchers in a group setting. The participants
receive feedback on current research and guidance for future research directions.
The consortium also aims toward the development of a supportive community of
scholars while contributing to the conference goals through interaction with
other researchers and participation in conference events. Consortium participants
have been invited based on their dissertation proposals, and reflect the wide
range of disciplines within HCI research.
Doctoral Consortium Faculty Members
- Deborah A. Boehm-Davis, Co-Chair,
George Mason University
- Clayton Lewis, Co-Chair,
University of Colorado, Boulder
- Bonnie E. John,
Carnegie Mellon University
- William Newman,
Rank Xerox Research Centre Europe
Participants
- Karen Orr Vered, U. of Southern CA, "Schooling in the
Digital Domain: Gendered Play and Work in the Classroom Context"
- Alvin Yeo, U of Waikato (N. Zealand), "Cultural
Effects in Usability Assessment"
- Kerry Rodden, U. Cambridge, "About 23 million
documents match your query..."
- Anthon Hornof, U. of Michigan, "The Low-Level
Cognitive Processes Involved in the Visual Search of Pull-Down Menus and
Computer Screens, as Revealed by Cognitive Modeling"
- Neil T. Heffernan, Carnegie Mellon, "Intelligent
Tutoring Systems have Forgotten the Tutor: Adding a Cognitive Model of
Human Tutors"
- Christopher Hundhausen, U. of Oregon, "Toward
Effective Algorithm Visualization Artifacts: Designing for Participation
and Negotiation in an Undergraduate Algorithms Course"
- Dario Salvucci, Carnegie Mellon, "Interpreting Eye
Movements with Process Models"
- Michelle X. Zhou, Columbia U., "Automated Visual
Discourse Synthesis: Coherence, Versaltility, and Interactivity"
- Susanne Jul, U. of Michigan, "Computational Implications
of Human Navigation in Multiscale Electronic Worlds"
- Ramon M. Felciano, Stanford U., "Graphical
Style Sheets: Towards Reusable Representations of Biomedical Graphics"
- David VanEsselstyn, Columbia U., "The Effect of
Accompanying Media on Spatial Models Derived from Text"
- Allan Christian Long, Jr., U. C. Berkeley,
"Improving Gestures and innteraction Techniques for Pen-Based User Interfaces"
- Carol Traynor, U. of Massachusetts-Lowell, "Putting Power
in the Hands of End Users: A Study of Programming by Demonstration, with
an application to Geographical Information Systems
- Chris North, U. of Maryland, Robust, "End-User
Programmable, Multiple-Window Coordination"
- John F. Pane, Carnegie Mellon, "Designing a
Programming System for Children with a Focus on Usability"