HCI Reading List
INLS 357
SILS UNC-Chapel Hill.  G. Marchionini
Note: all ACM and JASIST publications are available online through the UNC Library

*Ahlberg, C. and Shneiderman, B. (1994). Visual Information Seeking: Tight coupling of dynamic query filters with starfield displays , In Proc. of ACM CHI94, 313-317.

*Bederson, B. & Hollan, J. 1994. Pad++: A zooming graphical interface for exploring alternative interface physics.  In Proc. of ACM UIST ‘94. 17-26.

Beheshti, J., Valerie, B. (1996). “PACE: A Browsable Graphical Interface.” Information Technology and Libraries 15(4): 231-240.

*Bier, K., Stone, M., Baudel, T., Buxton, W., & Fishkin, K. (1994). A taxonomy of see-through tools. Proceedings of ACM CHI '94 (Boston, MA, April 24-28, NY: ACM Press, 358-364.

Borgman, C. L. (1996). “Why Are Online Catalogs Still Hard to Use.” Journal of the American Society for Information Science 47(7): 493-503.

Carroll, J. & Rosson, M. (1988). Paradox of the active user.  In John Carroll (Ed). Interfacing thought: Cognitive aspects of human-computer interaction.  Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

*Chisholm, W., Vanderheiden, G., & Jacobs, I. (2001). Web content accessibility guidelines 1.0.  Interactions, July/August.  35-53.

*Christel, M., Smith, M., Taylor, C.R., & Winkler, D. (1998). Evolving video skims into useful multimedia abstractions.  Proceedings of CHI '98: Human Factors in Computing Systems (Los Angeles, April 18-23, 1998).  171-178.

Curtis, B., Krasner, H., & Iscoe, N. (1988).  A field study of the software design process for large systems.  CACM, 31(11), 1268-1287.

*Eick, S. (2001).  Visualizing online activity.  CACM, 44(8), 45-50.

*Engelbart, D. (1963). A conceptual framework for the augmentation of man’s intellect.  In P. Howerton & D. Weeks (Eds.), Vistas in information handling (Vol. 1, pp. 1-29). Washington, DC: Spartan Books.

Fox, E., Hix, D, Nowell, L., Brueni, D., Wake, W., Heath, L, & Rao, D.  (1993). Users, user interfaces, and objects: Envision, a digital library.  Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 44(8), 480-491.

*Furnas, G. (1986). Generalized fisheye views. In Proceedings of the ACM SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, ACM (April 1986), 16-23.

Golovchinsky, G. & Chignell, M. (1997). The newspaper as an information exploration metaphor.  Information Processing & Management, 33(5), 663-683.

*Greene, S., Marchionini, G., Plaisant, C., & Shneiderman, B. (in press).  Previews and overviews in digital libraries: Designing surrogates to support visual information seeking.  Journal of the American Society for Information Science.

*Hearst, M. (1999). User interfaces and visualization.  In R. Baeza-Yates & B. Ribeiro-Neto, Eds., Modern Information Retrieval. Reading MA: Addison-Wesley.  257-323.

Hearst, M. (1997). TextTiling: Segmenting text into multi-paragraph subtopic passages. Computational Linguistics 23(1), March.  33-64.

*Hearst, M. (1995). TileBars: Visualization of term distribution information in full text information access.  Proceedings of ACM CHI ’95.  (Denver, May 7-11, 1995). 59-66.

Hendry, D. & Harper, D. (1997). An informal information-seeking environment.  Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 48(11), 1036-1048.

Hutchinson, T., White, K.P., Martin, W., Reichert, K., & Frey, L. (1989). Human-computer interaction using eye-gaze input. IEEE Transactions on systems, man, and cybernetics.  19(6), 1527-1534.

*Jacob, R. (1991). The use of eye movements in human-computer interaction techniques: What you look at is what your get.  ACM Transactions on Information Systems, 9(3), 152-169.

Jacob, R., Leggett, J., Myers, B., & Pausch, R. (1993). Interaction styles and input/output devices.  Behaviour and Information Technology.  12(2), 69-79.

John, B, & Kieras, D. (1996). The GOMS family of user interface analysis techniques: Comparison and contrast.  ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction, 3(4), 320-351.

John, B, & Kieras, D. (1996). Using GOMS for user interface design and evaluation: Which technique?  ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction, 3(4), 287-319.

*Karat. C., Halverson, C., Horn, D., & Karat, J. (1999). Patterns of entry and correction in large vocabulary continuous speech recognition systems.  Proceedings of ACM CHI '99 (Pittsburgh. PA. May 15-20, 1999).  568-575.

*Koenemann, Jurgen & Belkin, Nicholas. (1996).  A case for interaction: A study of interactive information retrieval behavior and effectiveness.  Proceedings of ACM CHI ’96, (April 13-18, 1996, Vancouver, BC) NY: ACM Press.  205-212.

*Lamping, J. & Rao, R. (1996). Visualizing large trees using the hyperbolic browser.  Proceedings of ACM CHI '96 Conference Companion (Vancouver, April 13-18, 1996). New York: ACM Press.  388-9.

*Lin, X. (1997). Map displays for information retrieval. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 48(1), 40 - 54.

