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Humans in HCI. Computers in HCI. Designing Human-Computer Interaction. Application/Domain Specific Design. Designing for Diversity. The Development Process: Requirements Specification. Design and Development. Testing and Evaluation. Managing HCI and Emerging Issues. Perspectives on HCI.
Julie A. Jacko
“If you care about Interaction Design, you should own this book.
Exhaustive coverage by world authorities. … one book that covers
the gamut. Highly recommended, highly practical.” — Don Norman,
Northwestern University and the Nielsen Norman group, Author of
Emotional Design and The Design of Everyday Things
“Comprehensive and thorough coverage of all the important issues
related to user interfaces and usability. A useful reference work
for anybody in the field…” — Jakob Nielsen, Author, Designing Web
Usability: The Practice of Simplicity and Prioritizing Web
Usability "… provides an unmatched range of topics … Building from
fundamental theories, models, and empirical findings, the book’s
chapters tour numerous application areas and user populations with
implications for virtually anyone working in any part of our field.
The organization of content into thematic parts and relevant
chapters makes the book easy to use both as a topical reference and
for a cover-to-cover voyage. … Teachers, researchers, students, and
practitioners will all find this volume a must-have for their
libraries, and a must-read for maintaining a holistic view of what
human-computer interaction and its acolytes have achieved."— Jacob
O. Wobbrock, Ph.D., University of Washington, Seattle, USA"… I find
the book to be a useful resource for all HCI practitioners and
researchers. … provides extensive coverage of key topics and
methods in human-computer interaction and includes contributions by
experts from a diverse set of communities and disciplinary
perspectives. Certainly one of the few books all HCI practitioners
and researchers should have in their bookshelves."—Bilge Mutlu,
University of Wisconsin–Madison, USA"Coordinating and editing the
contributions of more than 140 authors, Jacko (Univ. of Minnesota)
has done an amazing job in creating a well-organized, uniform
reference to the state of the art in human-computer interaction
(HCI). … an excellent, easy-to-use reference. … The 29 chapters
comprising the first three parts lay the foundation of HCI. Parts 4
and 5 elaborate on design issues. Part 6, "The Development
Process," is so large that it is further divided into three
subsections: "Requirements Specification," "Design and
Development," and "Testing, Evaluation, and Technology Transfer."
Each chapter contains its own set of references, and the book has
separate author and subject indexes, both of which are quite large.
Summing Up: Highly recommended." —J. Beidler, University of
Scranton“If you care about Interaction Design, you should own this
book. Exhaustive coverage by world authorities. … one book that
covers the gamut. Highly recommended, highly practical.” — Don
Norman, Northwestern University and the Nielsen Norman group,
Author of Emotional Design and The Design of Everyday Things "Many
bedrock chapters from the second edition have been retained and
updated, and new chapters that cover advances in technology have
been added. … It contains enough provocative ideas to keep legions
of readers busy until the next edition appears."—Technical
Communication, Volume 60, Number 2, May 2013“Comprehensive and
thorough coverage of all the important issues related to user
interfaces and usability. A useful reference work for anybody in
the field…” — Jakob Nielsen, Author, Designing Web Usability: The
Practice of Simplicity and Prioritizing Web Usability "… provides
an unmatched range of topics … Building from fundamental theories,
models, and empirical findings, the book’s chapters tour numerous
application areas and user populations with implications for
virtually anyone working in any part of our field. The organization
of content into thematic parts and relevant chapters makes the book
easy to use both as a topical reference and for a cover-to-cover
voyage. … Teachers, researchers, students, and practitioners will
all find this volume a must-have for their libraries, and a
must-read for maintaining a holistic view of what human-computer
interaction and its acolytes have achieved."— Jacob O. Wobbrock,
Ph.D., University of Washington, Seattle, USA"… I find the book to
be a useful resource for all HCI practitioners and researchers. …
provides extensive coverage of key topics and methods in
human-computer interaction and includes contributions by experts
from a diverse set of communities and disciplinary perspectives.
Certainly one of the few books all HCI practitioners and
researchers should have in their bookshelves."—Bilge Mutlu,
University of Wisconsin–Madison, USA"Coordinating and editing the
contributions of more than 140 authors, Jacko (Univ. of Minnesota)
has done an amazing job in creating a well-organized, uniform
reference to the state of the art in human-computer interaction
(HCI). … an excellent, easy-to-use reference. … The 29 chapters
comprising the first three parts lay the foundation of HCI. Parts 4
and 5 elaborate on design issues. Part 6, "The Development
Process," is so large that it is further divided into three
subsections: "Requirements Specification," "Design and
Development," and "Testing, Evaluation, and Technology Transfer."
Each chapter contains its own set of references, and the book has
separate author and subject indexes, both of which are quite large.
Summing Up: Highly recommended." —J. Beidler, University of
Scranton
“If you care about Interaction Design, you should own this book.
Exhaustive coverage by world authorities. … one book that covers
the gamut. Highly recommended, highly practical.” — Don Norman,
Northwestern University and the Nielsen Norman group, Author of
Emotional Design and The Design of Everyday Things "Many bedrock
chapters from the second edition have been retained and updated,
and new chapters that cover advances in technology have been added.
… It contains enough provocative ideas to keep legions of readers
busy until the next edition appears."—Technical Communication,
Volume 60, Number 2, May 2013“Comprehensive and thorough coverage
of all the important issues related to user interfaces and
usability. A useful reference work for anybody in the field…” —
Jakob Nielsen, Author, Designing Web Usability: The Practice of
Simplicity and Prioritizing Web Usability "… provides an unmatched
range of topics … Building from fundamental theories, models, and
empirical findings, the book’s chapters tour numerous application
areas and user populations with implications for virtually anyone
working in any part of our field. The organization of content into
thematic parts and relevant chapters makes the book easy to use
both as a topical reference and for a cover-to-cover voyage. …
Teachers, researchers, students, and practitioners will all find
this volume a must-have for their libraries, and a must-read for
maintaining a holistic view of what human-computer interaction and
its acolytes have achieved."— Jacob O. Wobbrock, Ph.D., University
of Washington, Seattle, USA"… I find the book to be a useful
resource for all HCI practitioners and researchers. … provides
extensive coverage of key topics and methods in human-computer
interaction and includes contributions by experts from a diverse
set of communities and disciplinary perspectives. Certainly one of
the few books all HCI practitioners and researchers should have in
their bookshelves."—Bilge Mutlu, University of Wisconsin–Madison,
USA"Coordinating and editing the contributions of more than 140
authors, Jacko (Univ. of Minnesota) has done an amazing job in
creating a well-organized, uniform reference to the state of the
art in human-computer interaction (HCI). … an excellent,
easy-to-use reference. … The 29 chapters comprising the first three
parts lay the foundation of HCI. Parts 4 and 5 elaborate on design
issues. Part 6, "The Development Process," is so large that it is
further divided into three subsections: "Requirements
Specification," "Design and Development," and "Testing, Evaluation,
and Technology Transfer." Each chapter contains its own set of
references, and the book has separate author and subject indexes,
both of which are quite large. Summing Up: Highly recommended." —J.
Beidler, University of Scranton
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