CS 889
Fall 2015
Overview
This is a seminar course in the area of human-computer interaction. As is typical of seminar courses, it will include student presentations and a course project as the bulk of the course work for students.
Announcements
- Join the class's Piazza list. You can submit your assignments (except A1) there.
- Project recruiting materials posted here.
Topics Schedule
Date
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Assigned Readings
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Slides
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Sept. 14th |
The papers below were used in class during discussion of replication studies. Posted here so you can read for interest, but no synopsis required.
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Slides
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Sept 16th |
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Slides |
Sept 21st |
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Slides |
Sept 23rd |
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Sept 30th |
No synopsis required for this reading. This paper is useful to skim so that you understand the challenges of mobile text input for exercise 1.
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Slides |
Exercises
These small exercises are for weeks 3 - 5 of the course. They are designd to be done with your "group". Note that your group can be either one or two students, so if you are working alone the number of data points needed is smaller. Please post the information by midnight on the due date (Tuesday) so that I can organize the data for Thursday's class. For exercise 1, the information will be posted in a Google Docs spreadsheet. For exercises 2 and 3, the information should be posted on the Piazza list.
Exercise 1: Touchscreen typing
Due Sept 28th
Find 2 friends per group member and ask them to type four different paragraphs as follows:
- One paragraph in their native language on a computer keyboard.
- One paragraph in their native language on a touch screen keyboard.
- One paragraph in a language they do not speak on a computer keyboard.
- One paragraph in a language they do not speak on a touch screen keyboard.
Note that each of the paragraphs should be different.
Calculate typing speed in words per minute (where 1 word = 5 characters) and residual error rate ((word errors remaining)/(total words) * 100) for each of the devices and languages. Enter these values into this Google Spreadsheet.
Exercise 2
Due October 6th
Pick an online dating site, preferably one where you don't need a membership. Pick a postal code in Alberta or a zip code in the US (so you don't know people). Perform a search for individuals aged 20 - 25, 30 - 35, and 40 - 45 (male or female) and pick the first three profiles returned in each. Using techniques from qualitative analysis, analyze the profiles. Look for things like picture, narrative, interests. Are there patterns that exist? Similars or differences? Take one more profile from each age range and decide whether it adds to the set of data you have or if it calls into questions your initial categorization.
Create two slides to describe your findings. The first should describe the results from your first-three search; the second from your add-one participant.
Come to class on October 7th prepared to discuss your results!
Paper Presentations
To start thinking about papers that you might want to present, I'd suggest taking a look at the CHI 2015 proceedings, located here. Other conferences that are relevant include SOUPS, UIST, Graphics Interface, among others.
Paper presentations can be scheduled here.
Project Details
For October 2, please post a less than 2-page description of your project. The project description should include a synopsis of what you would like to do (1/3 - 1/2 page), a pointer to a paper that describes an experiment most related to your project with some brief sketch of the experiment (1/3 page) and a detailed description of your experimental methodology (less than 1 page).
The October 2nd synopsis constitutes phase one of your project presentation. Please post so that your project is visible to the entire class.
Between October 2 - 6, pick two projects in the class to comment on. Project comments are first-come. Maximum of three commentators for each project. So, for example, say I posted a project by May 26th. Up to three people can add project comments between May 26th and May 30th for my project. The goal of these comments should be to make suggestions. Think carefully before posting. Ask yourself:
- What do you like about the project idea?
- What seems good about the experimental design?
- In what ways could the experimental design be improved, expanded or enhanced?
- Is there anything in the project description that is incomplete? For example, is there an obvious aspect of the experiment or study that should be expanded upon, or that was overlooked?
Project recruiting materials have been posted here. These may be revised as the class protocol needs to be re-activated.