Book DescriptionThe Berkshire Encyclopedia of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) is the first major reference resource on a fast-growing field that draws upon many branches of social, behavioral, and information sciences, as well as computer science, medicine, engineering, and design. The Encyclopedia of Human-Computer Interaction takes us inside some of the worlds leading research labs and technology corporations, as well as dozens of universities, to cover all aspects of HCI:
--applications (games, digital libraries, telecommuting)
--proaches (beta testing, ontologies)
--breakthroughs (ENIAC computer, Hollerith punch card)
--challenges (digital divide, hackers, privacy, spamming, viruses)
--components (Braille, fonts, spell checker)
--disciplines and HCI (artificial intelligence, law, sociology)
--interfaces (adaptive interfaces, smart homes, virtual reality)
--methods (browsers, data mining, hypertext and hypermedia)
The expert-written articles are accompaniedby lively sidebars, illustrations, glossaries, a master bibliography, and a popular culture database of more than 300 movies, television programs, documentaries, stage productions, novels, science fiction, and even music from the original I, Robotto The Matrix and much more.
Contributors include editor William Sims Bainbridge, deputy director of the National Science Foundations Division of Information and Intelligent Systems, and 175 other experts, among whom are leading figures such asDharma Agrawal, John M. Carroll, Jack Dongarra, Michael Goodchild, Jose-Marie Griffiths, Judith Klavans, Judith S. Olson, Gary M. Olson, and Gary Starkweather. Это и многое другое вы найдете в книге Berkshire Encyclopedia of Human-Computer Interaction (2 Volume Set)