Course: Course | Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (2007-2008) Dnatube

share this page with the world.

WATCH LECTURE

Lec 1 - Designing Interactions that Comb ...

"Lec 1 - Designing Interactions that Combine Pen, Paper, and PC" October 5, 2007 lecture by Ron Yeh for the Stanford University Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (CS 547). Pen and paper are powerful tools for visualizing designs, penning music, and communicating through art and written language. This pairing provides many benefits -it is mobile, flexible, and robust. Ron discusses the impact...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 2 - Accountability of Presence: Loca ...

"Lec 2 - Accountability of Presence: Location Tracking Beyond Privacy" October 12, 2007 lecture by Paul Dourish for the Stanford University Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (CS 547). Mobility is no longer sufficient; location-tracking is a key feature. However, the introduction of location-based technologies has traditionally been accompanied by a series of concerns over privacy. These...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 3 - Augmented Social Cognition

"Lec 3 - Augmented Social Cognition" October 19, 2007 lecture by Ed Chi for the Stanford University Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (CS 547). Augmented Social Cognition is trying to understand the enhancement of a group of people's ability to remember, think, and reason. This has been taking in the form of many Web 2.0 systems like social networking sites, social tagging systems, blogs, and...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 4 - Designing a Health Care Interface

"Lec 4 - Designing a Health Care Interface" October 26, 2007 lecture by Paul Tang for the Stanford University Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (CS 547). Even more fragmented than American health care is the management of health care information. Faced with a barrage of poorly organized health information, physicians and other clinicians must sift through uninspired displays to glean pearls of...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 5 - Toward Adaptive Services for Per ...

"Lec 5 - Toward Adaptive Services for Personal Archiving" November 2, 2007 lecture by Cathy Marshall for the Stanford University Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (CS 547). Most of us engage in magical thinking when it comes to the long term fate of our digital stuff. At this point, a strategy that hinges on benign neglect and lots of copies seems to be the best we can hope for. Cathy...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 6 - Data Modeling and Conceptual Ske ...

"Lec 6 - Data Modeling and Conceptual Sketching in the Design Process" November 9, 2007 lecture by Monty Hamontree for the Stanford University Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (CS 547). This talk delves into 5 interrelated keys that Microsoft teams focus on to elevate the impact of "design research". Namely how to: team insightfully as project teams; observe our users holistically; broker...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 7 - ChucK: A Computer Music Programm ...

"Lec 7 - ChucK: A Computer Music Programming Language" November 16, 2007 lecture by Ge Wang for the Stanford University Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (CS 547). In the first part of this talk, Ge presents the design, philosophy, and development of ChucK, a computer music programming language intending to provide a different approach, expressiveness, and thinking with respect to time and...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 8 - Context Aware Computing: Underst ...

"Lec 8 - Context Aware Computing: Understanding Human Intention" November 30, 2007 lecture by Ted Selker for the Stanford University Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (CS 547). This talk demonstrates that Artificial intelligence can competently improve human interaction with systems and even each other in a myriad of natural scenarios. CS 547 | Human-Computer Interaction Seminar:...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 9 - Adaptive Interaction Techniques ...

"Lec 9 - Adaptive Interaction Techniques for Sharing Design Resources" December 7, 2007 lecture by Brian Lee for the Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (CS 547). Today's designers generate content both on paper and online. Designers spread their work over physical and digital media, each of which has powerful, but distinct, sets of affordances. Recent work suggests that augmented paper...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 10 - Technologies for Collaborative ...

"Lec 10 - Technologies for Collaborative Democracy" April 4, 2008 lecture by Beth Noveck for the Stanford University Human Computer Interaction Seminar (CS547). In this lecture, Beth Noveck discusses why current political institutions have changed little in response to Web 2.0. She explores the role of visual and social interfaces in producing better democracy and talk about the progress of...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 11 - Designing for Cuba: Necessary I ...

"Lec 11 - Designing for Cuba: Necessary In(ter)vention" April 11, 2008 lecture by Gwendolyn Floyd and Joshua Kauffman for the Stanford University Human Computer Interaction Seminar (CS547). This lecture shares REGIONAL's recent in-field Cuban research that spans the socio-technological, the political, and the top-secret. It reveals how their research led to the design of a simple and...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 12 - The Past, Present, and Future o ...

"Lec 12 - The Past, Present, and Future of Digital Memories" April 18, 2008 lecture by Steve Whittaker for the Stanford University Human Computer Interaction Seminar (CS547). Steve Whittaker reviews the Digital Memories vision, briefly present various studies that challenge that vision, moving on to suggest an alternative approach to the topic that is informed by cognitive science,...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 13 - The Democratization of Ubiquito ...

"Lec 13 - The Democratization of Ubiquitous Computing" April 25, 2008 lecture by Leah Buechley for the Stanford University Human Computer Interaction Seminar (CS547). Computational textile researchers weave, solder and sew electronics into cloth to build soft, flexible and wearable computers. Computational textiles or "e-textiles" is a young discipline, and developments in the field have so...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 14 - Automatically Generating Person ...

"Lec 14 - Automatically Generating Personalized Adaptive User Interfaces" May 2, 2008 lecture by Krzysztof Gajos for the Stanford University Human Computer Interaction Seminar (CS547). User Interfaces delivered with today's software are usually created in a one-size-fits-all manner, making implicit assumptions about the needs, abilities, and preferences of the "average user" and the...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 15 - MySong: Automatic Accompaniment ...

"Lec 15 - MySong: Automatic Accompaniment for Vocal Melodies" May 9, 2008 lecture by Dan Morris for the Stanford University Human Computer Interaction Seminar (CS547). MySong is a system that automatically chooses chords to accompany a vocal melody. A user with no musical experience can create a song with instrumental accompaniment just by singing into a microphone, and can experiment with...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 16 - Automating & Customizing the We ...

"Lec 16 - Automating & Customizing the Web With Keyword Programming" May 16, 2008 lecture by Rob Miller for the Stanford University Human Computer Interaction Seminar (CS547). Rob Miller discusses some of the explorations into keyword programming in the web automation domain, and also in other domains such as Java development. One surprising result is that programming language syntax often...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec 17 - Science 2.0: The Design Science ...

"Lec 17 - Science 2.0: The Design Science of Collaboration" May 23, 2008 lecture by Ben Shneiderman for the Stanford University Human Computer Interaction Seminar (CS547). Science 2.0 focuses on the human-designed world in which the dynamics of trust, privacy, responsibility, and empathy are determinants of success. Advancing Science 2.0 will require a shift in priorities to promote intense...
WATCH LECTURE

Lec Last - Tangible Media for Design and ...

"Lec Last - Tangible Media for Design and Inspiration" May 30, 2008 lecture by Hiroshi Ishii for the Stanford University Human Computer Interaction Seminar (CS547). Tangible Bits seeks to realize seamless interfaces between humans, digital information, and the physical environment by giving physical form to digital information, making bits directly manipulable and perceptible. Their goal is...

Course | Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (2007-2008)


Source of these courses is stanford 
CS 547: Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (Seminar on People, Computers, and Design) is a Stanford University course that features weekly speakers on topics related to human-computer interaction design. The seminar is organized by the Stanford HCI Group, which works across disciplines to understand the intersection between humans and computers. This playlist consists of seminar speakers recorded during the 2007-2008 academic year.
stanford  Website: http://www.dnatube.com/school/stanford

COURSE NAME: Course | Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (2007-2008)

46398 LECTURE VIEWS

1949 COURSE VIEWS