10 episodes

Weekly speakers on topics related to human-computer interaction design. Presentations on a wide and evolving range of current research issues relating to human-computer interaction.  

Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (Fall 2009‪)‬ Stanford University

    • Technology

Weekly speakers on topics related to human-computer interaction design. Presentations on a wide and evolving range of current research issues relating to human-computer interaction.  

    • video
    10. The Web Changes Everything: How Dynamic Content Affects the Way People Find Online (December 4, 2009)

    10. The Web Changes Everything: How Dynamic Content Affects the Way People Find Online (December 4, 2009)

    Jaime Teevan, from Microsoft Research, discusses how changing content on web pages increases website revisitation behavior. (December 4, 2009)

    • 3 sec
    • video
    9. Enabling Practical Ubiquity (November 20, 2009)

    9. Enabling Practical Ubiquity (November 20, 2009)

    Shwetak Patel, from the University of Washington, discusses the challenge and recent developments of researching ubiquitous homes while allowing people to be in their natural environment. (November 20, 2009)

    • 4 sec
    • video
    8. Multi-Sensor HCI for Smart Environments (November 13, 2009)

    8. Multi-Sensor HCI for Smart Environments (November 13, 2009)

    Hamid Aghajan, from the Stanford Department of Electrical Engineering, discusses his research in technological developments that will allow for smart environments to sense and create a user-centric environment. (November 13, 2009)

    • 4 sec
    • video
    7. Computational Photography and the Stanford Frankencamera (November 6, 2009)

    7. Computational Photography and the Stanford Frankencamera (November 6, 2009)

    Stanford Professor Mark Levoy discusses Stanford's development of the Frankencamera--a programmable camera capable of correcting and computing photographs, operating with applications, and connecting to the internet. (November 6, 2009)

    • 3 sec
    • video
    6. Why is the Google Book Search Settlement So Controversial?

    6. Why is the Google Book Search Settlement So Controversial?

    Pamela Samuelson, Professor at UC Berkeley School of Information, discusses several troubling legal aspects of Google's settlement with copyright owners for the ambitious Google Books scanning and archiving program. (October 30, 2009)

    • 4 sec
    • video
    5. Segmenting and Connecting: From Event Perception to Comics (October 23, 2009)

    5. Segmenting and Connecting: From Event Perception to Comics (October 23, 2009)

    Barbara Tversky, Professor at Stanford and Columbia University, discusses how visual narratives use visual devices to form a visual vocabulary by breaking up time and space, showing space and time, and linking time and space. (October 23, 2009)

    • 4 sec

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