Your project as a CHI short paper
For more information on the submission process to CHI'2000, follow
this link for
short talks and interactive posters.
If you are interested in seeing what other HCI class projects have
resulted in submitted short papers, here are links to those
results.
- Fall, 1999
-
- Fall, 1998
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The following papers were not from previous HCI courses, but reflect
work from the FCE Group at Georgia Tech that has been accepted for
short papers. These should give you an idea of what constitues a
CHI short paper.
- OwnTime: A System for Timespace Management
(HTML)
Roy Rodenstein and Gregory D. Abowd.
Late-Breaking Results paper
in the Proceedings of the 1999 Conference on Human Factors in
Computing Systems (CHI
'99), Pittsburgh, PA, May 15-20, 1999. pp. 200-201.
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StuPad: Integrating Student Notes with Class Lectures
(HTML)
Khai N. Truong and Gregory D. Abowd.
Late-Breaking Results paper in the Proceedings of the 1999 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI '99), Pittsburgh, PA, May 15-20, 1999. pp. 208-209.
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CyberDesk: Automated Integration
of Desktop and Network Services
Andy Wood, Anind K. Dey and Gregory D. Abowd.
(HTML)
Technical Note in the Proceedings of the 1997 Conference
on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI '97), Atlanta, GA, March 22-27, 1997. pp. 552-553.
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Cyberguide: Prototyping Context-Aware Mobile Applications
(HTML)
Sue Long, Dietmar Aust, Gregory D. Abowd and Chris Atkeson.
Short paper in the Proceedings of 1996 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI '96), Vancouver, CA, April 13-18, 1996. pp. 293-294.
The following papers are accepted short papers that were also student
projects, but at other universities.
-
SportScope: A User-Centered Design for Baseball Fans
( PDF">HTML)
David S. Cortright.
Short paper in the Proceedings of 1996 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI '96), Vancouver, CA, April 13-18, 1996. pp. 297-298.
Page updated by Gregory Abowd
Last modified: Sun Dec 12 15:59:30 EST 1999