*Marchionini, G.  (1992). Interfaces for end-user information seeking. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 43(2), 156-163.

*Marchionini, G. & Komlodi, A. (1998).  Design of interfaces for information seeking.  In M. Williams (Ed.). Annual Review of Information Science and Technology.  Volume 33.  Medford, NJ: Information Today.  89-130.

Marchionini, G., Plaisant, C., & Komlodi, A. (1998).  Interfaces and tools for the Library of Congress National Digital Library Program.  Information Processing & Management, 34(5), 535-555.

Marchionini, G., Geisler, G., & Brunk, B. (2000). Agileviews: A Human-Centered Framework for Interfaces to Information Spaces.  SILS Technical Report http://ils.unc.edu/~march/agileviews/Agileviews.pdf

Meister, D. (1989). Lost in computer space.  International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction, 1(1), 5-21.

Myers, B., Hudson, S., & Pausch, R. (2000). Past, present, and future of user interface software tools.  ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction.  7(1), 3-28.

*Nation, D. Plaisant, C., Marchionini, G., & Komlodi, A. (1997). Visualizing websites using a hierarchical table of contents browser: WebTOC.  In Proceedings of Designing for the Web: Practices and Reflections (3rd Conference on Human factors and the Web, Denver, June 12, 1997). ftp://ftp.cs.umd.edu/pub/hcil/Demos/WebTOC/Paper/WebTOC.html

*Pankanti, S., Bolle, R., & Jain, A. (2000). Biometrics: The future of identification.  Computer, Feb 2000 46-49.

Raman, T.V. (1996).  Emacspeak—A speech interface.  Proceedings of ACM CHI 96 (Vancouver, April 13-18, 1996), NY: ACM Press.  66-71.

*Rao, Ramana, and S.K. Card. 1994. The Table Lens: Merging graphical and symbolic representations in an interactive focus+context visualization for tabular information. In Proc. of ACM CHI94, 318-322.

*Robertson, G., Czerwinski, M., Larson, K., Robbins, D., Thiel, D., & van Dantzich, M. (1998). Data mountain: Using spatial memory for document management.  Proceedings of the 11th Annual ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology (San Francisco, Nov. 1-4, 1998). 153-162.

Robertson, S. (1997). “Overview of the OKAPI Projects.” Journal of Documentation 53(1): 3-7.

Shackel, B.  (1997). Human-computer interaction—Whence and whither?  Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 48(11), 970-986.

*Shneiderman, B., Byrd, D., & Croft, B. (1997). Clarifying Search: A User-Interface Framework for Text Searches. D-Lib Magazine. 1997 January. ISSN 1082-9873. http://www.dlib.org/dlib/january97/retrieval/01shneiderman.html

*Want, R. & Schilit, B. (2001). Expanding the horizons of location-aware computing.  Computer, Aug., 2001 31-34.

*Weiser, M. (1997). An embedded, Invisible every-citizen interface.  In More than screen deep: Toward every-citizen interfaces to the nation's information infrastructure.  Washington, DC: National Academy Press.

*Winograd, T. (1997).  The design of interaction.  In P. Denning & R. Metcalfe (Eds.) Beyond calculation: The next fifty years of computing.  NY: Springer-Verlag.

*Yankelovich, N., Levow, G., & Marx, M. (1995). Designing SpeechActs: Issues in speech user interfaces. SIGCHI ’95 (Denver, May 7-11, 1995).  In Human Factors in Computing System Proceedings, Annual Conference Series, NY: ACM pp. 369-376.

===========================
Books
Bolt, R. (1984).  The human interface: Where people and computers meet.  Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.

Brooks, F. (1982). (reprinted from original 1975 edition).  The mythical man-month: Essays on software engineering.  Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley

Card, S., Moran, T., & Newell, A.  (1983). The psychology of human-computer interaction.  Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

Carroll, J. (Ed.) (1987). Interfacing thought: Cognitive aspects of human-computer interaction.  Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

Hix, D. & Hartson, H. (1993). Developing user interfaces: Ensuring usability through produce & process.  NY: John Wiley & Sons.

Marchionini, G. Information seeking in electronic environments.  NY: Cambridge University Press.

Mayhew, D. (1999). The usability engineering lifecycle.  San Francisco, CA: Morgan Kaufmann.

Nielsen, J. (1993). Usability engineering.  Boston: AP Professional: Academic Press.

Nielsen, J. (2000). Designing web usability.  Indianapolis, IN: New Riders Publishing.

Norman, D. (1988). The design of everyday things.  NY: Doubleday.

Petroski.  (1996). Invention by design: How engineers get from thought to thing.  Cambridge, MA: Harvard U. Press.

Raskin, J. (2000) The humane interface.  Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.

Reeves, B. & Nass, C. (1996). The media equation: How people treat computers, television, and new media like real people and places.  NY: Cambridge U. Press.

Rosenfeld, L. & Morville, P. (1998). Information architecture for the world wide web.  Sebastopol, CA: O’Reilly.

Shneiderman, B. (1998). Designing the user interface (3rd Ed.).  Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.
 

The HCI Bibliography: http://www.hcibib.org/  (22000 papers/reports plus guidelines and other pointers)